Big Booger wrote:My simple question is what exactly makes one sound black or white, or asian, or whatever.... I mean I can understand a foreigner or immigrant speaking with a certain accent that they inherit from their culture... but what exactly does one mean when we say "he sounds black" or "she sounds white".... I am at a total loss as to what the difference actually is.
I can get educated and uneducated. I can get high class and low class.... but when it comes to racial profiling of linguistic ability... I am just sort of ignorant. Please enlighten me.
American personalities who are black and "sound black":
- eddie murphy
- bill cosby
A good example of the contrast between the black American 'accent' and a black person speaking the American version of 'received pronunciation' is illustrated in this 10 second clip in Beverly Hills Cop:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7e3TYKOVCM0
Eddie Murphy's character makes fun of the black police officer for speaking in a dry 'white-sounding' manner.
Being black in America often means one needs to 'tone down' or completely turn off the 'black accent' in the workplace. When around other blacks, however, the 'black accent' (similar to a Southern accent) gets turned back on -- either consciously or sub-consciously.
Here we have the opposite. Hillary Clinton speaking to a largely Southern black audience -- affecting a Southern drawl:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YaDQ1vIuvZI