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‘Locally acquired foreign accent’ (LAFA) in contemporary Ghana
Oleh:
Shoba, Jo Arthur
;
Dako, Kari
;
Orfson-Offei, Elizabeth
Jenis:
Article from Journal - ilmiah internasional
Dalam koleksi:
World Englishes (Full Text) vol. 32 no. 2 (2013)
,
page 230–242.
Fulltext:
WE_32-02_2013_SHOBA.pdf
(133.41KB)
Isi artikel
The term‘LAFA’ stands for ‘locally acquired foreign accent’ and refers to a style of speech popularly known in Ghana as ‘slurring’. It emerged in the 1990s, as a mainly phonological approximation to American speech, among young Ghanaians who may have never been to the US. The ‘target’ variety for English in the Ghanaian education system remains, as a colonial legacy, officially although not always in practice, British English. This paper reports a small-scale study of often ambivalent attitudes towards LAFA, among tertiary level students, and as observed on publicwebsites. The analysis situates LAFAwithin a theoretical framework of identity construction through linguistic choices. By using LAFA, speakers bid for membership of an imagined global community. However, they also flout essentialised expectations of their speech, apparently rejecting aspects of their linguistic repertoire acquired in earlier life. The benefits LAFA users aspire to are thus accompanied by some risk of social rejection and accusations of fakery.
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