Minority Languages through the Lens of the Linguistic Landscape

  • Van Mensel L
  • Marten H
  • Gorter D
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Abstract

[first paragraph] When we first started the project of looking at minority languages through the linguistic landscape lens, we felt that the visibility of minority languages in public space had been insufficiently dealt with in traditional minority language research. A linguistic landscape approach, as it had developed over the last years, would constitute a valuable path to explore, by looking at the ‘same old issues’ of language contact and language conflict from a specific angle. We were convinced that fresh linguistic landscape data would be able to provide innovative and useful insights into ‘patterns of language […] use, official language policies, prevalent language attitudes, [and] power relations between different linguistic groups’ (Backhaus 2007, p. 11). The linguistic landscape approach, as presented by the different authors in this volume, has clearly proven to be a heuristic appropriate and relevant for a wide range of minority language situations. More specifically, the ideas and analyses in the different chapters do contribute to a further understanding of minority languages and their speakers. They deepen our comprehension of language policies, power relations and ideologies in minority language settings.

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Van Mensel, L., Marten, H. F., & Gorter, D. (2012). Minority Languages through the Lens of the Linguistic Landscape. In Minority Languages in the Linguistic Landscape (pp. 319–323). Palgrave Macmillan UK. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230360235_18

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