Abstract

AbstractThe Maybachufer Market is an urban street market in Berlin-Neukölln that constitutes a highly diverse urban context by bringing together people of different social, cultural, and linguistic backgrounds. Through linguistic ethnography, this paper explores the negotiation of various resources in everyday communicative practices and activities of this urban space. The market setting with its multiethnic and multilingual community constitutes a spatial repertoire with a rich pool of resources. Although German, Turkish, and English are prominent as local and international lingua francas, various other languages and resources are used in the market activities involving different types and modes of interaction. The study shows that the respective communicative practices, which seem random at first glance, in fact follow specific interactional patterns with respect to communicative goals and interactional roles, including different social relations and identity constructions. While exploring everyday activities and the linguistic behaviours at a highly diverse urban market, the study contributes to our understanding of spatial repertoires, metrolingual and convivial practices, and communicative patterns in multilingual and multiethnic interactions in highly diverse urban spaces.

Highlights

  • The ethnolinguistic diversity in metropolises enables intense urban language contact and constitutes highly heterogeneous settings for linguistic innovations

  • This paper explores the negotiation of various resources in everyday communicative practices and activities of this urban space

  • A combination of these disciplines is mutually beneficial since linguistics helps delimit the broad empirical scope of ethnography, while ethnographic approaches provide a broader perspective on the analysis of everyday linguistic practices by taking all potentially relevant aspects regarding the social context of interactions into account

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Summary

Introduction

The ethnolinguistic diversity in metropolises enables intense urban language contact and constitutes highly heterogeneous settings for linguistic innovations (cf. Vanderkerckhove 2010; Wiese 2020). Metrolingualism relates language to urban space and underlines the contextdependency of linguistic practices One of these contexts is urban markets, which Pennycook and Otsuji (2015: 177) characterise as “sites of layered multilingualism in which different language resources are mobilised within a flow of other practices.”. An example of this is the Maybachufer Market in the multicultural Reuterkiez neighbourhood in Berlin-Neukölln, which constitutes a highly diverse urban context, bringing together people from a large range of social, cultural, and linguistic backgrounds.

Research area: the Maybachufer Market
Linguistic ethnography as research methodology
Combining different methods
The researcher
Advertising
Sales and socialising
21 Customer2: danke
15 Seller2
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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