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Speaking from the Margin

Global English from a European Perspective

by Anna Duszak (Volume editor) Urszula Okulska (Volume editor)
©2004 Conference proceedings 296 Pages

Summary

The papers in this volume analyze the language situation under globalization in several European countries. How does the spread of Global English affect the integrity of the local systems? Changes in lexical and discursive repertories are evidenced and discussed. It is shown how new social identities are linguistically constructed and redefined in the social consciousness of the various local communities. The authors see globalization as a major change-in-progress that sets in relief the dual capacity of language: communication and identification. The collection reconciles empirical data analysis with profound attention to a host of theoretical issues, such as a new ecology for language under globalization or a new interdiscursivity of globalizing communications. It is argued that globalization-as-recontextualization of meanings poses a serious challenge for a new science of language. The spatial imagery of center-margin is chosen to expound on the complex interaction between the global and the local. The concept of a glocal view on language affords a new perspective for coping with massive linguistic change.

Details

Pages
296
Year
2004
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631526637
Language
English
Keywords
Englisch Europa globalization language borrowing multilingual discourses Aufsatzsammlung Verkehrssprache
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2004. 296 pp., num. fig. and tables

Biographical notes

Anna Duszak (Volume editor) Urszula Okulska (Volume editor)

The Editors: Anna Duszak is Professor of Linguistics at the Institute of Applied Linguistics, Warsaw University. Her research interests include text linguistics, discourse analysis and cross-cultural communication. She is the author of over fifty publications. Urszula Okulska is a lecturer at the Institute of Applied Linguistics, Warsaw University. She holds a Ph.D. degree (2000) in English linguistics from the School of English, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań. The main fields of her professional interests include historical linguistics, contemporary and historical sociolinguistics, pragmatics, corpus linguistics, gender studies, and political discourse.

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Title: Speaking from the Margin