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Language standardization 'from above'

Authors :
R. Vosters
J. Bellamy
W. Ayres-Bennett
G.J. Rutten
Ayres-Bennett, W.
Bellamy, J.
Ayres-Bennett, Wendy
Bellamy, John
Brussels Centre for Urban Studies
Brussels Platform for Digital Humanities
Linguistics and Literary Studies
Brussels Institute for Applied Linguistics
Centre for Linguistics
Source :
The Cambridge Handbook of Language Standardization ISBN: 9781108559249, Cambridge Handbooks in language and linguistics, Cambridge Handbooks in language and linguistics, 65-92. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, STARTPAGE=65;ENDPAGE=92;TITLE=Cambridge Handbooks in language and linguistics
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press, 2021.

Abstract

Language standardization ‘from above’ occurs in situations in which language authorities seek to disseminate a standardized variety across a speech and writing community. Hence, the crucial aspect of language standardization ‘from above’ is implementation, in Haugen’s terminology. In the history of many European languages, standardization ‘from above’ is a Late Modern phenomenon, closely tied to the rise of standard language ideology in the eighteenth century. In this chapter, we first define language standardization ‘from above’, situating it in the sociohistorical context of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Arguing that the sociolinguistic situation at the time can be described as diaglossic, we claim that language standardization ‘from above’ is a top-down effort to reorganize the sociolinguistic condition in terms of standard and non-standard. We then discuss various instruments of implementation, encompassing both private and official language planning activities such as usage guides, language academies, professorships in ‘national’ languages, language laws and educational reforms. Finally, we zoom in on the effects of implementation, distinguishing between discursive and linguistic effects (i.e. changing patterns of language use under the influence of standardization ‘from above’). Our examples are mainly taken from the Dutch situation, while also incorporating examples from English, German, French and Spanish.

Details

Language :
English
ISBN :
978-1-108-55924-9
ISBNs :
9781108559249
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Cambridge Handbook of Language Standardization ISBN: 9781108559249, Cambridge Handbooks in language and linguistics, Cambridge Handbooks in language and linguistics, 65-92. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, STARTPAGE=65;ENDPAGE=92;TITLE=Cambridge Handbooks in language and linguistics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....17cb870f8ba1cab1a35e66dc9ff55208