Power moves
Read it & Weep
The City is Talking
It's Giving Identity
Words That Do Things
100

Gramsci's concept for the system of domination that works not through force but through culture, institutions, and taken-for-granted 'common sense.

What is hegemony?

100

This is the mistaken idea that acquiring literacy, by itself, automatically produces higher-order thinking, economic mobility, and social progress.

What is the literacy myth?

100

This term refers to the language visible in public signs, billboards, shop names, and government buildings in a given territory or urban space.

What is the linguistic landscape?

100

Rather than treating identity as a fixed thing you ARE, linguistic anthropologists prefer this verb-form — the ongoing, active process of doing who you are.

What is identifying (or identification)?

100

J.L. Austin's term for utterances that don't just describe the world but actually DO something — 'I promise,' 'I apologize,' 'I now pronounce you…'

What are performatives?

200

For Foucault, this capital-D term refers to the broader system of ideas, institutions, and practices that shape what can be said, known, and done — regulating thought and conduct.

What is Discourse?

200

This debunked claim holds that children from low-income families hear millions fewer words than their wealthier peers by age three — treating working-class and nonstandard language use as 'less' language.

What is the word gap myth?

200

When linguistic anthropologists treat the city as THIS, they're reading signs, storefronts, and graffiti as meaningful communicative acts that can be analyzed like discourse.

What is a text?

200

Clothing, consumption, labels, hairstyles, accents, and even what we eat are all ways humans do THIS in everyday life.

What is enacting or "doing" identity?

200

Austin's term for the conditions — the right authority, the right setting, the right procedure — that have to be in place for a performative to 'work.'

What are felicity conditions?
300

Bourdieu's term for the set of dispositions, habits, and bodily ways of being that individuals acquire from the social structures they grow up in.

What is habitus?

300

Jonathan Rosa's term for the false idea that bilingual or minoritized speakers possess 'no real language' — that their speech counts as neither one language nor the other.

What is the languagelessness myth?

300

A focus on linguistic landscape lets us see these kinds of dynamics — power relations, gentrification, belonging, exclusion, and who a neighborhood is for — written right on its walls.

What are social, political, and economic processes (shaping space and identity)?

300

These small words — 'here/there,' 'us/them,' 'we/they' — are one of the most powerful linguistic resources for marking group belonging and difference.

What are deictics?

300

'Once upon a time,' lowering your voice for a prayer, or switching to a formal register to begin a ceremony — these are all examples of THIS: signaling what kind of speech event is happening

What is keying?

400

Bourdieu's term for the idea that prestigious forms of language — accent, vocabulary, style — can be 'cashed in' for social and economic advantage.

What is linguistic capital?

400

Shirley Brice Heath's longitudinal study across three communities showed that children from THIS group did best in mainstream schools — because their home literacy practices aligned with school expectations.

What is the mainstream/middle-class community (or Maintown)?

400

Walking through a neighborhood with residents, photographing signs, and mapping languages across space are examples of methods used for THIS kind of research.

What is linguistic landscape research (or ethnographic study of signage)?

400

When a speaker moves between two or more language varieties within a single conversation or even a single sentence, this is one common way of enacting identity

What is code-switching?

400

Performance is about skill; performativity is about THIS — the transformative force of speech that brings social realities into being, whether or not it's delivered well.

What is force or efficacy?

500

Even in unequal systems, people aren't just dominated — they push back, reframe, and use language creatively. This is the concept of THIS in language.

What is agency (or power and agency)?

500

García & Wei's term for fluid language practices that move between and beyond named languages — engaging speakers' full meaning-making repertoires rather than keeping languages separate.

What is translanguaging?

500

The idea that public signs don't just carry information but POINT to something — conferring value, status, or belonging on certain languages, people, and places.

What is indexicality (signs as indexical)?

500

Even at the level of how you say a single vowel, THIS can index class, age, region, gender, and affect — showing that identity work happens at every linguistic scale.

What is pronunciation?

500

This is one of the key limitations of trying to identify explicitly performative words: most utterances that 'do things' don't actually contain words like 'promise' or 'declare' — action is accomplished more subtly.

What is that performativity is rarely marked by explicit performative verbs (most speech acts are implicit)?