介绍
This volume examines the complex processes and practices of multilingualism in a wide range of economically, culturally, politically, and geographically peripheral sites and spaces in different locations. Using approaches that draw on sociolinguistics, ethnography, and discourse studies, leading scholars investigate different peripheral minority language sites, ranging from Arctic territories to a busy airport in Wales. The volume brings together these different contexts and approaches in order to explore what possible commonalities and differences might arise from processes of peripheralizing and centralizing in multilingual minority language sites. The volume aims to open up new ways of thinking and theorizing about multilingualism, about centres and peripheries, and challenges existing notions of straightforward power relations (e.g. majority-minority; center-periphery etc.). All of the contributors question assumptions about peripheries as less fortunate counterparts to prosperous centres, and suggest instead that peripheries are diverse, multilingual spaces, constructed by but, crucially, constitutive to centres.
Sari Pietikäinen is Professor of Discourse Studies at the Department of Languages, University of Jyväskylä, Finland.
Helen Kelly-Holmes is Lecturer in Sociolinguistics and New Media at the University of Limerick, Ireland.
目录
Acknowledgements v
Contributors vii
1. Multilingualism and the Periphery 1
Sari Pietikäinen and Helen Kelly-Holmes
2. Repositioning the Multilingual Periphery: Class, Language, and Transnational Markets in Francophone Canada 17
Monica Heller
3. What Makes Art Acadian? 35
Mireille McLaughlin
4. Tourism and Gender in Linguistic Minority Communities 55
Joan Pujolar
5. Heteroglossic Authenticity in Sámi Heritage Tourism 77
Sari Pietikäinen
6. Linguistic Creativity in Corsican Tourist Context 95
Alexandra Jaffe and Cedric Oliva
7. ‘Translation in Progress’: Centralizing and Peripheralizing Tensions in the Practices of Commercial Actors in Minority Language Sites 118
Helen Kelly-Holmes
8. Welsh Tea: The Centring and Decentring of Wales and the Welsh Language 133
Nikolas Coupland
9. The (De-)Centring Spaces of Airports: Framing Mobility and Multilingualism 154
Adam Jaworski and Crispin Thurlow
10. The Career of a Diacritical Sign: Language in Spatial Representations and Representational Spaces 199
Brigitta Busch
11. The Peripheral Multilingualism Lens: A Fruitful and Challenging Way Forward? 222
Helen Kelly-Holmes and Sari Pietikäinen
Index 229