π subnode [[@luciana/language and superdiversity]]
in π node [[language-and-superdiversity]]
Language and Superdiversity
- artΓculo de [[Jan Blommaert]] y [[Ben Rampton]] de 2011
- Superdiversity supposes a paradigm shift that sociolinguistics and linguistic anthropology are ready to study
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This paper will:
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define superdiversity
- from multiculturalism to superdiversity
- emerges from globalization and migration
- social, cultural and linguistic diversity
- increase in the categories of migrants (nationality, ethnicity, language, religion, motives, patterns, itineraries of migration, etc.)
- influenced by the Internet : new media and technologies of communication
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Example: text written in two form of Chinese: a mixture of two different scripts found in different parts of Chinese-speaking territories:
- suggests that addressee and addressed are from different origins
- suggests that the producer is learning the addressee's script
- suggests the change from traditional to a new diaspora which originates in the PRC
- suggests that such diaspora takes place in peripheral places too
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there are distinctive communicative processes in migration and studying them can make contributions to the debates about superdiversity
- people are still connected to their communities of origin
- host communities are involved in these transnational connections
- changes in both the material world and ways of life
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define the most important theoretical and methodological developments in language study:
- sociolinguistics has evolved with the humanities and social sciences
- before, homogeneity, stability and boundedness; Now: mobility, mixing political dynamics and historical embedding
- though these ideas are not new, the ideas they seek to displace are still very much at work
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denaturalization of named, distinct languages
- named languages are an ideological construct which serves the ideal of nation-estate
- however the idea of language as bounded systems linked to bounded communities continues to be taken for granted in our institutions and even sociolinguistic studies which aim at questioning it
- although the traditional idea of language is useful or functional in ways the most interesting analysis emerges when the variety of feature combinations
- with the notion of language the notion of nation, people and speech community to be deconstructed
- idealized speaker versus more flexible group
- inequality and innovation: normativity
- the communicative event is only possible interaction context
- instead, variable resources picked up along an individual's trajectory: linguistic repertoire
- the focus is on the way people use different linguistic forms in different contexts
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linguistic is one semiotic among many:
- communicative practice
- attention turns to indexicality (connotation of choices)
- meaning is multimodal
- non-shared knowledge replaces the idea of common ground between speakers
- the idea of negotiation is questioned
- focus on creativity
- reflection on language
- mobility of texts
- comtext is multi layered and multi scalar
- traditionally macro components are found at the micro level
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methodologically, this means:
- investigation of the context
- analysis of internal organisation of semiotic data
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Defines a research agenda influenced by ethnography
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why is linguistic ethnography useful?
- alternative to structuralism's definitive constructs, suggests directions
- ideologies are also important
- sociolinguistic economy: different speech forms are valued and others are not, thus language plays a role in stratification
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what are the priorities?
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need for cumulative comparison
- as an objective in theory
- as a resource for practical intervention
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need for cumulative comparison
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why is linguistic ethnography useful?
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define superdiversity
π stoas
- public document at doc.anagora.org/language-and-superdiversity
- video call at meet.jit.si/language-and-superdiversity