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Linguistic co-creativity and the performance of identity in the discourse of National Trust holiday cottage guestbooks

Linguistic co-creativity and the performance of identity in the discourse of National Trust holiday cottage guestbooks
Linguistic co-creativity and the performance of identity in the discourse of National Trust holiday cottage guestbooks
This article reports on some of the results of a project undertaken by researchers at the University of Sheffield with The National Trust in the UK, which seeks to examine the discourse found in guestbooks located in the Trust’s holiday rental cottages. Our key interests lie in the ways in which holidaymakers perform particular identities through the stylistic choices they make when writing entries in guestbooks, the role linguistic creativity plays in these performances, and the extent to which cognitive-linguistic analysis can help us understand guestbooks as socially and conceptually complex sites of linguistic interaction. Between 2014 and 2018, we collected over 800,000 words of data from 13 holiday cottages in two popular holiday regions in the UK: the Roseland Peninsula in South East Cornwall and the Port Quin area of Northern Cornwall. Our dataset was analysed and tagged using NVivo qualitative coding software, which enables the identification of both linguistic and non-linguistic features of the discourse and makes these items searchable. In the present discussion, we use Text World Theory to explore both the situational context of this discourse, or the ‘discourse-world’, and the conceptual structures, or ‘text-worlds’, which result from linguistic interaction in the minds of participants. We suggest that the unified examination of these two interacting levels of discourse enables a holistic investigation of the pragmatic and conceptual environment which surrounds the production and reception of the guestbook discourse; the linguistic and stylistic features of the texts themselves; and the mental representations that arise from them. In particular, we present a case-study analysis of the guestbooks of Caragloose, a three-bedroomed former farmhouse in South East Cornwall, which our study found to contain levels of linguistic creativity which were exceptional in our dataset. We outline the key stylistic features of this discourse and show how one collective linguistic endeavour in particular in Caragloose fosters an exceptionally experimental style across multiple entries. We reveal how the resulting discourse, although taking place between strangers separated in both time and space, exhibits a density of creativity more commonly associated with collaborative discourse produced between intimates in a face-to-face situation.
0963-9470
381-406
Gavins, Joanna
1ebdb07c-e407-4398-9b14-afdfe8240585
Whiteley, Sara
4146dc13-678a-4f74-a418-550f9598ca1d
Candarli, Duygu
4beb0fad-0664-499b-96aa-c2b9a33b4865
Gavins, Joanna
1ebdb07c-e407-4398-9b14-afdfe8240585
Whiteley, Sara
4146dc13-678a-4f74-a418-550f9598ca1d
Candarli, Duygu
4beb0fad-0664-499b-96aa-c2b9a33b4865

Gavins, Joanna, Whiteley, Sara and Candarli, Duygu (2021) Linguistic co-creativity and the performance of identity in the discourse of National Trust holiday cottage guestbooks. Language and Literature, 381-406. (doi:10.1177/09639470211047732).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This article reports on some of the results of a project undertaken by researchers at the University of Sheffield with The National Trust in the UK, which seeks to examine the discourse found in guestbooks located in the Trust’s holiday rental cottages. Our key interests lie in the ways in which holidaymakers perform particular identities through the stylistic choices they make when writing entries in guestbooks, the role linguistic creativity plays in these performances, and the extent to which cognitive-linguistic analysis can help us understand guestbooks as socially and conceptually complex sites of linguistic interaction. Between 2014 and 2018, we collected over 800,000 words of data from 13 holiday cottages in two popular holiday regions in the UK: the Roseland Peninsula in South East Cornwall and the Port Quin area of Northern Cornwall. Our dataset was analysed and tagged using NVivo qualitative coding software, which enables the identification of both linguistic and non-linguistic features of the discourse and makes these items searchable. In the present discussion, we use Text World Theory to explore both the situational context of this discourse, or the ‘discourse-world’, and the conceptual structures, or ‘text-worlds’, which result from linguistic interaction in the minds of participants. We suggest that the unified examination of these two interacting levels of discourse enables a holistic investigation of the pragmatic and conceptual environment which surrounds the production and reception of the guestbook discourse; the linguistic and stylistic features of the texts themselves; and the mental representations that arise from them. In particular, we present a case-study analysis of the guestbooks of Caragloose, a three-bedroomed former farmhouse in South East Cornwall, which our study found to contain levels of linguistic creativity which were exceptional in our dataset. We outline the key stylistic features of this discourse and show how one collective linguistic endeavour in particular in Caragloose fosters an exceptionally experimental style across multiple entries. We reveal how the resulting discourse, although taking place between strangers separated in both time and space, exhibits a density of creativity more commonly associated with collaborative discourse produced between intimates in a face-to-face situation.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 29 September 2021
Published date: 1 November 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 474934
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/474934
ISSN: 0963-9470
PURE UUID: 2e3fad6e-c324-42c8-90ff-a7dfd549ca7e
ORCID for Duygu Candarli: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9965-7835

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Date deposited: 07 Mar 2023 17:36
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:18

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Contributors

Author: Joanna Gavins
Author: Sara Whiteley
Author: Duygu Candarli ORCID iD

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