Is Creaky Voice a Valley Girl Feature? Stancetaking & Evolution of a Linguistic Stereotype

The ‘Valley Girl’ stereotype came to be known in 1982 thanks to Frank & Moon Zappa’s eponymous hit song, which associated a wide variety of linguistic markers with the persona of a white, privileged, vapid, female adolescent. This ideological association has contributed to stancetaking in that u...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Pierre Habasque
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses Universitaires du Midi 2021-12-01
Series:Anglophonia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/anglophonia/4104
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832579237775671296
author Pierre Habasque
author_facet Pierre Habasque
author_sort Pierre Habasque
collection DOAJ
description The ‘Valley Girl’ stereotype came to be known in 1982 thanks to Frank & Moon Zappa’s eponymous hit song, which associated a wide variety of linguistic markers with the persona of a white, privileged, vapid, female adolescent. This ideological association has contributed to stancetaking in that using linguistic markers associated with Valspeak, the dialect supposedly spoken by Valley Girls, may alter the perception an outside observer has of the speaker. This linguistic stereotype evolved over time though, and new markers that were not originally part of Valspeak eventually became associated with this dialect. The aim of this paper is to explore the extent to which creaky voice has come to be associated with Valley Girls. It is argued that the birth of this stereotype tied the persona to specific linguistic markers, and that the integration of creaky voice to the dialect is evidence of an evolution of the stereotype. In order to test this hypothesis, a study on the perception of Valspeak was conducted in March/April 2019 on the campus of California State University, Northridge. 123 students participated in a quantitative study, and 70 other students participated in qualitative interviews. Results suggest that participants associate creaky voice with the Valley Girl persona. Creak can unsurprisingly be indexical of rather negative Valley Girl traits, such as shallowness, or stupidity, but other students associate it with characteristics that are not overtly socially stigmatized, such as economic privilege.
format Article
id doaj-art-6236fda0c4ec4801beffaa7c10112a2a
institution Kabale University
issn 1278-3331
2427-0466
language English
publishDate 2021-12-01
publisher Presses Universitaires du Midi
record_format Article
series Anglophonia
spelling doaj-art-6236fda0c4ec4801beffaa7c10112a2a2025-01-30T12:33:05ZengPresses Universitaires du MidiAnglophonia1278-33312427-04662021-12-013210.4000/anglophonia.4104Is Creaky Voice a Valley Girl Feature? Stancetaking & Evolution of a Linguistic StereotypePierre HabasqueThe ‘Valley Girl’ stereotype came to be known in 1982 thanks to Frank & Moon Zappa’s eponymous hit song, which associated a wide variety of linguistic markers with the persona of a white, privileged, vapid, female adolescent. This ideological association has contributed to stancetaking in that using linguistic markers associated with Valspeak, the dialect supposedly spoken by Valley Girls, may alter the perception an outside observer has of the speaker. This linguistic stereotype evolved over time though, and new markers that were not originally part of Valspeak eventually became associated with this dialect. The aim of this paper is to explore the extent to which creaky voice has come to be associated with Valley Girls. It is argued that the birth of this stereotype tied the persona to specific linguistic markers, and that the integration of creaky voice to the dialect is evidence of an evolution of the stereotype. In order to test this hypothesis, a study on the perception of Valspeak was conducted in March/April 2019 on the campus of California State University, Northridge. 123 students participated in a quantitative study, and 70 other students participated in qualitative interviews. Results suggest that participants associate creaky voice with the Valley Girl persona. Creak can unsurprisingly be indexical of rather negative Valley Girl traits, such as shallowness, or stupidity, but other students associate it with characteristics that are not overtly socially stigmatized, such as economic privilege.https://journals.openedition.org/anglophonia/4104stancetakingcreaky voiceValley Girlperceptual dialectologysocial meaning
spellingShingle Pierre Habasque
Is Creaky Voice a Valley Girl Feature? Stancetaking & Evolution of a Linguistic Stereotype
Anglophonia
stancetaking
creaky voice
Valley Girl
perceptual dialectology
social meaning
title Is Creaky Voice a Valley Girl Feature? Stancetaking & Evolution of a Linguistic Stereotype
title_full Is Creaky Voice a Valley Girl Feature? Stancetaking & Evolution of a Linguistic Stereotype
title_fullStr Is Creaky Voice a Valley Girl Feature? Stancetaking & Evolution of a Linguistic Stereotype
title_full_unstemmed Is Creaky Voice a Valley Girl Feature? Stancetaking & Evolution of a Linguistic Stereotype
title_short Is Creaky Voice a Valley Girl Feature? Stancetaking & Evolution of a Linguistic Stereotype
title_sort is creaky voice a valley girl feature stancetaking amp evolution of a linguistic stereotype
topic stancetaking
creaky voice
Valley Girl
perceptual dialectology
social meaning
url https://journals.openedition.org/anglophonia/4104
work_keys_str_mv AT pierrehabasque iscreakyvoiceavalleygirlfeaturestancetakingampevolutionofalinguisticstereotype