People

Dr Amanda Cole

Lecturer
Department of Language and Linguistics
Dr Amanda Cole
  • Email

  • Telephone

    +44 (0) 1206 873754

  • Location

    4.123, Colchester Campus

  • Academic support hours

    Mondays 10am-12pm

Profile

Biography

I work in the field of sociolinguistics. My research interests include language variation and change, language attitudes and ideologies, perceptual dialectology, and social meaning. My work focusses specifically on the accents spoken in South East England. For instance, I have researched the influence of the Cockney accent in Essex. I have also worked on accent bias in South East England and how this relates to social factors such as social class and gender. I am also interested in policy and media engagement in relation to language in society. I am open to supervising students in the fields of sociolinguistics, sociophonetics, language attitudes and ideologies, sociophonetics.

Research and professional activities

Research interests

Language Attitudes

Open to supervise

Sociolinguistics

Open to supervise

Language Variation and Change

Open to supervise

Sociophonetics

Open to supervise

Conferences and presentations

Accent the Positive: An investigation into children's implicit attitudes towards different regional accents

New Ways of Analyzing Variation 50 (NWAV50) conference, Stanford, United States, 15/10/2022

The search for linguistically coherent accents: unsupervised clustering of diphthong variation in Southeast England

New Ways of Analyzing Variation 50 (NWAV50) conference, Stanford, United States, 15/10/2022

Exploring the role of face-to-face and online interactions in rates of accent change for university students during the COVID-19 pandemic

Language Variation and Change in the South of England, Univesity of Suffolk, Ipswich, UK, 22/4/2022

A speaker of Cockney, Estuary English, Essex, MLE, SSBE or RP? Demarcating distinct accents from patterns of language variation and change in South East England

Invited presentation, Keynote presentation, Language Variation and Change in the South of England, Ipswich, United Kingdom, 22/4/2022

Language attitudes towards speech stimuli and geographic locations in South East England: Britain’s hierarchy of accents continues to disadvantage the working class and/or ethnic minority speakers

The International Conference on Language Variation in Europe 11 (ICLaVE11), Vienna, Austria, 12/4/2022

What counts as an accent? Unsupervised clustering of diphthong variation in South East England

The 2022 Colloquium of the British Association of Academic Phoneticians (BAAP2022), York, United Kingdom, 5/4/2022

I vs. /aI/

Word-specific phenomena in the realization of vowel categories: methodological and theoretical perspectives workshop at LabPhon 17, 1/10/2021

Patterns of dialect levelling in South East England: the role of social factors in a geographic identification task

UK Language Variation and Change 13 (UKLVC13), Glasgow, United Kingdom, 9/9/2021

Individuals vs. community and vowels vs. vowel systems: the case of Cockney diphthong shift reversal in Essex

UK Language Variation and Change 13 (UKLVC13), Glasgow, United Kingdom, 8/9/2021

The perceived hierarchy of accents in South East England: disambiguating socio-demographic and geographic factors

The Sixth International Conference of the International Society for the Linguistics of English (ISLE6), Joensuu, Finland, 4/6/2021

Class-based, linguistic distinctions in Southeast England: the role of technology in aggregating perceptual dialectology data

New Ways of Analyzing Variation 48 (NWAV48) conference, United States, 11/10/2019

The PRICE-MOUTH crossover in the “Cockney diaspora”

9th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences (ICPhS2019), Melbourne, Australia, 6/8/2019

Publications

Journal articles (7)

Cole, A. and Strycharczuk, P., (2023). The search for linguistically coherent accents: Unsupervised clustering of diphthong variation in Southeast England. English World-Wide: a journal of varieties of English. 95 (1), 129-129

Cole, A. and Tieken-Boon van Ostade, I., (2022). Haagse Harry, a Dutch chav from The Hague? The enregisterment of similar social personas in different speech communities. International Journal of Language and Culture. 9 (1), 72-96

Cole, A., (2022). Cockney moved East: the dialect of the first generation of East Londoners raised in Essex. Dialectologia et Geolinguistica. 30 (1), 91-114

Cole, A. and Evans, BG., (2021). Phonetic variation and change in the Cockney Diaspora: The role of place, gender, and identity. Language in Society. Online (5), 641-665

Cole, A., (2021). Disambiguating language attitudes held towards socio-demographic groups and geographic areas in South East England. Journal of Linguistic Geography. 9 (1), 13-27

Cole, A. and Strycharczuk, P., (2021). Dialect levelling and Cockney diphthong shift reversal in South East England: the case of the Debden Estate. English Language and Linguistics. 26 (4), 621-643

Cole, A., (2020). Co-variation and social meaning: the implicational relationship between (H) and (ING) in Debden, Essex. Language Variation and Change. 32 (3), 349-371

Conferences (4)

Cole, A., Identifications of Speaker Ethnicity in South-East England: Multicultural London English as a Divisible Perceptual Variety

Cole, A., Crowdsourced Participants’ Accuracy at Identifying the Social Class of Speakers from South East England

Cole, A. and Strycharczuk, P., (2023). Evaluating the role of self-description in demarcating accents

Cole, A. and Strycharczuk, P., (2019). The PRICE-MOUTH crossover in the "Cockney diaspora"

Other (1)

Cole, A. and Clayton, D., (2023).New Directions: A Level English Language research and resource pack,English & Media Centre

Grants and funding

2023

Training on Accent Bias for LinkedIn North America Employees

LinkedIn Technology UK Ltd

Accentism and Linguistic Variation Impact Leave

University of Essex (QR Impact Fund)

2022

Accent Bias for LinkedIn staff

LinkedIn Technology UK Ltd

Contact

amanda.cole@essex.ac.uk
+44 (0) 1206 873754

Location:

4.123, Colchester Campus

Academic support hours:

Mondays 10am-12pm