6533b833fe1ef96bd129b91d

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Rapping the ‘Better folk’: Ideological and scalar negotiations of past and present

Elina Westinen

subject

Linguistics and LanguageSocial PsychologyLanguage ideologyDiscourse analysismedia_common.quotation_subjectlanguage ideologyta6121Experimental and Cognitive PsychologyresurssitLanguage and LinguisticsscaleGlobalization0601 history and archaeologySociologySociocultural evolutionrapFinlandmedia_common060201 languages & linguistics060101 anthropologyminorityCommunicationGender studies06 humanities and the artsRappingAesthetics0602 languages and literatureEliterap musicIdeologyresourcesSociolinguistics

description

Drawing on sociolinguistics of globalization, discourse studies and global hip hop studies, this article examines how the ideological sociocultural and -historical reality of Finland is (re)constructed and (re)negotiated in a local rap song and how the song takes issue with the official, but often tension-ridden Finnish–Swedish bilingualism. Its specific, ironic take arises from the fact that the rap artist is Finnish-speaking, but echoes a Swedish-speaking minority who are traditionally and stereotypically seen as a privileged, historical elite. The song exemplifies how rap can constitute a site for investigation of language ideological debates in bi/multilingual societies and how nationalistic-laden ideologies (one nation–one language–one state) are taken for granted, brought forth but also significantly problematized and questioned. peerReviewed

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.langcom.2016.08.007