Article
Details
Citation
Khan K & Blackledge A (2015) 'They look into our lips': Negotiation of the citizenship ceremony as authoritative discourse. Journal of Language and Politics, 14 (3), pp. 382-405. https://doi.org/10.1075/jlp.14.3.04kha
Abstract
The British citizenship ceremony marks the legal endpoint of the naturalisation process. While the citizenship ceremony may be a celebration, it can also be a final examination. Using an ethnographically-informed case study, this article follows one candidate, ¡®W¡¯, through the naturalisation process in the UK. W is a migrant Yemeni at the end of the naturalisation process. Bakhtin¡¯s notion of ¡°ideological becoming¡± offers an analytic orientation into how competing discourses may operate. This article focuses on the role of what Bakhtin describes as ¡°authoritative discourse¡± in the citizenship ceremony, in particular the Oath/Affirmation of Allegiance which citizenship candidates are required to recite. Success in the ceremony is dependent on how individuals negotiate authoritative discourse. This study follows W and highlights the complexities and negotiations of authoritative discourse in a citizenship ceremony.
Keywords
Authoritative discourse; Bakhtin; citizenship; citizenship ceremony and ideological becoming;
Journal
Journal of Language and Politics: Volume 14, Issue 3
Status | Published |
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Publication date | 31/01/2015 |
ISSN | 1569-2159 |
eISSN | 1569-9862 |