Dr. Sharese King is a sociolinguist interested in the relationship between race, place, and language variation. She explores how African Americans use language to construct multidimensional identities and how these constructions are perceived and evaluated across different listener populations. Drawing on both ethnographic and experimental techniques, her work explores both the linguistic construction of race and the ways in which language is racialized. To date, she has done fieldwork in both Bakersfield, California and Rochester, New York.
Recent Publications
Selected Articles/Chapters:
- King, S. (2020). "To appear. From African American Vernacular English to African American Language: Rethinking Race and Language in the Study of African Americans’ Speech." Annual Review Linguistics: Vol. 6.
- King, S. & Rosa, J. (2019). "Forging New Ways of Hearing Diversity: The Politics of Linguistic Heterogeneity in the Work of John Rickford." The Roundtable Companion to John Russell Rickford. Routledge Press.
- Rickford, J. R. & King. S. (2016). "Language and linguistics on trial: Hearing Rachel Jeantel (and other vernacular speakers) in the Courtroom and Beyond." Language, 92(4), 948-988.
- King, S. (2016). "On the negotiation of racial and regional identities: Vocalic Variation in African Americans from Bakersfield." University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics, Vol. 22: Iss. 2, Article 12. 100-110.
2019-2020 Course Offerings
Language in Society (LING 26002) - Spring 2020
This course is an introduction to sociolinguistics, the study of language in its social context. We will look at variation at all levels of language and how this variation constructs and is constructed by identity and culture, including relationships between language and social class, language and gender, and language and ethnicity. We will also discuss language attitudes and ideologies, as well as some of the educational, political, and social repercussions of language variation and standardization.
2020-2021 Course Offerings
Race, Ethnicity, and Language (LING 23650/LING 33650) - Autumn 2020
This course explores definitions of race and ethnicity, asking how both are socially constructed through structures and institutions, as well as interpersonally. Further, we explore what linguistics can tell us about race and how language is used to racialize to individuals.
Language in Society (LING 26002) - Spring 2021
This course is an introduction to sociolinguistics, the study of language in its social context. We will look at variation at all levels of language and how this variation constructs and is constructed by identity and culture, including relationships between language and social class, language and gender, and language and ethnicity. We will also discuss language attitudes and ideologies, as well as some of the educational, political, and social repercussions of language variation and standardization.
Seminar on Race and Place (LING 51350) - Spring 2021
In this seminar we explore the relationship between race and place, honing in on the question of how race dynamics have affected linguistic variation in the Chicago landscape. We examine sociohistorical texts on the migration of African Americans to Chicago, while also drawing data collected in the region to answer the aforementioned question.