New Directions in Linguistic Geography
Title | New Directions in Linguistic Geography PDF eBook |
Author | Greg Niedt |
Publisher | Springer Nature |
Pages | 363 |
Release | 2022-10-12 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 9811936633 |
This collection brings together contributions from a new wave of research into language, space, and place, at the intersection of various disciplines, from geography to sociolinguistics and linguistic anthropology. The authors investigate the myriad ways that people conceive of—and thereby describe—the world around them, studying the impact these ideas have on their identities, and highlighting the tension between conflicting ontologies of space. It is a timely and invaluable new resource for researchers and students in linguistics, geography, anthropology and communication.
New Directions for Historical Linguistics
Title | New Directions for Historical Linguistics PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | BRILL |
Pages | 194 |
Release | 2020-01-29 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 900441407X |
This volume consists of revised versions of presentations given at a roundtable on “New Directions for Historical Linguistics: Impact and Synthesis, 50 Years Later” held at the 23rd International Conference on Historical Linguistics in San Antonio, Texas, in 2017, as well as an introduction by the editors. The roundtable discussed the evolution of historical linguistics since the 1966 symposium on “Directions for Historical Linguistics,” held in Austin, Texas. Six prominent scholars of historical linguistics and sociolinguistics contributed: William Labov (the only surviving author from the 1968 volume), Gillian Sankoff, Elizabeth Traugott, Brian Joseph, Sarah Thomason, and Paul Hopper (a graduate student assistant at the original symposium).
New Directions in Ghanaian Linguistics
Title | New Directions in Ghanaian Linguistics PDF eBook |
Author | Felix K. Ameka |
Publisher | |
Pages | 464 |
Release | 2002 |
Genre | Akan language |
ISBN |
Essays in honour of Florence Abena Dolphyne, M.E. Kropp Dakubu, and Alan Stewart Duthie, the "3Ds" prominently responsible for the development of Linguistics as a discipline in the University of Ghana.
The Oxford Handbook of Ritual Language
Title | The Oxford Handbook of Ritual Language PDF eBook |
Author | David Tavárez |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Pages | 625 |
Release | 2024-11-04 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 0192694081 |
This volume brings together representative case studies and surveys that explore research into ritual language, covering theoretical and methodological approaches that reflect traditional inquiries and more recent studies. This recent literature contends that ritual language hinges on the construction of authoritative ontological models about the cosmos and its inhabitants. Ritual speech also orchestrates performances that articulate representations of collective identities, and rests on the diversity of hierarchical forms of authoritative knowledge, displayed in both oblique and direct terms. Moreover, performances, texts, and narratives associated with ritual practices are closely entwined with historical accounts that navigate current memories, recast in a diversity of ways, about ancestral beings and distant or recent pasts, or delimit a terrain in which dialectical relationships with colonial hegemony and Christian indoctrination emerge to transform the social order. Ritual narrative often offers in its structure and delivery momentous representation of the social order, social institutions, social difference, and collective identities, and may also be constituted by claims about relations among species, non-human actors, and material culture. The Oxford Handbook of Ritual Language addresses foundational questions regarding the scope, structuring, use, and consequences of ritual language. The chapters examine the relationship between speakers' consciousness and verbal ritual performances, and between ritual language, hegemony, collective authority, and the social world. As the study of ritual speech hinges on extensive analyses of linguistic choices and styles, the contributors draw on data from a wide range of language groups and societies in the Americas, the Middle East, the Pacific, South Asia, and the Indian Ocean.
Expanding the Linguistic Landscape
Title | Expanding the Linguistic Landscape PDF eBook |
Author | Martin Pütz |
Publisher | Multilingual Matters |
Pages | 345 |
Release | 2018-12-20 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 1788922174 |
This book provides a forum for theoretical, methodological and empirical contributions to research on language(s), multimodality and public space, which will advance new ways of understanding the sociocultural, ideological and historical role of communication practices and experienced lives in a globalised world. Linguistic Landscape is viewed as a metaphor and expanded to include a wide variety of discursive modalities: imagery, non-verbal communication, silence, tactile and aural communication, graffiti, smell, etc. The chapters in this book cover a range of geographical locations, and capture the history, motives, uses, causes, ideologies, communication practices and conflicts of diverse forms of languages as they may be observed in public spaces of the physical environment. The book is anchored in a variety of theories, methodologies and frameworks, from economics, politics and sociology to linguistics and applied linguistics, literacy and education, cultural geography and human rights.
Title | PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Pages | 625 |
Release | |
Genre | |
ISBN | 019269409X |
The Social Differentiation of English in Norwich
Title | The Social Differentiation of English in Norwich PDF eBook |
Author | Peter Trudgill |
Publisher | CUP Archive |
Pages | 236 |
Release | 1974-02-22 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 9780521202640 |
This 1979 volume was the first to apply the principles of social linguistics within a British urban community, specifically Norwich.