Monographs and Articles on Language Spread




Author:        MULJACIC-Z.
Title:         Language Spread and Social Change. Dynamics and Measure
               - French, English, by L. Laforge, G.D. Mcconnell.
Source:        ZEITSCHRIFT FUR ROMANISCHE PHILOLOGIE.  Vol. 111, no. 4, 1995,
               p.606-608.
Language:      Italian.
ISSN:          0049-8661.
Publisher:     TUBINGEN : MAX NIEMEYER VERLAG.
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Author:       Rasmus Rask Colloquium (2nd : 1994 Odense University).
Title:        The origins and development of emigrant languages : prodeedings
              from the Second Rasmus Rask Colloquium, Odense University,
              November 1994 / edited by Hans F. Nielsen and Lene Schosler.
Pub. Info.:   Odense : Odense University Press, 1996.
Notes:        English and French.
              Includes bibliographical references.
              Immigrants -- Language -- Congresses.
Other Author: Nielsen, Hans Frede, 1943-.
              Schosler, Lene, 1946-.

                P40.5.L37 R37 1994  
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Author:       Georgetown University Round Table on Languages and
              Linguistics (1987 : Washington D.C.).
Title:        Language spread and language policy : issues, implications, and
              case studies / Peter H. Lowenberg, editor.
Pub. Info.:   Washington : Georgetown University Press, c1988.

Notes:        Includes bibliographies.
Other Author: Lowenberg, Peter H.
                P125 .G87 1988  
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Author:        Kachru, Braj B.
Title:         The Power and Politics of English.
Year:          1986
Language:      English
Pub. Type:     Journal article;  Review literature;  Project description
Source:        World Englishes;  v5 n2-3 p121-40 Win 1986
Abstract:      Presents issues related to power and politics of the English
               language specifically in relation to the unprecedented global
               spread of the language.  Several linguistic and nonlinguistic
               perspectives used to conceptualize the relationship between
               language and power are considered. (Author/CB)

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Author:        Quirk, Randolph
Title:         The Question of Standard in the International Use of English.
Year:          1991
Language:      English

Note:          13p.; In: Tickoo, Makhan L., Ed. Languages & Standards: Issues,
               Attitudes, Case Studies; see FL 019 461.
Pages:         13; 1
Abstract:      This paper presents three models on "language spread,"
               or three ways in which human language may be spread.  These
               models include: (1) the demographic spread, in which
               language spread is caused and accompanied by population
               spread; (2) the econocultural model, exemplified by the spread
               of English in the world of multinational business; and (3) the
               imperial model, which reflects political domination with only
               sufficient population movement to sustain an administrative
               system and power structure.  It is concluded that the
               remarkable degree of the current spread of English in the world
               can be attributed to the econocultural model, and, that, for
               countries affected by the imperial model, it is likely that a
               long-term demand for English will be related equally to
               econocultural factors, with consequences accordingly for the
               standards to be observed.  (JL)

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Author:        Alatis, James E., Ed.;  Tucker, G. Richard, Ed.
Title:         Language in Public Life. Georgetown University Round Table on
               Languages and Linguistics (Washington, D.C., 1979).
Author Affil.: Georgetown Univ., Washington, D.C. School of Languages and
               Linguistics.
Year:          1979
Language:      English; French

Abstract:      The proceedings of the Georgetown Round Table on language and
               public life are divided into four sections dealing with: (1)
               language in public life and international affairs, (2)
               language spread and language policy, (3) language and
               the professions, and (4) the language of public persuasion. The
               articles in these sections treat the following points: the
               President's Commission on Foreign Languages and International
               Studies; U.S.  international English language policy; language
               attitudes, planning and policy; language choice and human
               rights; communication in medical practice; language and
               advertising, education, the judicial system, the neurosciences,
               and the deaf experience; and language assessment, and the
               languages of persuasion in the media.  An appendix presents an
               article in French by A. Zachariev on language planning in
               education in multilingual countries.  (AMH)

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Author:        Lieberson, Stanley
Title:         Language Diversity and Language Contact.
Year:          1981
Language:      English

Abstract:      The essays in this volume are divided into four sections: (1)
               "Ethnic Diversity and National Language," (2) "Bilingualism:
               Its Causes and Consequences," (3) "Models and Methods," and (4)
               "Language Spread: A New Direction," The first part deals
               with the social conditions that influence acquisition of a
               second language, and language diversity on the national and
               regional level.  In addition to a discussion of the forces that
               determine mother-tongue shift, part two reports on a
               demographic analysis of bilingualism and linguistic and ethnic
               segregation in Montreal, and language shift in the United
               States and Nairobi.  The third part provides formal models for
               measuring the role language plays in binding and separating the
               regions of a nation, and discusses the linkage between native
               language diversity and national development.  The essay in part
               four offers some basic propositions on forces affecting
               language    spread.  

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