| Micaela Di Leonardo - 1991 - 444 páginas
..."voice," or "words" are routinely used not only to designate everyday talk but also, much more broadly, to denote the public expression of a particular perspective...accepting the representations of more powerful others. And similarly, "silence" and "mutedness" (E. Ardener 1975) are used not only in their ordinary senses... | |
| Camille Roman, Suzanne Juhasz, Cristanne Miller - 1994 - 492 páginas
..."voice," or "words" are routinely used not only to designate everyday talk but also, much more broadly, to denote the public expression of a particular perspective...accepting the representations of more powerful others. And similarly, "silence" and "mutedness" (E. Ardener 1975) are used not only in their ordinary senses... | |
| Kira Hall, Mary Bucholtz - 1995 - 526 páginas
...social science. Such terms are routinely used not to designate everyday talk but, much more broadly, to denote the public expression of a particular perspective...accepting the representations of more powerful others. Similarly, silence and mutedness are used not for inability or reluctance to create utterances in conversational... | |
| Susan Talburt - 2000 - 300 páginas
...department through her actions and speech. Julie's use of "voice" is not (self-)representational, "denoting] the public expression of a particular perspective...life, the effort to represent one's own experience." 2' Rather, she uses her voice to disrupt the taken-for-granted, for example, by placing queerness in... | |
| Andrew Sears, Julie A. Jacko - 2002 - 1330 páginas
...books on adolescence, and much feminist theory, use the terms voice, words, and language metaphorically "to denote the public expression of a particular perspective...representations of more powerful others" (Gal, 1991, p. 172). In this perspective, we understand the kinds of activities that have been described as "what... | |
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