“This marvelous book offers a fresh perspective on class formations in the 21st century. Originally a derogatory epithet for a British underclass, the term Chav was to become the moniker for a gradiently inhabitable social identity, performable and negotiable through the behaviors that make Chav personae identifiable, and eventually to undergo ever-changing forms of reanalysis and regrouping in the lives of British citizens. By carefully tracing these developments through the last two decades, this book shows that any attempt to reify class formations—by criteria of disposable income, and the like—fails utterly to account for the manner in which class identities are created and transformed through the discursive interactions in which they live.” (Asif Agha, University of Pennsylvania, USA)“Present-day cultural forms challenge the social scientist for they arise, develop, prosper, dwindle, and fade away at a speed that is at odds with the usual pace of scientific investigation and academic writing; the word and the concept of ‘chav’ designate one of these phenomena, which are meteoric yet involve millions of people, their words, and their representations, intertwining in complex ways with previous and ensuing stylistic trends. Emilia Di Martino successfully faced the challenge of the academic study of ‘chav' and provided a sophisticate account of this fleeting yet global tendency.” (Massimo Leone, Università di Torino, Italy)“Just when it seemed that everything had been said about the Chav, along comes this book to offer new insights. The author investigates the concept of Chav, tracing its origins from the early 21st Century through to a detailed analysis of current usage in Tik Tok Chav Check videos. Thought-provoking in its argument that Chav has been re-appropriated, and may hold the potential for positive re-evaluation insome contexts, the book is certain to open up new academic discussions of the Chav phenomenon.” (Susan Fox, Universität Bern, Switzerland)“Indexing CHAV offers readers a much-needed—and tremendously smart and fun—model for linguistic ethnographic research in the online-offline nexus. DiMartino zeros in on one word, “CHAV,” and exposes a world of social history, social media, and human creativity. Her exploration refreshingly adds to an understanding of language rooted in context, history, and the way people make meaning in new ways, in new media, differently, every day.” (Betsy R. Rymes University of Pennsylvania)“Emilia Di Martino’s Indexing ‘chav’ on Social Media: Transmodal Performances of Working-class Subcultures is the first comprehensive inquiry of how the ‘chav’ as a concept and figure has developed over the last two decades. Impressive in scope, this in-depth analysis provides a highly nuanced reading of ‘chav’ which challenges most established research on this notion.” (Elias le Grand, Stockholm University)
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