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Language and German Disunity: A Sociolinguistic History of East and West in Germany, 1945-2000 [Hardback]

(, University of Southampton)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 288 pages, height x width x depth: 241x162x21 mm, weight: 546 g, 3 tables and 3 figures
  • Izdošanas datums: 12-Dec-2002
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0198299699
  • ISBN-13: 9780198299691
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 266,04 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 288 pages, height x width x depth: 241x162x21 mm, weight: 546 g, 3 tables and 3 figures
  • Izdošanas datums: 12-Dec-2002
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0198299699
  • ISBN-13: 9780198299691
Stevenson (German, U. of Southampton) explores the role of language in national disunity in Germany since the end of WWII. He discusses the crucial role which language has always played in constructing, challenging and dismantling social divisions in Germany, and the political embeddedness of Germans' experience of language. Turning to the first decade after unification, he examines ways in which sociolinguistic difference has been experienced by east and west Germans, their responses to its challenges, how language contributes to different kinds of eastern and western identities, and the realization of eastness and westness in public and interpersonal discourse. Annotation (c) Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

This book investigates the history of national disunity in Germany since the end of the Second World War from a linguistic perspective: what was the role of language in the ideological conflicts of the Cold War and in the difficult process of rebuilding the German nation after 1990? In the first part of the book, Patrick Stevenson explores the ways in which the idea of 'the national language' contributed to the political tensions between the two German states and to the different social experiences of their citizens. He begins by showing how the modern linguistic conflict between east and west in Germany has its roots in a long tradition of debates on the relationship between language and national identity. He then describes the use of linguistic strategies to reinforce the development of a socialist state in the GDR and argues that they ultimately contributed to its demise. The second part considers the social and linguistic consequences of unification. The author discusses the challenges imposed on east Germans by the sudden formation of a single 'speech community' and examines how conflicting representations of easterners and westerners - for example, in personal interactions, the media, and advertising - have hindered progress towards national unity. German division and re-unification were crucial to the development of Europe in the second half of the twentieth century. This fascinating account of the relationship between language and social conflict in Germany throws new light on these events and raises important questions for the study of divided speech communities elsewhere. The book will interest sociolinguists, historians, sociologists, and political scientists.

Recenzijas

Patrick Stevenson's fascinating and highly readable study...goes beyond most existing linguistic and sociolinguistic research ... The author hopes that his book will appeal to sociolinguistics, historians, sociologists, and political scientists, and indeed it will. * Ingeborg Walther, The German Quarterly * ... provides a well-written and well-argued overview of a substantial body of research on east-west sociolinguistic divergence and re-convergence in post-war Germany, which has so far been published almost exclusively in German. * Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development * Stevenson relies largely upon the research of others but his expert summaries, selections of examples and methodological commentaries make the book an authoritative one. * Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development * ... outstanding new book ... Stevenson is right at the forefront of thinking in sociolinguistics and the cognate field of linguistic anthropology ... The task, so admirably fulfilled here, is to elucidate such indexicality vis-ą-vis one of the key political and historical periods of the last century: the division an unification of Germany. * Journal of Sociolinguistics * ... outstanding book ... [ Stevenson's] book explores language in a way that interfaces with recent social, cultural and political theory, his analyses capture throughout the inherently indexical nature of language as manifest in, and through, communicative practice. * Times Higher Education Supplement * This book is ideal for not only the students of socio-linguistics but for everyone who is interested in studying language politics and understanding a linguistic fact as a political act. * Linguist List *

Preface vii
Abbreviations xi
Introduction
1(14)
Part I 1945--1990 Language, Nation, and State
Germany and the Questione della Lingua
15(40)
Political change and linguistic crises
15(9)
Language, society, and politics
24(18)
Linguistic and sociolinguistic difference
42(13)
Building and Unbuilding the GDR
55(60)
The Byzantine architecture of official discourse
55(14)
Rituality in the discourses of everyday life
69(24)
The polyphony of Wende discourses
93(22)
Part II 1990--2000 Relocating 'East' and 'West'
Conflicting Patterns in the Use and Evaluation of Language
115(71)
The linguistic challenge of unification
115(15)
Communicative dissonance
130(22)
Linguistic variation and social mobility
152(20)
Language ideologies and social discrimination
172(14)
The Discursive Construction of Difference
186(44)
Narratives of collective memory
186(12)
Representations of self and other
198(14)
Manufacturing and contesting identities
212(18)
Conclusions
230(9)
Bibliography 239(30)
Index 269


Patrick Stevenson studied at the Universities of Oxford, Sussex and Reading. He is currently Reader in German and Head of German Studies at the University of Southampton. He has published widely on many aspects of German sociolinguistics.