This textbook provides an accessible overview of the field of sociolinguistics. Blending qualitative and quantitative approaches and including examples drawn from different contexts and societies all over the world, the author introduces progressively complicated topics to help students build their confidence and understanding gradually as they work through the book. The chapters cover all the core topics on an introductory sociolinguistics course, including language and power, dialects, language and gender, language planning and multilingualism, and each chapter ends with a set of exercises, suggestions for small-scale projects which the author has used successfully with his own students and suggested further readings (both classic and more recent). This book assumes no background in Linguistics and is intended as an introduction to sociolinguistics that can be used at any level of undergraduate or graduate study, or by interested outsiders to the field.
Walker
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Zielgruppe
Lower undergraduate
Weitere Infos & Material
1. Studying Language in its Social Context.- 2. Beliefs about Language.- 3. One Society, Many Languages.- 4. Language and Interpersonal Relationships.- 5. Language and Culture.- 6. Language Variation and Place.- 7. The Sociolinguistic Variable.- 8. Language Variation and Style.- 9. Language Variation and Social Status.- 10. Language Variation and Sex.- 11. Language Variation and Ethnicity.- 12. Language Variation and Time.- 13. Languages in Contact.- 14. Language, Mode and Media.
James A. Walker
is Professor of Linguistics at La Trobe University, Australia. After completing degrees in Linguistics and Anthropology at the University of Toronto and University of Ottawa, Canada, he was Professor of Linguistics at York University, UK until 2017. He is the author of
Variation in Linguistic Systems
(2010) and
Canadian English: A Sociolinguistic Perspective
(2015).