dc.description.abstract | Starting from the assumption that iconicity, as a means of narration, is prevalent
in circumstances in which a new language is invented, the paper investigates the
anti-language (Halliday, 1978) of rap music, considered as a performed narrative
genre belonging to the long-standing African American oral tradition. As they vividly
describe the social conditions and the plight of urban young blacks, most rap
songs, in fact, offer powerful narratives of inner-city life, which are to be taken into
consideration in a sociolinguistic perspective, both in their narrative structure and
in the language used.
The analysis, which is pragmatic, is based on a corpus of one hundred songs,
collected from 1979 (the year of the first rap record release) up to nowadays. The
iconic use of idiophones, alphabetic letters, onomatopoeia, rhyme, metonymy, eye
dialect and word-formation processes will be discussed, in an attempt to investigate
the extent to which iconicity is a driving force towards lexicalization, but also
to what extent the iconic one-to-one principle is violated by individual reinterpretations
due to the interaction between author and listener. | en_US |