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From broadcast archive to language corpus: Designing and investigating a sociohistorical corpus from Desert Island Discs

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journal contribution
posted on 2018-02-14, 12:23 authored by Nicholas Smith, Cathleen Waters
The aims of this paper are twofold: i) to present the motivation and design of a sociohistorical corpus derived from the popular BBC Radio show, Desert Island Discs (DID); and ii) to illustrate the potential of the DID corpus (DIDC) with a case study. In an era of ever-increasing digital resources and scholarly interest in recent language change, there remains an enormous disparity between available written and spoken corpora. We describe how a corpus derived from DID contributes to redressing the balance. Treating DID as an example of a specialized register, namely, a ‘biographical chat show’, we review its attendant situational characteristics, and explain the affordances and design features of a sociolinguistic corpus sampling of the show. Finally, to illustrate the potential of DIDC for linguistic exploration of recent change, we conduct a case study on two pronouns with generic, impersonal reference, namely you and one.

Funding

In developing the DIDC, we thank the University of Leicester for periods of study leave, as well as the transcribers, especially Sarah Creer, Rebecca Hings, Naomi Obeng and Adam Percival. For discussion of the corpus design, we thank Doug Biber, David Denison, Gregory Garretson, Terttu Nevalainen, Emma Smith, Amy Wang, and audiences in Uppsala, Leicester and Hong Kong. Sebastian Hoffmann kindly filtered the corpus word counts for quotation/non-quotation.

History

Citation

ICAME Journal, 2018, 42 (1), pp. 167–190

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, ARTS AND HUMANITIES/School of Education

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

ICAME Journal

Publisher

De Gruyter

eissn

1502-5462

Acceptance date

2018-01-08

Copyright date

2018

Available date

2018-05-23

Publisher version

https://content.sciendo.com/view/journals/icame/42/1/article-p167.xml

Notes

Data related to this article is available at http://hdl.handle.net/2381/41039 - Guest speaker classifications for a corpus linguistic study of Desert Island Discs, by Smith and Waters (2018)

Language

en

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