ABSTRACT

This collection of articles presents a selection of Deborah Cameron’s work on language, gender and sex in one single volume. Arranged thematically, this book covers major developments in Anglo-American feminist linguistics, and Cameron’s responses to these, spanning the last twenty years.

The collection’s overarching theme is the political relationship between language and gender: four distinctly themed sections demonstrate that a variety of forces affect gender relations, and gender representations, in different times and places. Cameron examines the connections between language and the (mis)representation of reality, and the role language plays in reproducing gender inequalities. More recent articles focus on representations of men and women as communicators, as well as the impact of sexuality on gender and gender relations, an increasingly prominent area of the author’s research.

This timely study brings much of Cameron’s work together for the first time, and highlights characteristics of her work with which many readers will be familiar: a combination of linguistic and feminist political orientation; and a distinct focus on conflict in gender relations. Including a new introductory essay and eleven articles, three of which are previously unpublished, with short introductions to contextualize each piece, the collection is extremely useful for students and teachers on a variety of courses including English language and linguistics, women’s studies, gender studies and communication studies.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

On language and sexual politics

part |32 pages

The sexual politics of representation

chapter |8 pages

Non-sexist language

Lost in translation? (1995)

part |50 pages

Power and difference

chapter |16 pages

Lakoff in context

The form and function of tag questions (with Fiona McAlinden and Kathy O'Leary, 1988)

chapter |14 pages

Performing gender identity

Young men's talk and the construction of heterosexual masculinity (1997>)

chapter |18 pages

‘Is there any ketchup, Vera?'

Gender, power and pragmatics (1998)

part |53 pages

Ideologies of language and gender

chapter |17 pages

Verbal hygiene for women

Linguistics misapplied? (1994)

chapter |21 pages

Styling the worker

Gender and the commodification of language in the global service economy (2000)

part |33 pages

Language, gender and sexuality

chapter |16 pages

‘Naming of parts'

Gender, culture and terms for the penis among American college students (1992)

chapter |15 pages

Straight talking

The sociolinguistics of heterosexuality (2003)