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E-grāmata: Languages in Contact

(The University of Hong Kong), (The University of Hong Kong)
  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Sērija : Key Topics in Sociolinguistics
  • Izdošanas datums: 29-Sep-2015
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781316429877
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  • Cena: 32,11 €*
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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Sērija : Key Topics in Sociolinguistics
  • Izdošanas datums: 29-Sep-2015
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781316429877

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Introducing new findings from popular culture, the globalised new economy and computer-mediated communication, this is a fascinating study of contact between languages in modern societies. Ansaldo and Lim bring together research on multilingualism, code-switching, language endangerment, and globalisation, into a comprehensive overview of world Englishes and creoles. Illustrated with a wide range of original examples from typologically diverse languages, including Sinitic, Autronesian, Dravidian and other non-Indo-European varieties, the book focuses on structural analyses of Asian ecologies and their relevance for current theories of contact phenomena. Full of new insights, it is essential reading for students and researchers across linguistics, culture and communication.

Introducing new insights from popular culture, the globalised new economy and computer-mediated communication, this is a fascinating study of contact between languages in modern societies. Ansaldo and Lim bring together findings on multilingualism, code-switching, language endangerment, and globalisation, into a comprehensive overview of world Englishes and creoles.

Recenzijas

'Well-informed, timely, and unique in its focus on a wide variety of language contacts in an ever more globalized Asia.' Armin Schwegler, University of California, Irvine 'It is refreshing that Lim and Ansaldo's project is less a textbook on creolistics, of which the discipline does not need another instalment, and rather a summation of the field. It is a critical distillation of significant issues and debates in creole studies integrated within a more modern sociolinguistics involving research into multilingualism, code switching, language shift, and language and globalisation.' Joshua Nash, Languages in Contrast

Papildus informācija

This fascinating study of languages in contact introduces new insights from popular culture, the globalised new economy and computer-mediated communication.
List of figures
vii
List of tables
viii
Preface ix
Acknowledgements xi
List of abbreviations
xiv
1 Perspectives on contact
1(26)
1.1 Introduction
1(4)
1.2 Contact phenomena
5(9)
1.3 The Asian perspective
14(2)
1.4 Globalisation and contact
16(9)
1.5 Languages in contact for today's scholar
25(2)
2 Contact and code choice
27(32)
2.1 Introduction
27(6)
2.2 Allocating languages in society
33(7)
2.3 Code switching
40(4)
2.4 Mixed code as default
44(5)
2.5 Mixing for meaning
49(8)
2.6 Concluding remarks
57(2)
3 Contact and Creole formation
59(21)
3.1 Introduction
59(1)
3.2 Focus on Universal Grammar
60(2)
3.3 Focus on lexifiers
62(2)
3.4 Focus on substrates
64(1)
3.5 Focus on transfer in second language acquisition
65(4)
3.6 Discussion
69(9)
3.7 Concluding remarks
78(2)
4 Contact and language evolution
80(22)
4.1 Introduction
80(1)
4.2 The Creole Prototype
80(4)
4.3 The evolutionary approach
84(5)
4.4 Contact language formation in evolutionary terms
89(10)
4.5 Concluding remarks
99(3)
5 Contact and ecology
102(27)
5.1 Introduction
102(1)
5.2 Discourse particles
103(15)
5.3 Tone
118(7)
5.4 Reflections on the significance of ecology
125(4)
6 Contact and shift
129(30)
6.1 Introduction
129(3)
6.2 Language shift
132(8)
6.3 Language endangerment
140(7)
6.4 The case of Sri Lanka Malay
147(7)
6.5 Concluding remarks
154(5)
7 Contact and globalisation
159(28)
7.1 Introduction
159(2)
7.2 Contact outcomes of computer-mediated communication
161(8)
7.3 Contact opportunities in the globalised new economy
169(10)
7.4 Contact in globalised urban and rural populations
179(2)
7.5 Contact in popular culture
181(4)
7.6 Reflections on globalisation and contact
185(2)
8 Reflections and future directions
187(18)
8.1 The state of our field
187(3)
8.2 Ongoing debates
190(6)
8.3 Current and future directions
196(6)
8.4 Concluding remarks
202(3)
References 205(29)
Index 234
Lisa Lim is Assistant Professor and Coordinator of the Language and Communication programme at the University of Hong Kong. She co-edited The Typology of Asian Englishes (2009) and English in Multilingual, Globalising Asia (2009). She has developed the online resource LinguisticMinorities.HK, for which she won the Faculty Knowledge Exchange Award 2014. Umberto Ansaldo is Professor in Linguistics at the University of Hong Kong. His book Contact Languages: Ecology and Evolution (Cambridge, 2009) garnered the 2010 faculty research output award. He is co-editor of the Creole Language Library and editor-in-chief of Language Sciences.