Directive use in a migrant agricultural community: A test of ervin tripps hypotheses
Abstract:
The choice of English directive variants has been hypothesized by Ervin Tripp (1976, 1977) to be determined by several social and ecological factors: the relative social ranks of the speaker and recipient, their ages, their familiarity, the presence or absence of outsiders, territorial location, and task expectations. The major goal of this investigation is to test Ervin Tripps hypotheses concerning the relationship between these variables and the choice of the identified syntactically based directive variants (imper atives, imbedded imperatives, need statements), using a distinctly different sample: a predominantly black male migratory agricultural labor population in the United Statess eastern seaboard region. The data indicate that the imperative form is used almost exclusively in those contexts where the syntactically based directive variants were expected to occur. Thus, most of the pbkp_redictions derived from Ervin Tripps model for these directive variants were contradicted. The preference for imperatives is suggested to be largely a consequence of the antagonistic relationships within the migrant farm worker community. The results of this study also suggest that the set of decision rules used in choosing among directive variants according to social criteria is a function of the following factors: crosscultural (i.e., social class and ethnic) variation, and social and physical characteristics of the interaction setting. (Directives, migrant farmworkers, cultural differences, environmental influences, ethology). © 1986, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
Año de publicación:
1985
Keywords:
Fuente:

Tipo de documento:
Article
Estado:
Acceso restringido
Áreas de conocimiento:
- Sociología
Áreas temáticas:
- Grupos de personas
- Economía laboral
- Agricultura y tecnologías afines