Britain and Ireland are home to a rich array of spoken and signed languages and dialects. Language is ever evolving, in its diversity, and in the number and the backgrounds of its speakers, and so, too, are the tools and methods used for researching language. Now in its third edition, this book brings together a team of experts to provide cutting-edge linguistic and sociolinguistic information about all the major varieties of language used across Britain and Ireland today. Fully updated, this edition covers topics including the history of English, the relationship between standard and nonstandard Englishes, multilingualism in Britain and Ireland, and the educational and policy planning implications of this linguistic diversity. Chapters are also dedicated to specific language varieties, including comprehensive descriptions of the Celtic languages, nonstandard regional varieties, sign languages, and urban contact varieties. It is essential reading for academic researchers and students of sociolinguistics and education.
Now in its third edition, this book provides an up-to-date overview of all the major spoken and signed varieties of language used in Britain and Ireland today, and issues related to them. Comprehensive yet accessible, it is essential reading for academic researchers and students of sociolinguistics and education.
Arvustused
'The latest edition of Language in Britain and Ireland is a much needed resource. The chapters are very detailed and they provide the necessary information on language and language variation for anyone who is working in the area right now.' Eivind Nessa Torgersen, Norwegian University of Science and Technology 'A thoughtful, fresh re-examination of language in use in Britain and Ireland today. Old chapter titles are breathed new life by a new generation of scholars. Organised with a mind to answering existing social questions and prompting more.' Miriam Meyerhoff, All Souls College, Oxford
Muu info
An overview of spoken and signed varieties of language, and issues related to them, used in Britain and Ireland today.
List of figures; List of tables; List of contributors; Acknowledgments;
Map of Britain and Ireland; Introduction Susan Fox; Part I. English:
1. The
history of English Anita Auer;
2. Standard and non-standard English Stephen
Levey;
3. Phonetic and phonological variation in England Gerry Docherty, Paul
Foulkes and Paul Kerswill;
4. Grammatical variation in England David Britain;
5. Discourse-pragmatic variation in England Heike Pichler and Jenny Cheshire;
6. Scots and Scottish standard English Jennifer Smith, Jane Stuart-Smith,
Rachel Macdonald and E. Jamieson;
7. English in Ireland Karen Corrigan;
8.
English in Wales Heli Paulasto;
9. Insular varieties of English in Britain
Anna Rosen, Emma Moore, Jenny Amos, Jennifer Smith and Mercedes Durham; Part
II. Multilingualism in Britain and Ireland: The Celtic Languages:
10. The
history of the Celtic languages in Britain and Ireland Paul Russell;
11.
Scottish Gaelic Claire Nance;
12. Irish Gaelic Aidan Doyle;
13. Welsh David
Willis;
14. Cornish and Manx Merryn Davies-Deacon and Dave Sayers; Part III.
Multilingualism in Britain and Ireland: Minority Languages:
15. Channel
Islands French Mari Jones;
16. South Asian languages Devyani Sharma;
17.
Chinese Li Wei;
18. Yiddish Ruth Kircher;
19. European immigrant languages
Petros Karatsareas;
20. Sign languages in Britain and Ireland Adam Schembri,
Kate Rowley and Lorraine Leeson; Part IV. Multilingualism: The Development of
Urban Contact Varieties:
21. Multicultural London English Susan Fox;
22.
British Asian English Devyani Sharma and Jessica Wormald;
23. Multicultural
British English Rob Drummond; Part V. Applied Sociolinguistic Issues:
24.
Language policy and planning in Britain and Ireland Dave Sayers and Leanne
Henderson;
25. 'Nonstandard' English and education Julia Snell;
26.
Education, England and users of languages other than English Ben Rampton,
Constant Leung and Melanie Cooke; Index.
Susan Fox is Associate Researcher at the University of Bern, Switzerland. Her research interests include language variation and change, dialect and language contact, and the impact of immigration on language change and the language of adolescents, particularly in urban, multicultural contexts. She is author of The New Cockney (2015).