CODESWITCHING IN NEWSPAPER DISCOURSE: A CASE OF CRAZY MONDAY ARTICLES IN THE STANDARD NEWSPAPER
Keywords:
Codeswitching, codemixing, newspaper, discourse, CAT (Communication Accommodation Theory)Abstract
In Kenya, the codeswitching phenomenon is prevalent in everyday conversation and mass-crafted discourses
because many people are multilingual. These communicators have varied language choices to make due to the
multi-ethnic nature of our social background. As codeswitching has found its way into the language of
newspaper, this study sought to establish the motivation for codeswitching in Crazy Monday Articles in the
Standard Newspaper in Kenya. The data for this study was collected between 2013 and 2014 and was primarily
obtained from codeswitched written discourse of Crazy Monday articles between the stated periods. Library
research and the internet were instrumental in the study as they provided scholarly contributions on code
switching in newspaper discourse. Purposive sampling technique was used whereby the researcher selected
codeswitched written discourse from Crazy Monday articles only. The data collected was analyzed
qualitatively using the principles of Communication Accommodation Theory (CAT) of Giles in 1973 (cited in
Giles, Coupland, & Coupland,
1991). The results show that the motivation for codeswitching are to fill a lexical gap, express identity,
solidarity, informality, economy, aesthetic effects, direct quotations and interjections