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Baugh.jpg John Baugh
Title:Margaret Bush Wilson Professor in Arts & Sciences
Director, African & African American Studies
Professor of Anthropology
Professor of Education
Professor of Psychology
Professor of English
Degree:PHD, University of Pennsylvania
MSSH, University of Pennsylvania
BA, Temple University
Dept:
American Culture Studies
Anthropology
Education
English

Psychology
Office:McMillan Hall 224
Mailbox: Full Mailing Address
Phone:(314) 935-8556
E-mail:jbaugh@wustl.edu

Courses
The Linguistic Legacy of the African Slave Trade in Interdisciplinary Perspective

Research Interests
Sociolinguistics; Language, Equity and Environmental Change; Linguistic Profiling; Econolinguistics.

Professor Baugh's primary research interest has been the social stratification of linguistic behavior in multicultural and multilingual nations. Initial interest in this area began with quantitative and experimental studies of linguistic variation among African Americans. These studies evolved into applied linguistic research devoted to policy issues in medicine, education, and law. Gradually his analyses expanded to include populations who suffered various forms of linguistic discrimination, including deaf communities, as well as speakers of languages or dialects who lack fluency in the dominant linguistic norms of their respective societies.

Most of Professor Baugh's research is interdisciplinary, drawing extensively upon related work in the fields of anthropology, ethnography, linguistics, and sociology. These experimental investigations are tailored to have practical applications whenever possible. Recently he has conducted studies of linguistic profiling over the telephone, where callers seeking housing or other goods and services face discrimination due to stereotypes about their speech. Very often these discriminatory acts have legal implications in civil and criminal court cases.

In addition to his linguistic research, Professor Baugh directs the African and African American Studies program, which strives to advance distinguished scholarship of and by people of African descent regardless of academic discipline. These administrative duties are collaborative and involve scholars and students across Washington University who work to advance teaching, scholarship, and public service throughout the African Diaspora.

Selected Publications
1983 Black Street Speech: Its History, Structure and Survival. Austin : University of Texas Press.

1999 Out of the Mouths of Slaves: African American Language and Educational Malpractice. Austin: University of Texas Press.

2000 Beyond Ebonics: Linguistic Pride and Racial Prejudice. New York : Oxford University Press.

In Press (with H. Samy Alim) Black Language, Education, and Social Change. New York : Teachers College Press.