Phraseology and Culture in English
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Phraseology and Culture in English
parts of the English-speaking world. 3. How you is? on Tristan da Cunha How you is? is an infrequent greeting formula and unknown in most areas in the English-speaking world, how are you?, how you doin’?, how are things?, etc. being much more widespread and common. 3 Whereas it is probably not restricted to Tristan da Cunha, how you is? is both structurally and socioculturally unusual. It is a salient and prominent opening of inter- actions involving Tristanians, and most outsiders to the island are unfamil- iar with this formula. The pragmatic usage and function of how you is? offers thus the opportunity to explore the socially-constructed identity that is attached to such markers and at the same time allows to investigate whether the usage of salient markers of this kind continues when the com- munity which uses them undergoes rapid transformation and change, or, in contrast, whether it dies out as a result of accommodation to and adoption of outside norms. This section highlights the social history of the Tristan Greetings as an act of identity in Tristan da Cunha English 357 community and briefly deals with the historical origins of this marker. The main part is dedicated to the discussion of this formula’s pragmatic func- tion and social significance, particularly with reference as to how its usage is restricted to group members and how it may function as a symbolic lin- guistic demarcation between locals and outsiders. 3.1. Tristan da Cunha: A brief social history The island of Tristan da Cunha lies in the heart of the South Atlantic Ocean and has a population of 285; it is 2,334 kilometres south of St Helena, 2,778 kilometres west of Cape Town, and about 3,400 kilometres east of Uruguay (Crawford 1945). It was first discovered by the Portuguese admi- ral Tristão da Cunha in 1506, but the Portuguese did not pursue a concerted settlement policy for the island. The English and Dutch, too, became aware of the islands; the Dutch were the first to effect a landing in 1643 (Bein- tema 2000), but none of the colonial powers developed an interest in estab- lishing a permanent colony on the island. Things changed towards the end of the 18th century, when the American fishing and whaling industry ex- panded to the South Atlantic Ocean and Tristan da Cunha served as an oc- casional resort to the sealers and whalers fishing in the region (Brander 1940). The growing economic interest, as well as the strategic position of Tristan da Cunha along a major sea-route, attracted a number of discoverers and adventurers. The island was settled in 1816, when the British admiralty formally annexed Ascension Island and Tristan da Cunha, apparently with the intention of blocking a possible escape route for Napoleon Bonaparte, who at the time was exiled on the island of St Helena (Schreier and Lava- rello Schreier 2003). A military garrison was dispatched to the island, but they withdrew after a one-year stay. Some army personnel stayed behind with the intention of settling on Tristan da Cunha: two stonemasons from Plymouth (Samuel Burnell and John Nankivel), a non-commissioned officer from Kelso, Scotland, named William Glass, his wife, “the daughter of a Boer Dutchman” (Evans 1994: 245), and their two children. The population increased when shipwrecked sailors and castaways ar- rived, some of whom settled and added to the permanent population. Au- gustus Earle, an artist and naturalist who was stranded on the island in 1824, reports that apart from the Glass family, the British colonisers consisted of Richard ‘Old Dick’ Riley (from Wapping, in the London East End) and Alexander Cotton (from Hull, Yorkshire), who arrived in the early 1820s 358 Daniel Schreier (Earle 1832). The late 1820s and 1830s saw the arrival of a group of women from St Helena and three non-Anglophone settlers (from Denmark and Hol- land). The population grew rapidly and by 1832 there was a total of 34 people on the island, 22 of whom were young children. The 1830s and 1840s saw a renaissance of the whaling industry and once again numerous ships called at Tristan da Cunha to barter for fresh water and supplies; this led to the arrival of a number of American whalers, some of whom settled permanently. The second half of the 19th century witnessed a period of growing isola- tion, for a number of political and economic reasons: the American whale trade declined quickly, the increasing use of steam ships made bartering unnecessary, and the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 drastically reduced the number of ships in the South Atlantic. This affected the influx of set- tlers, and a weaver from Yorkshire (Crawford 1945) and two Italian sailors were the only new arrivals in the second half of the century (Crabb 1980). The sociocultural isolation of Tristan da Cunha peaked in the early 20th century; Evans (1994) notes that the community received no mail for more than ten years, and a minister reported in the mid-1920s that the children had never seen a football (Rogers 1925). When visiting the island in 1937, the Norwegian sociologist Peter Munch found that the Tristanians had not Download 1.68 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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