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E-grāmata: Language Life in Japan: Transformations and Prospects

Edited by (University of the Ryukyus, Japan), Edited by (University of Toulouse le Mirail, France)
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Despite its monolingual self-image, Japan is multilingual and growing more so due to indigenous minority language revitalization and as an effect of migration. Besides Japan's autochthonous languages such as the Ainu and Ryukyuan languages, there are more than 75,000 immigrant children in the Japanese public education system alone who came to Japan in the 1980s and who speak more than a hundred different languages. Added to this growing linguistic diversity, the importance of English as the language of international communication in business and science especially is hotly debated.

This book analyses how this linguistic diversity, and indeed recognition of this phenomenon, presents a wide range of sociolinguistic challenges and opportunities in fundamental institutions such as schools, in cultural patterns and in social behaviours and attitudes. This topic is an important one as Japan fights to re-establish itself in the new world order and will be of interest to all those who are concerned language change, language versus dialect, the effect of modern technology on language usage, and the way national and social problems are always reflected through the prism of language.

List of illustrations
xi
List of contributors
xii
Foreword xv
Florian Coulmas
Preface xviii
1 Modern and late modern perspectives on language life in Japan
1(13)
Patrick Heinrich
Christian Galan
2 Language rights in Japan: what are they good for?
14(20)
Goro Christoph Kimura
3 Difficulties of establishing heritage language education in Uchinaa
34(16)
Patrick Heinrich
4 The emerging borderless community on the local radio in Uchinaa
50(27)
Yuko Sugita
5 Out of this world, in this world, or both? The Japanese school at a threshold
77(17)
Christian Galan
6 Japan's literacy myth and its social functions
94(15)
Hitoshi Yamashita
Patrick Heinrich
7 Standardization and de-standardization processes in spoken Japanese
109(15)
Fumio Inoue
8 Constraints on language use in public broadcasting
124(16)
Takehiro Shioda
9 Technology and the writing system in Japan
140(14)
Nanette Gottlieb
10 Modernity rewritten: linguistic landscaping in Tokyo
154(16)
Peter Backhaus
11 Language, power and politeness in business meetings in Japan
170(16)
Hiromasa Tanaka
Aya Sugiyama
12 Japanese as an international language
186(16)
Tessa Carroll
13 Prospects and prerequisites for a Japanese third-way language policy in Japan
202(16)
Takao Katsuragi
Bibliography 218(29)
Index 247
Patrick Heinrich is Professor at Dokkyo University, Japan.

Christian Galan is Professor at the University of Toulouse-le Mirail/Center of Japanese Studies (INALCO, Paris), France.