In the past twenty years the existence of a sense of ethnic belonging
among immigrant groups of European ancestry in the United States has
become the focus of frequent debates and polemics. This article argues
that ethnicity cannot be understood if it is abstracted from concrete
social practices, and that analyses of this construct need to be based on
ethnographic observation and on the study of actual talk in interaction.
This interactionally oriented perspective is taken to present an analysis
of how Italian ethnicity is constructed as a central element in the
collective identity of an all-male card playing club. Linguistic
strategies, particularly code-switching, are central in this construction,
but their role becomes apparent only when language use is analyzed within
significant practices in the life of the club. Code-switching into Italian
is used as an important index of ethnic affiliation in socialization
practices related to the game and in official discourse addressed by the
president to club members through the association of the language with
central domains of activity.I would like to
thank two anonymous reviewers and the editor of this journal, Barbara
Johnstone, for their insightful suggestions, which have substantially
contributed to the shaping of this article.