Expertise

Geographical Areas of Specialization: Mexico; Mesoamerica

Research Interests: linguistic anthropology; semiotic anthropology; verbal art; youth and adolescence; Mesoamerican languages and cultures

First is my long-term and ongoing work to document Mixe-Zoquean languages (southern Mexico) and the traditions and histories of their speakers. I have been doing field research on these languages for nearly twenty years. Second is my investigation into the changing lives of indigenous youth and the often-underestimated role they have played in the social and cultural changes that are transforming their communities. As a linguistic anthropologist I am particularly interested in what they are doing with language and how language figures into intergenerational debates. Finally, I am interested in verbal art and poetics–the aesthetic dimensions of language use–and how people shape their speech and play with words to accomplish various sorts of social business, from the transmission of traditional values to the sly critique of political corruption. All three of these lines of investigation contribute to a broader research program focusing on grammatical and sociolinguistic change (including dramatic changes such as “language death”) and how these processes both reflect and play an active role in larger social changes. In my work, I have documented and analyzed how language serves as a medium that local people use to grapple with the impact of economic development and globalization on their lives, and how it becomes valued as a symbolic resource that social actors struggle to control and pass on to future generations. I am interested in the nature of linguistic inequalities both as a theoretical matter and because I see this as a key component of any politically engaged linguistic anthropology that seeks to understand the workings of injustice and point to avenues of redress. I have taught and lectured on these themes in both English and Spanish, for audiences of specialists, native speakers, and interested lay people.


Subject Area: Anthropology


Keywords:

  • Minority Languages and Cultures Project
Communities
Chicano/a Studies, Anthropology
Degrees
PhD, University of Chicago, Anthropology and Linguistics, 2005
MA, University of Chicago, Anthropology, 1996
BA, Reed College, Linguistics, 1993