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Humanities LibreTexts

4.4.2.1: Code-Switching

  • Page ID
    360621

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    On the Art of Code-Switching

    In Ken Chen’s essay, “City Out of Breath,” he writes the following:

    And a week ago in Taiwan, my father had shed the most mundanely engrossing fear of any Chinese immigrant to America: his accent. He became a master of languages, all traces of self-consciousness suddenly gone from his voice. He chatted with taxi drivers and strangers about the drenching humidity or about which restaurants were good, casually code-switching to Taiwanese for jokes, Mandarin for information, and English for translation and one-word exclamations. (qtd. in Slater 45)

    Code-switching is what we all end up doing, especially in our workplaces and among people we are taught to hold in high regard, to show respect. In some languages, such as Spanish and French, you even show people you respect them by addressing them with different forms of verbs or pronouns: tu versus usted, for example. Although it’s a matter of personal choice, how you talk and write will differ from person to person or situation to situation.

    Justification

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    Photo by Bruno Figueiredo on Unsplash

    When we think of our goals as writers, we must consider what makes code-switching necessary: the consideration of genre (form or structure), audience, and purpose. We must, as the London Tube reminds us in the image above from Bruno Figueiredo, mind the GAP of our writing tasks:

    Genre

    • What form or structure should my writing take? Has the form or category of writing I’m supposed to write been assigned by the prompt?

    Audience

    • For whom am I writing? What do I know about the people I want to read my writing? What kinds of words do I use that would be engaging or appropriate for my intended audience? What might trigger or turn away potential audiences of my writing?

    Purpose

    • Why am I writing this, and what do I hope to achieve? Am I writing simply to entertain, to inform, or to persuade? How should I change my writing (code-switch) to achieve my goal?
    Note

    Another way to remind yourself about this idea is to think of your GPA (it could stand for grade point average, a key component of transferring to some universities, but now that you’ve read this, it could also remind you of genre, purpose, and audience: GPA. Clever, right?)