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E-grāmata: Languages and Nationalism Instead of Empires

Edited by , Edited by (St. Andrew's University, United Kingdom)
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This volume probes into the mechanisms of how languages are created, legitimized, maintained, or destroyed in the service of the extant nation-states across Central Europe.

Through chapters from contributors in North America, Europe, and Asia, the book offers an interdisciplinary introduction to the rise of the ethnolinguistic nation-state during the past century as the sole legitimate model of statehood in today’s Central Europe. The collection’s focus is on the last three decades, namely the postcommunist period, taking into consideration the effects of the recent rise of cyberspace and the resulting radical forms of populism across contemporary Central Europe. It analyzes languages and their uses not as given by history, nature, or deity but as constructs produced, changed, maintained, and abandoned by humans and their groups. In this way, the volume contributes saliently to the store of knowledge on the latest social (sociolinguistic) and political history of the region’s languages, including their functioning in respective national polities and on the internet.

Languages and Nationalism Instead of Empires

is a compelling resource for historians, linguists, and political scientists who work on Central and Eastern Europe.



This volume probes into the mechanisms of how languages are created, legitimized, maintained, or destroyed in the service of the extant nation-states across Central Europe.
Introduction
1. Language or Dialect? Nation-Building in Central Europe
2. Language and Place in Recent Eastern European Linguistic Regionalism Part
1: State Languages
3. The Russian Standard Language from the Empire Through
the Revolution and Stalinism to Perestroika
4. Attitudes to Linguistic
Accuracy among Russian-Speaking Social Media Users
5. Rethinking the
Graphization Process of the Belarusian Language in Eastern and Western
Belarus During the Interwar Period
6. Urban Oral Ukrainian of the 1920s as
Reflected in Early Soviet Literature
7. Democratizing Linguistic Forms:
Language Regulation and Diachronic Shifts in Czech
8. Script Revitalization?
Reemergence of Old Scripts Among South Slavs
9. Ideology Against Language:
The Current Situation in South Slavic Countries
10. Change and Variation in
the Bulgarian Language of Internet and Social Media Part 2: Substate
Languages
11. The Latvian (In)Dependence and the Latgalian Language Question
12. Silesian: Between Suppression in Poland and Flourishing on the Web
13.
Codification of Vojvodina Rusyn: Language Ideology in Kosteljnik's Grammar of
1923
14. Standardizing Vlach Romanian in Eastern Serbia: A Remissive Issue
Motoki Nomachi is Professor in the Slavic-Eurasian Research Center at Hokkaido University, Japan. He researches Slavic language contact and linguistic typology, alongside the Slavic micro-languages. Recently, he wrote and edited Slavic on the Language Map of Europe: Historical and Areal-Typological Dimensions (2019).

Tomasz Kamusella is Reader in Modern History at the University of St Andrews, Scotland, UK. His latest publications include Politics and the Slavic Languages (2021) and Words in Space and Time: A Historical Atlas of Language Politics in Modern Central Europe (2021).