How Black and White Styles of Communication Differ - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 11
About This Presentation
Title:

How Black and White Styles of Communication Differ

Description:

Modified for US-1 from an original presentation by Dr. Alan D. Desantis, ... Walking, dancing, worshipping, Black step shows, marching bands, cheerleading ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:62
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 12
Provided by: DrAl68
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: How Black and White Styles of Communication Differ


1
How Black and White Styles of Communication Differ
Modified for US-1 from an original presentation
by Dr. Alan D. Desantis, University of
Kentucky. www.uky.edu/addesa01/documents/BlackLan
guage101.ppt
?????
??????
2
A Brief History of English (1)
  • 1) The British colonized North America
  • They brought the English language and its customs
    and settled the original 13 colonies along
    Americas Eastern Coast.
  • 2) The distances between the colonies created
    sub-dialects that are still heard today
  • New York vs. Boston vs. Appalachian talk
  • Cf. the American Tongues videotape
  • Differences in accent, pace, vocabulary, etc.
  • 3) One of the most distinctive U.S. dialects is
    Black English

3
A Brief History of English (2)
  • 4) Over time, Black English developed its own
    vocabulary, pronunciation, grammatical rules,
    nonverbal cues, dress, walk, and distinctive
    speech culture.
  • 5) American dialects have different status
  • Since political and economic power was centered
    in the Northeast, the way those people spoke
    became Standard English

4
A Brief History of English (3)
  • 6) The Problem
  • Those who spoke differently were stigmatized
    by the majority speakers. Thus the Southern,
    Appalachian and Black dialects, among others,
    were considered to be bad English.
  • 7) Most people know little about the Black
    Dialect, which is also known as Black English,
    Ebonics, AAVE and BEV, among others.

5
Communication Differences
  • 1) BE is Different from SAE
  • Black English has its own specific rules for
    1) pronunciation (ax ask, spoze), 2)
    vocabulary, 3) syntax, 4) accent, and 5) grammar
    (are be)
  • BE is not a bastardized version of SAE it is
    its own linguistic form with its own rules of
    appropriateness. However, non-blacks often
    view BE as being uneducated and unrefined, and
    sometimes even threatening.
  • There is frequent misunderstanding, even
    conflict, when BE and SAE speakers do not
    understand their different modes of speaking and
    acting.

6
Communication Differences
  • 2) Call and Response Communication
  • Traced back to Africa
  • The black church, jazz, movies, clubs, talk
  • Cf. the Apollo theater in Harlem, black churches
    (highly interactive), dance floor chanting,
    interpersonal exchanges (overlapping)
  • Blacks see SAE as uninvolved and removed
  • Whites see BE as loud, aggressive and impolite

7
Communication Differences
  • 3) BE Reflects a Personal Style
  • A) BE speakers desire an individual style
  • automobiles (personalized), sports celebration
    (Ali to Deon), dress, names (Tashaun vs. Bob),
    dress modes
  • B) The style differentiates BE speakers from the
    speech and behavior norms of white culture
  • Whites regard BE as showing off, cockiness, not
    being a team player (cf. Eddie Murphys Axel
    Foley, etc.)
  • Blacks regard SAE behavior as boring and
    conformist

8
Communication Differences
  • 4) BE Differs From SAE Emotionally
  • Blacks are more animated and expressive
  • Anger joy are openly expressed
  • For whites, being rational means to be calm and
    quiet
  • White culture separates mind and emotion, and
    masks ones true feelings
  • Whites see animated black behavior as less
    rational, unrefined and childish
  • Blacks regard white rationality as cold,
    dispassionate, and unemotional

9
Communication Differences
  • 5) The Importance of Rhythm in BEV
  • Rhythm/groove permeates everything
  • Walking, dancing, worshipping, Black step shows,
    marching bands, cheerleading
  • Gospel, blues, RB, jazz, rock, and rap all
    derived from only 12 of the U.S. population
  • Research shows that black talk is more rhythmic
    and syncopated than white talk (there is a
    groove)
  • Whites sense BE speech to be out of sync
  • Blacks sense SAE speech to be out of sync

10
Communication Differences
  • 6) BE vocabulary is more dynamic
  • White vocabulary is more stable over time
  • Black language is more dynamic
  • Why?
  • BE language illustrates personal style
  • Whites appropriate BE, and thus force BE to keep
    changing in order to remain more
    individualistic
  • BE language is fun, not just a tool

11
Communication Differences
  • 7) BE Nonverbal Cues Are Different
  • Proxemics Closer space
  • Eye Contact Reversed
  • Greater while talking, less while listening
  • Gestures Greater use of body
  • Handshakes, body movement, walk, etc...
  • Touch Higher touch culture (with each other)
  • Volume of Speech Loud Honest
  • Whites sense BE as too emotional and child-like
  • Blacks sense SAE as cold, distant and non-feeling

12
Communication Differences
  • 8) The Playful Use of Language in BE
  • Playin Dozens, Signifying, Dissing, Dogin
  • SAE culture sees language as a stable tool
  • One strives to speak clearly, precisely,
    consistently
  • Black culture see language as a dynamic art
  • One strives to speak creatively imaginatively
  • BE illustrates style, rhythm, and
    vocabulary
  • Whites often feel insulted (whos your Daddy?) or
    confused when they hear BE
  • Blacks feel SAE is boring, includes no feeling or
    fun or humor
  • (The End)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com