Linguistic Legitimacy and Social Justice
| Egile nagusia: | |
|---|---|
| Erakunde egilea: | |
| Gaia: | XX, 434 p. 49 illus. text |
| Hizkuntza: | ingelesa |
| Argitaratua: |
Cham :
Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,
2019.
|
| Edizioa: | 1st ed. 2019. |
| Gaiak: | |
| Sarrera elektronikoa: | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-10967-7 |
| Formatua: | Baliabide elektronikoa Liburua |
Aurkibidea:
- Chapter 1: Language and Other Myths: ‘Die Grenzen meiner Sprache bedeuten die Grenzen meiner Welt’
- Chapter 2: Conceptualizing the Ideology of Linguistic Legitimacy: ‘Primitive people have primitive languages and other nonsense’
- Chapter 3: African American English, Race and Language: ‘You don’t believe fat meat is greasy’
- Chapter 4: Spanglish in the United States: ‘We speak Spanglish to the dogs, to the grandchildren, to the kids’
- Chapter 5: Sign Language and the DEAF-WORLD: ‘Listening without hearing’
- Chapter 6: Yiddish, the Mame-Loshn: ‘Mensch tracht, Gott lacht’
- Chapter 7: Created and Constructed Languages: ‘I can speak Esperanto like a native’
- Chapter 8: Afrikaans, Language of Oppression to Language of Freedom: ‘Dit is ons erns’
- Chapter 9: Why Language Endangerment and Language Death Matter: ‘Took away our native tongue … And taught their English to our young’
- Chapter 10: Foreign Language Education in the US: ‘But French isn’t a real class!’
- Chapter 11: Linguistic Legitimacy, Language Rights and Social Justice: ‘No one is free when others are oppressed’.