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Lectures Against Sociolinguistics

by Rajendra Singh (Author)
©1996 Others XX, 182 Pages

Summary

Lectures Against Sociolinguistics exposes the very serious limitations of sociolinguistics as we know it. Its twelve lectures critically examine the standard sociolinguistic ways of exploring several intersections of human linguisticality and sociality (variability, inter-ethnic and cross-sex communication, language-contact, and 'native'/'non-native' speech, etc.). In addition, this book outlines a linguistically and sociologically less naïve sociolinguistics. Dr. Singh argues against correlationism and disguised culturism as sociolinguistics, and invites the next generation of linguists and sociolinguists to undertake a more responsible and meaningful study of the intersection of human linguisticality and sociality.

Details

Pages
XX, 182
Year
1996
ISBN (Softcover)
9780820430973
Language
English
Keywords
sociality variability communication speech culturism
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Frankfurt/M., Paris, Wien, 1996. XX, 182 pp.

Biographical notes

Rajendra Singh (Author)

The Author: Rajendra Singh is Professor of Linguistics at the Université de Montréal. He has published extensively on sociolinguistics, language-contact, phonology, and morphology. Dr. Singh has guest-lectured at several institutions, including the universities of Amsterdam, British Columbia, Delhi, Singapore, and Vienna. His other recently published books are Explorations in Indian Sociolinguistics (1995); and Linguistic Theory, Language-Contact, and Modern Hindustani (Peter Lang, 1995).

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Title: Lectures Against Sociolinguistics