LINGUIST List 32.997
Thu Mar 18 2021
TOC: Language in Society 50 / 1 (2021)
Editor for this issue: Sarah Robinson <srobinsonlinguistlist.org>
Date: 17-Mar-2021
From: Rachel Tonkin <rtonkin
cambridge.org>
Subject: Language in Society Vol. 50, No. 1 (2021)
E-mail this message to a friend Publisher: Cambridge University Press
http://cambridge.org Journal Title: Language in Society
Volume Number: 50
Issue Number: 1
Issue Date: 2021
Main Text:
Language in Society – 50 years
Susan Ehrlich, Tommaso Milani
1-5
Dissecting the language of elitism: The ‘joyful’ violence of premium
Crispin Thurlow
125-152
Markus Rheindorf & Ruth Wodak (eds.), Sociolinguistic perspectives on migration control: Language policy, identity and belonging. Bristol: Multilingual Matters, 2020. Pp. 184. Pb. £25.
Jaycee Scanlon
153-156
Teresa L. McCarty, Sheilah E. Nicholas, & Gillian Wigglesworth (eds.), A world of indigenous languages: Politics, pedagogies and prospects for language reclamation. Bristol: Multilingual Matters, 2019. Pp. 264. Pb. £30.
Kelly Baur
157-158
Organisation Internationale de la Francophonie (OIF), La langue française dans le monde [French language in the world]. Paris: Gallimard, 2019. Pp. 368. Hb. €26.
Gabriel Camară
158-159
Franco Zappettini, European identities in discourse: A transnational citizens’ perspective. London: Bloomsbury, 2019. Pp. 219. Hb. £95.
Ashley Coogan
159-160
David Malinowski & Stefania Tufi (eds.), Reterritorializing linguistic landscapes: Questioning boundaries and opening spaces. London: Bloomsbury, 2020. Pp. 383. Hb. £117.
John Daly
161-162
Philip Seargeant, The emoji revolution: How technology is shaping the future of communication. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019. Pp. 231. Pb. £13.
Jan Dijsselbloem
162-163
David Gramling & Robert Gramling, Palliative care conversations: Clinical and applied linguistic perspectives. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, 2019. Pp. 246. Hb. €94.
Andy Hui
164-165
Adrian Blackledge & Angela Creese, Voices of a city market: An ethnography. Bristol: Multilingual Matters, 2019. Pp. 199. Pb. £30.
Adam Sargent
165-166
Mark Fifer Seilhamer, Gender, neoliberalism and distinction through linguistic capital: Taiwanese narratives of struggle and strategy. Bristol: Multilingual Matters, 2019. Pp. 220. Hb. £100.
Feng Ye
166-167
Publications Received
169-170
Affect and iconicity in phonological variation
Annette D'Onofrio, Penelope Eckert
29-51
Modulating action through minimization: Syntax in the service of offering and requesting
Chase Raymond, Jeffrey Robinson, Barbara Fox, Sandra Thompson, Kristella Montiegel
53-91
Sociolinguistic patterns and names: A variationist study of changes in personal names among Indian South Africans
Rajend Mesthrie
7-28
Co-opting the neoliberal manhood ideal: Masculinity, normativity, and recursive normalisation in Serbian gay men's digital dating profiles
Ksenija Bogetić
93-123
LSY volume 50 issue 1 Cover and Back matter
b1-b6
LSY volume 50 issue 1 Cover and Front matter
f1-f2
Page Updated: 18-Mar-2021