The Invention of Monolingualism
Title | The Invention of Monolingualism PDF eBook |
Author | David Gramling |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing USA |
Pages | 266 |
Release | 2016-10-06 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 150131808X |
Winner of the 2018 Book Award awarded by the American Association for Applied Linguistics The Invention of Monolingualism harnesses literary studies, applied linguisitics, translation studies, and cultural studies to offer a groundbreaking investigation of monolingualism. After briefly describing what "monolingual” means in scholarship and public discourse, and the pejorative effects this common use may have on non-elite and cosmopolitan populations alike, David Gramling sets out to discover a new conception of monolingualism. Along the way, he explores how writers-Turkish, Latin-American, German, and English-language-have in recent decades confronted monolingualism in their texts, and how they have critiqued the World Literature industry's increasing hunger for “translatable” novels.
The Invention of Monolingualism
Title | The Invention of Monolingualism PDF eBook |
Author | David Gramling |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing USA |
Pages | 266 |
Release | 2016-10-06 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 1501318055 |
The first book in the humanities and social sciences to offer an extensive conceptual definition of monolingualism, based on literary, applied-linguistic, technological, and translational examples.
The Invention of Multilingualism
Title | The Invention of Multilingualism PDF eBook |
Author | David Gramling |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 277 |
Release | 2021-06-17 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 1108804624 |
Multilingualism is a meaningful and capacious idea about human meaning-making practice, one with a promising, tumultuous, and flawed present - and a future worth caring for in research and public life. In this book, David Gramling presents original new insights into the topical subject of multilingualism, describing its powerful social, economic and political discourses. On one hand, it is under acute pressure to bear the demands of new global supply-chains, profit margins, and supranational unions, and on the other it is under pressure to make way for what some consider to be better descriptors of linguistic practice, such as translanguaging. The book shows how multilingualism is usefully able to encompass complex, divergent, and sometimes opposing experiences and ideas, in a wide array of planetary contexts - fictitious and real, political and social, North and South, colonial and decolonial, individual and collective, oppressive and liberatory, embodied and prosthetic, present and past.
The Invention of Multilingualism
Title | The Invention of Multilingualism PDF eBook |
Author | David Gramling |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 277 |
Release | 2021-06-17 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 1108490301 |
Explores what multilingualism means today, in a historical moment when it is under intense discursive and technological pressure.
Linguistic Disobedience
Title | Linguistic Disobedience PDF eBook |
Author | Yuliya Komska |
Publisher | Springer |
Pages | 180 |
Release | 2018-07-13 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 3319920103 |
This book asks how we—as citizens, immigrants, activists, teachers—can counter the abuse of language in our midst. How can we take back the power of language from those who flaunt that power to silence or erase us and our fellows? In search of answers, Linguistic Disobedience recalls ages and situations that made critiquing, correcting, and caring for language essential for survival. From turn-of-the-twentieth-century Central Europe to the miseries of the Third Reich, from the Movement for Black Lives to the ongoing effort to decolonize African languages, the study and practice of linguistic disobedience have been crucial. But what are we to do today, when reactionary supremacists and authoritarians are screen-testing their own forms of so-called disobedience to quash oppositional social justice movements and their languages? Blending lyric essay with cultural criticism, historical analysis, and applied linguistics, Linguistic Disobedience offers suggestions for a hopeful pathway forward in violent times.
Learning Languages in Early Modern England
Title | Learning Languages in Early Modern England PDF eBook |
Author | John Gallagher |
Publisher | Oxford University Press, USA |
Pages | 285 |
Release | 2019-08-22 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0198837909 |
In 1578, the Anglo-Italian author, translator, and teacher John Florio wrote that English was 'a language that wyl do you good in England, but passe Dover, it is woorth nothing'. Learning Languages in Early Modern England is the first major study of how English-speakers learnt a variety of continental vernacular languages in the period between 1480 and 1720. English was practically unknown outside of England, which meant that the English who wanted to travel and trade with the wider world in this period had to become language-learners. Using a wide range of printed and manuscript sources, from multilingual conversation manuals to travellers' diaries and letters where languages mix and mingle, Learning Languages explores how early modern English-speakers learned and used foreign languages, and asks what it meant to be competent in another language in the past. Beginning with language lessons in early modern England, it offers a new perspective on England's 'educational revolution'. John Gallagher looks for the first time at the whole corpus of conversation manuals written for English language-learners, and uses these texts to pose groundbreaking arguments about reading, orality, and language in the period. He also reconstructs the practices of language-learning and multilingual communication which underlay early modern travel. Learning Languages offers a new and innovative study of a set of practices and experiences which were crucial to England's encounter with the wider world, and to the fashioning of English linguistic and cultural identities at home. Interdisciplinary in its approaches and broad in its chronological and thematic scope, this volume places language-learning and multilingualism at the heart of early modern British and European history.
Literature in Late Monolingualism
Title | Literature in Late Monolingualism PDF eBook |
Author | David Gramling |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Academic |
Pages | 0 |
Release | 2024-12-12 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN |
Monolingualism is bad; literature is good -- right? Though not in quite such simple terms, many of us still confidently associate monolingualism with closed-mindedness, political nationalism, and a general hostility to diverse knowledges and experiences of the world. In contrast, literature continues to stand allegedly unbeholden, as a symbolic beacon for expansive human expression and insight -- making meaning astride Earth's thousands of human languages. But what if this division of virtue and vice isn't quite right, leading us to overlook the uninterrupted historical and aesthetic collusion between political monolingualism and literary novels today? What if novels made in a European mould tend to be much more indebted to monolingual structures, ideologies, and styles than their publishers, and even their critics, care to acknowledge? Instead of whistling past such a discomfort, Literature in Late Monolingualism recognizes it squarely -- detailing the important ways in which many authors of contemporary novels do so too. As it turns out, these authors and their novels tend to be far less skittish than their marketers are about the vast implications of monolingualism in literature, literary critique, and civic life. Rather than rebuking monolingualism as a social vice or a personal shortcoming, authors from China Miéville to Dorthe Nors to Karin Tidbeck to Neal Stephenson investigate it dauntlessly, aiming to show us in vivid terms how monolingualism is still often calling the shots in our globalized aesthetic and political cultures today.