Atnaujinkite slapukų nuostatas

El. knyga: Pluricentricity Debate: On Austrian German and other Germanic Standard Varieties [Taylor & Francis e-book]

(The University of British Columbia, Canada)
  • Formatas: 138 pages, 5 Tables, black and white; 9 Line drawings, black and white; 15 Halftones, black and white; 24 Illustrations, black and white
  • Serija: Routledge Focus on Linguistics
  • Išleidimo metai: 03-Jun-2019
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9780429031496
  • Taylor & Francis e-book
  • Kaina: 63,69 €*
  • * this price gives unlimited concurrent access for unlimited time
  • Standartinė kaina: 90,99 €
  • Sutaupote 30%
  • Formatas: 138 pages, 5 Tables, black and white; 9 Line drawings, black and white; 15 Halftones, black and white; 24 Illustrations, black and white
  • Serija: Routledge Focus on Linguistics
  • Išleidimo metai: 03-Jun-2019
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9780429031496

This book unpacks a 30-year debate about the pluricentricity of German. It examines the concept of pluricentricity, an idea implicit to the study of World Englishes, which expressly allows for national standard varieties, and the notion of "pluri-areality," which seeks to challenge the former. Looking at the debate from three angles – methodological, theoretical, and epistemological – the volume draws on data from German and English, with additional perspectives from Dutch, Luxembourgish, Swedish, Danish and Norwegian, to establish if and to what degree "pluri-areality" and pluricentricity model various sociolinguistic situations adequately. Dollinger argues that "pluri-areality" is synonymous with "geographical variation" and as such no match for pluricentricity. Instead, "pluri-areality" presupposes an a-theoretical, supposedly "neutral", data-driven linguistics that violates basic science-theoretical principles. Three fail-safes are suggested – the uniformitarian hypothesis, Popper’s theory of falsification, and speaker attitudes – to avoid philological incompatibilities and terminological clutter. This book is of particular interest to scholars in sociolinguistics, World Englishes, Germanic languages, and linguists more generally.

List of Tables
viii
List of Figures
ix
Preface x
Acknowledgements xii
Terminological Note xiii
1 The Problem
1(9)
1.1 What Is Pluricentricity?
3(1)
1.2 What Is Pluri-Areality?
4(1)
1.3 Pluricentricity in the World
5(1)
1.4 Pluricentricity in the Germanic Languages
6(3)
1.5 An Outline of the Book
9(1)
2 Standardizing German: Concepts and Background
10(13)
2.1 Contiguous Borders vs. Sea Borders
12(2)
2.2 What's in a Name?
14(2)
2.3 The Standardization of Written German
16(4)
2.4 Abstand, Ausbau Language and "Roofing"
20(3)
3 The International Pluricentric Model
23(12)
3.1 English
25(1)
3.2 Northern Germanic
26(2)
3.3 Belgian Dutch (Flemish) and Dutch Dutch
28(4)
3.4 Luxembourgish
32(3)
4 The German "Pluri-Areal" Model
35(13)
4.1 Dialectological Context
37(1)
4.2 Pluricentric and Monocentric Models of German
38(2)
4.3 The Upper Austrian--Bavarian Border
40(2)
4.4 A Pluricentrist Turned Pluri-Arealist
42(6)
5 The Case Against Pluricentricity
48(14)
5.1 Pluricentricity and the Osterreichisches Worterbuch (OWB)
48(2)
5.2 The Charge of Ideology vs. Enregistering Identity
50(2)
5.3 The Pluri-Arealist Bias
52(2)
5.4 Reinterpreting Auer (2005)
54(4)
5.5 Pluricentricity: Outdated in a Borderless Europe vs. homo nationalist
58(4)
6 The Case Against "Pluri-Areality"
62(15)
6.1 Demystifying Pluri-Areality = "Geographical Variation"
62(2)
6.2 Atheoretical Empiricism
64(3)
6.3 The Axiom of Categoricity
67(5)
6.4 Type vs. Tokens and Social Salience
72(2)
6.5 Formulae in a Black Box
74(3)
7 The Lynchpin: Speaker Attitudes
77(16)
7.1 State Nation Austria vs. Nation State Germany
77(1)
7.2 Linguistic Insecurity
78(6)
7.3 German Mother Tongue Instruction
84(4)
7.4 Language Planning and Pedagogy
88(5)
8 Examples: Trends, Not Categoricity
93(14)
8.1 An Undetected Austrianism: Anpatzen ("Make Disreputable")
93(1)
8.2 An Unlikely Austrianism: der Tormann ("Goal Tender")
94(1)
8.3 An Even Unlikelier Austrianism: hudeln
95(6)
8.4 An Enregistered Austrianism: es geht sich (nicht) aus
101(2)
8.5 A Typology of Austrianisms
103(4)
9 Safeguards in the Modelling of Standard Varieties
107(12)
9.1 The Uniformitarian Principle: "Vertical" and "Horizontal"
109(2)
9.2 Explicit and Falsifiable Theories
111(2)
9.3 "The Speaker Is Always Right": Pedagogical Implications
113(1)
9.4 The Language-Political Angle of "Pluri-Areality"
114(2)
9.5 Considering Political Borders
116(3)
Bibliography 119(14)
Index 133
Stefan Dollinger is Associate Professor at UBC Vancouver, specializing in historical linguistics, sociolinguistics and linguistic border studies. He is the author of New-Dialect Formation in Canada (2008) and The Written Questionnaire in Social Dialectology (2015), and Chief Editor of the Dictionary of Canadianisms on Historical Principles www.dchp.ca/dchp2 (2017).