Master data

Exploring Māori/Aotearoa English from socio-cognitive and cultural linguistic perspectives (full title)Māori English: A socio-cognitive & cultural linguistic take (short title)
Description:

Wider research context

This project is located in the field of World Englishes (WEs) and sheds new light on Māori English (ME), the variety that is traditionally associated with the indigenous Māori population in the linguistic and cultural context of New Zealand (NZ). ME can be characterized as a post-colonial contact variety that co-exists with and is related to general New Zealand English (NZE) and that continues to be influenced by the current socio-cultural embedding of the Māori people, their culture and their language, Te Reo Māori, in NZ. 

Objectives

The project intends to explore potential differences in language use among young New Zealanders of different ethnicity (Māori and Pākehā ‘NZ Europeans’) and with diverse linguistic repertoires (monolinguals and bilinguals) by concentrating on the lexical-and cognitive semantic dimensions of language use. Based on the hypothesis that the diverse experience of Māori bilinguals can surface in their use of English when compared to Pākehā speakers of English, the project aims at disclosing Māori culturally specific contents in English, as evident in: a) topics and themes, b) loans, codeswitches and calques, c) figurative language and d) cultural conceptualizations.

Approach

Based on data gathered from a story-telling task involving 140 New Zealanders of Māori and non-Māori ethnicity, the project applies methods from cognitive sociolinguistics and cultural linguistics to focus on variation in the use of English among the different groups of New Zealanders. A particular focus of the analysis will be on the semantic dimension of language use while controlling for the variables of ethnicity and bilingualism.

Innovation

The project is in line with the latest developments in research on WEs and proposes a new approach that combines insights from cognitive sociolinguistics and cultural linguistics, two research frameworks that have only recently begun to be applied to the study of WEs.

The project will be based on the linguistic analysis of an entirely new and unique set of spoken data that was elicited from a story-telling task conducted with 4 groups of speakers that differ in terms of linguistic repertoires (monolinguals and bilinguals) and ethnic affiliation (Māori and non-Māori). A further major objective of the project is to gather this data in the New Zealand Stories Corpus, a specialized corpus of narrations which will be made freely available to the research community upon completion of the project.

Primary researchers involved

The project will involve a team of researchers based at the University of Klagenfurt (Austria), including the Principal Investigator, Marta Degani, two student assistants and a computational linguist. Further support will be given by a range of international cooperation partners in NZ and at EURAC Bolzano.  

Keywords: World Englishes, New Zealand Englishes, Māori English, cognitive sociolinguistics, cultural linguistics, corpus-linguistics, storytelling, figurative language
Short title: FWF: Maori English
Period: 01.05.2023 - 30.04.2026
Contact e-mail: -
Homepage: -

Employees

Employees Role Time period
Marta Degani (internal)
  • Applicant
  • Project leader
  • 01.05.2023 - 30.04.2026
  • 01.05.2023 - 30.04.2026
Egon Stemle (external)
  • Research staff
  • 01.05.2023 - 30.04.2026
Maja Gajic (internal)
  • Student staff
  • 01.05.2023 - 30.04.2026
Nicole Imrich (internal)
  • Student staff
  • 01.05.2023 - 30.04.2026
Andreea Calude (external)
  • Cooperation partner
  • 01.05.2023 - 30.04.2026
Jeanette King (external)
  • Cooperation partner
  • 01.05.2023 - 30.04.2026
Hemi Whaanga (external)
  • Cooperation partner
  • 01.05.2023 - 30.04.2026
Hineitimoana Greensill (external)
  • Cooperation partner
  • 01.05.2023 - 30.04.2026

Categorisation

Project type Research funding (on request / by call for proposals)
Funding type §26
Research type
  • Applied research
Subject areas
  • 602026 - Cognitive linguistics
  • 602048 - Sociolinguistics
  • 602011 - Computational linguistics
  • 602008 - English studies
Research Cluster
  • Humans in the Digital Age
Gender aspects Genderrelevance not selected
Project focus
  • Science to Science (Quality indicator: n.a.)
Classification raster of the assigned organisational units:
  • No classification raster available for the assigned organisational units.
working groups No working group selected

Cooperations

No partner organisations selected