Back to Search Start Over

"So, I trucked out to the border, learned to say ain't, came to find work": the sociolinguistics of Firefly.

Authors :
Laliberté, Catherine
Keller, Melanie
Wengler, Diana
Source :
Linguistics Vanguard; 2023 Supplement 3, Vol. 9, p275-286, 12p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Firefly is a TV series that aired in 2002 and 2003 in the United States. The series belongs to the space western subgenre, which allies science fiction and western tropes by layering, in this case, a dystopian society, space travel, standoffs in desolate landscapes, and saloon brawls. This juxtaposition of genres is reflected in the language of Firefly's characters in three ways: world-specific slang, Chinese code-switching, and features evoking Southern American English. This study explores the latter, employing quantitative methods used in variationist sociolinguistics. Using a corpus of all episodes of the series and the film Serenity (2005), we show that features reminiscent of Southern varieties of English, specifically nasal fronting and the use of ain't, are stratified according to the social realities of the world of Firefly. Nonstandard linguistic variants are used to represent rebel smugglers as opposed to characters representing valued professions. This pattern contributes to world-building in Firefly by indexing divisions between the superpower-controlled territories and the recently settled edge of the universe. The use of realistically constrained Southern linguistic features draws upon present-day notions of linguistic (non)standardness to indicate marginality. Firefly therefore relies on its audience's linguistic knowledge of the real world to create its fictional one. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
Volume :
9
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Linguistics Vanguard
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
173961235
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1515/lingvan-2023-0013