[1] In their work, raciolinguists incorporate intersectionality in theorizing how various identities (e.g. gender, ethnicity, nationality) within a group and/or an individual influence lived experiences of race.
[5] For instance, the employment experience of African immigrants suggests that the evaluation of their accents when speaking English is rooted in the racist association of Black bodies with unintelligible speech.
[5] Languaging race also encompasses the theory of transracialization, made popular in the United States by the case of Rachel Dolezal.
This includes the development of African-American Vernacular English (AAVE) in the United States, the generational linguistic shifts of Punjabi communities in London, and the significance of pharyngeal versus depharyngealized Hebrew in Israel.
The following are some well-known scholars of raciolinguistics: William Labov, Geneva Smitherman, John Baugh, Arthur K. Spears, Donald Winford, John R. Rickford, Angela Rickford, Marcyliena Morgan, Salikoko Mufwene, Sinfree Makoni, Jane Hill, Elinor Ochs, Ana Celia Zentella, Ofelia García, Bernard Perley, Bonnie Urciuoli, Barbra Meek, Mary Bucholtz, H. Samy Alim, Awad Ibrahim, Anne Charity Hudley, Kira Hall, Cecilia Cutler, Michel Degraff, Michele Koven, Angela Reyes, Jonathan Rosa, Nelson Flores, Elaine Chun, Adrienne Lo, Jenny L. Davis, Hilary Dick, Kristina Wirtz, April Baker-Bell, Steve Black, Jennifer Roth-Gordon, Wesley Leonard, Jennifer Delfino, Krystal Smalls, Karl Swinehart, Adrienne Washington, Mariam Durrani, Suzie Telep, Kendra Calhoun, Joyhanna Yoo.