LINGUIST List 19.1356
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Tue Apr 22 2008
Review: Sociolinguistics: Ammon et al (2006)
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1. Katharina
Barbe,
Review: Sociolinguistics: Ammon et al (2006)
Message 1: Review: Sociolinguistics: Ammon et al (2006)
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Date: 22-Apr-2008
From: Katharina Barbe <kbarbe niu.edu>
Subject: Review: Sociolinguistics: Ammon et al (2006)
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Announced at http://linguistlist.org/issues/17/17-2868.html
EDITORS: Ammon, Ulrich; Dittmar, Norbert; Mattheier, Klaus J.; Trudgill, Peter TITLE: Sociolinguistics / Soziolinguistik SUBTITLE: An International Handbook of the Science of Language and Society / Ein internationales Handbuch zur Wissenschaft von Sprache und Gesellschaft PUBLISHER: Walter de Gruyter YEAR: 2006 Katharina Barbe, Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, IL SUMMARY This volume is the third part of a thematically organized encyclopedia available in hard cover as well as electronic format. As the bilingual title in English and German suggests, the entries are written in either German or English. Each contribution ends with an informative literature selection that could be a starting point for readers who desire further information. This second edition is an updated and expanded version of the first one from 1987, taking account of the fact that the. ''field has left behind its status as an interdiscipline between sociology and linguistics and is now a worldwide established field'' (http://www.degruyter.de/cont/glob/neutralMbwEn.cfm?rc=16344). Here, I will briefly give a thematic overview of the three volumes and will then discuss Volume 3 in more detail. In Volume 1, five major topics are covered, each elaborated with several articles of different lengths. These five headings are: I. The Subject Matter of Sociolinguistics (1.-13.); II. Basic Sociolinguistic Concepts (14.-41.); III. Sociological Concepts (42.-61.); IV. The Social Implications of Levels of Linguistic Analysis (62. -78.); and V. The History of Sociolinguistics (79.-88.). Volume 2 follows with VI. Neighboring Disciplines (89.-94); VII. Sociolinguistic Methodology (95.-126.); and VIII. Findings of Sociolinguistic Research (127.-168). As the final volume of the encyclopedia, Volume 3 presents IX. Regional Overview (169.-232.); X. Linguistic Change, Sociolinguistic Aspects (219.-232) and, finally, XI. Application (233.-257.). The volume ends with an Index of Subjects covering all three volumes. In the following, I will describe the book more closely by looking in-depth at a few representative entries. Ian Hancock contributes an English entry about ''Gypsy Languages / Zigeunersprachen'' (entry number 182, pages 1870-1874), where he first discusses the category 'gypsy language'. While he concludes that it is a legitimate term, because no other label exists for the language groups originating in India, he also recognizes that the term gypsy has often been romanticized. The romantic notion of the gypsy refers more to an imaginary ideal than a real homogeneous ethnic people. Actually, there are numerous different names for Middle Eastern gypsy groups. These groups have in common that they are migrants, so the commonality appears to be on the basis of behavior rather than ethnicity. Hancock notices that there is a scarcity of pertinent linguistic material. While there are lexical items the languages have in common, these could have been acquired through contact Nikolas Coupland and Virpi Ylänne's contribution in English ''The Sociolinguistics of Ageing / Soziolinguistik des Alterns'' (entry number 235, pages 2334-2340) is divided into five parts: 1. Social ageing and sociolinguistics, 2. Ageing and patronizing talk, 3. Discourse analytic studies of ageing, 4. Towards a sociolinguistics of ageism, and 5. Literature (selected). Sociolinguistics has until recently not dealt with social ageing. But for sociolinguistics to remain relevant gerontological issues need to be recognized and researched. There are two approaches, cohort shift and age grading, which are found to be inadequate. ''Sociolinguistics needs to develop a more open programme of research into social ageing'' (2337). When a discourse-based approach to ageing is chosen, it is based on the notion that age is ''socially negotiable'' (ibid.). So far the focus of sociolinguistics has been on class, race, and gender; however, ageing should not be neglected, especially because the ''social implications for youth-fetished societies which define one third of their own adult population as 'elderly' are considerable'' (2339). Helga Bister-Broosen's German contribution ''Soziolinguistik und Fremdsprachenunterricht / Sociolinguistics and Foreign Language Teaching'' (entry number 239, pages 2376-2383) discusses the importance of sociolinguistics as a factor in Foreign Language Teaching and Acquisition. The focus here is on learning a foreign language outside of the target culture within an institutional setting. Bister-Broosen's contribution broadly contains a survey of the development of methods and models in Foreign Language Teaching as well as influences of sociolinguistic research on Foreign Language Teaching. Researchers had set aside Chomsky's model of a homogeneous speaker-hearer as not useable for language acquisition and found the idea of a development of a communicative competence based on authentic language usage more useful (Dell Hymes 1972 ''On Communicative Competence''). It is difficult overall to delineate exactly which sociolinguistic theory and to what extent it influenced the directions and research areas of Foreign Language Teaching. However, it has become clear that the communicative needs of the learners have to be not only the focus but also the starting point of research. Her entry ends with a literature survey in selection (unfortunately, the newest publication is from 1998, fully eight years before publication of the volume's second edition; this entry should have been updated). EVALUATION: Overall, I found the handbook to be very useful for colleagues in the field of linguistics. Some articles go in-depth and thus provide an excellent starting point for the interested researcher. This is not a handbook for linguistic novices, since the authors generally presuppose a knowledgeable reader. In order to benefit fully from the handbook, a reading knowledge of both German and English is a necessity (even though in volume 3 only 20 of the 88 articles are in German). The price of the volume, $545.00, probably puts it out of reach for most individuals; however, every university library should have this important resource available in book or in electronic form. ABOUT THE REVIEWER: Katharina Barbe (Ph.D., Rice University) is an Associate Professor and Assistant Chair in the Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures at Northern Illinois University. She has published _Irony in Context_ (1995, John Benjamins) and articles in various journals. Currently she is working on a project tentatively entitled ''Language-related editorials in the DAZ (1933-1945)'' as well as on translation evaluations of the English and Spanish versions of Klemperer's _LTI_.
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