Sarah Hillewaert

Associate Professor
HSC 362 (Main), AP 334 (St. George)

Campus

Fields of Study

Areas of Interest

Research Keywords: linguistic responses to globalization and urbanization, language and youth culture, language ideologies and semiotic ideologies, language and religion

Research Region: Kenya, Eastern Africa and the Indian Ocean World

Biography

My research focuses on the range of ways in which young people negotiate social relations and positions in contexts of social change and globalization. More specifically, it investigates the linguistic and semiotic strategies youth deploy to express their orientations to development, modernity, religion, heritage, and tradition.

My work on Lamu (Kenya) discusses how young people use accents and language mixing as well as bodily comportment and greeting styles to negotiate new sets of social and economic relationships and altering understandings of moral personhood. Through an analysis of their daily practices, I demonstrate that young people do not leave norms of propriety behind, but are in fact concerned with what it means to be a virtuous person in a rapidly changing society.

My newer research looks at how young people’s notions of religious identity and historical conceptions of global interconnectivity along the Swahili coast shift in tandem with emerging geopolitical positions and technological innovations. I am particularly interested in how an altered access to translocal discourses changes notions of moral communities and conceptions of belonging.

Education

Ph.D. (University of Michigan, 2013)

Teaching interests and responsibilities

Linguistic anthropology
Semiotic anthropology
Anthropology of Islam
Studies of youth Culture

Affiliations

Society for Linguistic Anthropology
American Anthropological Association
African Studies Association

Major Awards and Grants

2013 Engaged Anthropology Grant, Wenner-Gren Foundation
2011 Mary Malcomson Raphael Fellowship, Center for the Education of Women (University of Michigan)
2011 Sylvia “Duffy” Engle Graduate Student Fellow, Institute for the Humanities, University of Michigan
2008 Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research, fieldwork grant Wenner Gren Foundation
2007 National Science Foundation Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant in Anthropology and Linguistics

Publications

2016  Whoever leaves their traditions is a slave. Contemporary notions of servitude in an East African townAfrica (Journal of the International African Institute)  86.3: 425-446.

2016   Tactics and Tactility: A Sensory Semiotics of Handshakes in Coastal KenyaAmerican Anthropologist 118(1): 49-66.

2015    Writing with an Accent: Orthographic Practice, Emblems, and Traces on FacebookJournal of Linguistic Anthropology 25(2): 195-214.

2011   The Ideological Motivations for Language Change: The Loss of Dialectical Variation and Identity among the Swahili Speaking People of the Kenya Coast. In Rocha Chimera, Mohamed Karama, et al (eds) Kiswahili Research and Development in Eastern Africa. Mombasa: National Museum of Kenya. pp. 131-151.

2009    Do Dictionary Users Really Look Up Frequent Words? – On the Overestimation of the Value Of Corpus-based Lexicography. de Schryver Gilles-Maurice, David Joffe, Pitta Joffe and Sarah Hillewaert. In Lexicography. Bangalore: Icfai University Press.

2006    Do Dictionary Users Really Look Up Frequent Words? – On the Overestimation of the Value of Corpus-based Lexicography. de Schryver Gilles-Maurice, David Joffe, Pitta Joffe and Sarah Hillewaert Lexikos 16 (Afrilex 16)

2006    Grenzen aan de Solidariteit, (Boundaries to Solidarity). Jan Blommaert, Kristel Beyens, Henk Meert, Sarah Hillewaert, Kristof Verfaillie, Karen Stuyck & Anke Dewilde Gent: Academia Press (2006)

Graduate Students