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E-grāmata: Linguistic Choices in the Contemporary City: Postmodern Individuals in Urban Communicative Settings

Edited by (Ca Foscari University, Italy), Edited by (Charles University, Czech Republic), Edited by
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Linguistic Choices in the Contemporary City focuses on how individuals navigate conversation in highly diversified contexts and provides a broad overview of state of the art research in urban sociolinguistics across the globe. Bearing in mind the impact of international travel and migration, the book accounts for the shifting contemporary studies to the workings of language choices in places where people with many different backgrounds meet and exchange ideas. It specifically addresses how people handle language use challenges in a broad range of settings to present themselves positively and meet their information and identity goals.

While a speakers experience runs like a thread through this volume, the linguistic, cultural and situational focus is as broad as possible. It runs from the language choices of Chinese immigrants to Beijing and Finnish immigrants to Japan to the use of the local lingua franca by motor taxi drivers in Ngaoundéré, Cameroon, and how Hungarian students in their dorm rooms express views on political correctness uninhibitedly. As it turns out, language play, improvisation, humour, lies, as well as highly marked subconscious pronunciation choices, are natural parts of the discourses, and this volume provides numerous and extensive examples of these techniques. For each of the settings discussed, the perspective is taken of personalised linguistic and extra-linguistic styles in tackling communicative challenges. This way, a picture is drawn of how postmodern individuals in extremely different cultural and situational circumstances turn out to have strikingly similar human behaviours and intentions.

Linguistic Choices in the Contemporary City is of interest to all those who follow theoretical and methodological developments in this field. It will be of use for upper level students in the fields of Sociolinguistics, Pragmatics, Linguistic Anthropology and related fields in which urban communicative settings are the focus.
List of Tables

List of Figures

List of Contributors

1. Introducing city people and their communicative challenges

Part I. Innovative language uses

2. Marginal spaces in small urban areas: Evidence from a refugee centre in
Southern Italy

3. Urban Language Practices Online? Multilingualism among German-Namibians in
Computer-Mediated Communication

4. Motorcycle taxi drivers in Ngaoundéré, Cameroon: Communication in a
diffuse multilingual setting.

Part II. Competing identities

5. Language Choices and Language Identities of Finns in Japan

6. PC goes East-Central Europe: Enregistering politically correct language in
Budapest university dormitories

7. The Haarlem Legend: The unpredictable formation of a national language
norm

8. The sociolinguistic situation in Hradec Krįlové, the best researched town
in the Czech Republic

Part III. Multilingual strategies

9. The social linguistic soundscape and its influence on language choice in
Stornoway

10. Bilingualism, ideology and identity: Change in the Finland-Swedish
variety

11. Trasyanka as a dying phenomenon of urban speech in the city of Minsk

12. Language problems in interactions between locals and foreign tourists in
the city of Prague: A language management study

Part IV. Linguistic Landscapes

13. Non-identical twins: monolingual bias and linguistic landscapes of the
twin cities of Ivangorod/Narva

14. Nothing personal, just business: individuals as actors in changing
monolingual linguistic landscapes in Vyborg, Russia

15. Behind the linguistic landscape: An interview-based study of business
owners reasons for choosing business names in the German city of Mainz

Part V. Global processes and sound change

16. Rhotics Frequency In Beijing

17. Reacting to urbanization in Morocco: New language practices, old
discourses?

18. The dynamic sociophonetics of Bulgarian /l/: The quiet transition from
[ l] to [ ]

Index
Dick Smakman is an Assistant Professor at the Leiden University Centre for Linguistics in the Netherlands. He specialises in the sociolinguistics and sociophonetics of both first-language use and second language acquisition and use.

Jiķ Nekvapil is an Associate Professor at Charles University in Prague. His specific research interests lie in the issues of language interaction, Language Management Theory, language diversity in multinational companies and the ethnomethodologically based analysis of media discourse.

Kapitolina Fedorova is a Professor of Russian Studies at Tallinn University in Estonia. Her research interests include language contacts, intercultural communication, migration and border studies, and register variation in everyday communication.