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Entextualizing Domestic Violence - Language Ideology and Violence Against Women in the Anglo-American Hearsay Principle (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,441
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Entextualizing Domestic Violence - Language Ideology and Violence Against Women in the Anglo-American Hearsay Principle (Hardcover)
Series: Oxford Studies in Language and Law
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Language ideology is a concept developed in linguistic anthropology
to explain the ways in which ideas about the definition and
functions of language can become linked with social discourses and
identities. In Entextualizing Domestic Violence, Jennifer Andrus
demonstrates how language ideologies that are circulated in the
Anglo-American law of evidence draw on and create indexical links
to social discourses, affecting speakers whose utterances are used
as evidence in legal situations. Andrus addresses more specifically
the tendency of such a language ideology to create the potential to
speak for, appropriate, and ignore the speech of women who have
been victims of domestic violence. In addition to identifying
specific linguistic strategies employed in legal situations, she
analyzes assumptions about language circulated and animated in the
legal text and talk used to evaluate spoken evidence, and describes
the consequences of the language ideology when it is co-articulated
with discourses about gender and domestic violence. The book
focuses on the pair of rules concerning hearsay and its exceptions
in the Anglo-American law of evidence. Andrus considers legal
discourses, including statutes, precedents, their application in
trials, and the relationship between such legal discourses and
social discourses about domestic violence. Using discourse
analysis, she demonstrates the ways legal metadiscourses about
hearsay are articulated with social discourses about domestic
violence, and the impact of this powerful co-articulation on the
individual whose speech is legally appropriated. Andrus approaches
legal rules and language ideology both diachronically and
synchronically in this book, which will be an important addition to
ongoing research and discussion on the role legal appropriation of
speech may have in perpetuating the voicelessness of victims in the
legal treatment of domestic violence.
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