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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Netta Avineri , Jesse HarastaPublisher: Springer Nature Switzerland AG Imprint: Springer Nature Switzerland AG Edition: 1st ed. 2021 Weight: 0.498kg ISBN: 9783030768997ISBN 10: 3030768996 Pages: 264 Publication Date: 28 September 2021 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsChapter 1. Exploring Agency, Ideology, and Semiotics of Language across Communities by Netta Avineri and Jesse HarastaPart One: Language Defining Belonging Chapter 2. Contested Hebrew: Ethnolinguistic Infusion and Metalinguistic Communities in U.S. Jewish Complementary Schools by Netta Avineri, Sarah Bunin Benor, and Nicki Greninger. Chapter 3. “Anyone who speaks just a little bit of Náhuat knows she's only babbling...” : Metapragmatic discourses on proficiency in the Náhuat language revitalization (El Salvador) by Quentin Boitel. Chapter 4. Intimate Politics and Language Revitalization in Veneto, Northern Italy by Sabina Perrino. Chapter 5. Metalinguistic discourse and ‘Grenglish’ in narratives of return migration by Jennifer Sclafani and Alexander Nikolaou. Part Two: Language as a Tool Against Erasure Chapter 6. Where the Language Appears, We Also Appear: Tehuelche Language Reclamation in Patagonia by Javier Domingo. Chapter 7. Utilization of Ethnolinguistic Infusion in the Construction of a Trifurcated Metalinguistic Community: An Example from the Kernewek (Cornish) language of Britain by Jesse Harasta. Chapter 8. Retaking Hãhãhãe: Revitalization and Reindigenization in a Context of Indigenous Erasure by Jessica Fae Nelson. Part Three: Language Mediating Relations with the State Chapter 9. ’I didn't know it was a language back then’: The ideological value of recognition among Gallo advocates in Brittany by Sandra Keller. Chapter 10. Raciolinguistic Ideologies of Spanish Speakers in a California Child Welfare Court by Jessica López-Espino. Chapter 11. The historical tie that binds: Deploying Kurdish to index ownership, authenticity, collective memory, and distinction within Kawaguchi’s Kurdish metalinguistic community by Anne Schluter Chapter 12. Reclamation and Metalinguistic Communities by Wesley Y. LeonardReviews“This volume offers both insider and outsider perspectives about metalinguistic communities, using concepts such as linguistic objectification, ethnolinguistic infusion, linguistic reindigenization, nostalgia socialization, and raciolinguistics, among others, by which speakers of minoritized languages show enthusiasm for their language and differentiate themselves from outsiders, and how outsiders differentiate against insiders—thus foregrounding speakers’ agency. Linguistic anthropologists, sociolinguists, and anyone working on language revitalization and second language acquisition will find the volume helpful.” (Olamide Eniola, Language in Society, Vol. 52 (5), 2023) Author InformationNetta Avineri is an Associate Professor of Language Teacher Education and Chair of the Intercultural Competence Committee at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey, USA. An applied linguistic anthropologist, she is the author of Research Methods for Language Teaching: Inquiry, Process, and Synthesis, co-editor of Language and Social Justice in Practice, and Series Editor for Critical Approaches in Applied Linguistics (De Gruyter Mouton). Jesse Harasta is an Associate Professor of Social Science and program director for International Studies at Cazenovia College, USA. A cultural and linguistic anthropologist, he studies the symbolic and political uses of language and language as an object (e.g. signage, font). He researches Kernewek and other European lesser-used languages. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |