This fascinating book explores how we reason about the value and status of multilingualism today, where we do so, and in relation to which persons, communities, and languages. The critical approach to multilingualism that this book traces is one that openly intends to strengthen the usability of this visionary concept.
This fascinating book explores how we reason about the value and status of multilingualism today, where we do so, and in relation to which persons, communities, and languages. The critical approach to multilingualism that this book traces is one that openly intends to strengthen the usability of this visionary concept.
David Gramling is Professor and Head in the Department of Central, Eastern, and Northern European Studies at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada (unceded Musqueam territory). He won the American Association of Applied Linguistics Book Award in 2018 for his book The Invention of Monolingualism.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction 1. Right-sizing multilingualism 2. The problem of value (14k) 3. Justice and injustice 4. Hospicing late mono/lingualism Epilogue: the multilingual undercommons.
Introduction 1. Right-sizing multilingualism 2. The problem of value (14k) 3. Justice and injustice 4. Hospicing late mono/lingualism Epilogue: the multilingual undercommons.
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