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Institution: State University of New York at Buffalo Program: Germanic Linguistics Dissertation Status: Completed Degree Date: 2004 Author: Kristine Horner Dissertation Title: Negotiating the Language-Identity Link: Media Discourse and Nation-Building in Luxembourg Linguistic Field: Discourse Analysis, Sociolinguistics, Anthropological Linguistics Subject Language: English (code: ENG), French (code: FRN), German,Standard (code: GER), Luxembourgeois (code: LUX) Dissertation Director 1: David Fertig Dissertation Director 2: Wolfgang W�lck Dissertation Director 3: Robert Hoeing Dissertation Director 4: Neil Jacobs Dissertation Abstract: The image of multilingual and multicultural Luxembourg, with its official recognition of Luxembourgish, French and German, is widely circulated on the international level. However, debates in the national arena often portray linguistic diversity and cultural pluralism as a threat to social cohesion and the continuity of the nation. This study, based on a collection of over 500 documents taken primarily from the print media, illustrates how: 1) the multiple and (seemingly) contradictory discourses that surface in language debates are inherently intertextual with other discourses, such as those about World War II and the founding of the European Union. 2) Various discursive strategies are used to construct boundaries within Luxembourg as well between Luxembourg and other European Union member-states. 3) The augmented value of Luxembourgish is discursively linked to changes in the linguistic landscape as well as to greater social, political and economic fluctuations. Since the 1970s, there have been significant developments, including the rise of the banking industry, the arrival of EU institutions and employees, and record levels of in-migration as well as border-crossing commuters: 38% of the resident population and 36% of the employment sector in the Grand Duchy is composed of non-Luxembourgish citizens. The results show that identification with Luxembourgish and/or with multilingualism is open to negotiation and is related to nation-building along ethnic and civic dimensions.Mail to author|Respond to list|Read more issues|LINGUIST home page|Top of issue