In:Language and Citizenship: Broadening the agenda
Edited by Tommaso M. Milani
[Benjamins Current Topics 91] 2017
► pp. 89–112
Linguistic citizenship
Language and politics in postnational modernities
Published online: 9 June 2017
https://doi.org/10.1075/bct.91.05wil
https://doi.org/10.1075/bct.91.05wil
A major challenge facing South Africa is that of reconstructing a meaningful and inclusive notion of citizenship in the aftermath of its apartheid past and in the face of narratives of divisiveness that reach back from this past and continue to reverberate in the present. Many of the problems confronting South African social transformation are similar to the rest of the postcolonial world that continues to wrestle with the inherited colonial divide between citizen and subject. In this article, we explore how engagement with diversity and marginalization is taking place across a range of non-institutional and informal political arenas. Here, we elaborate on an approach towards the linguistic practices of the political everyday in terms of a notion of linguistic citizenship and by way of conclusion argue that the contradictions and turmoils of contemporary South Africa require further serious deliberation around alternative notions of citizenship and their semiotics.
Cited by (6)
Cited by six other publications
Heugh, Kathleen
Stroud, Christopher
Årman, Henning
Stroud, Christopher, Quentin Williams, Ndimphiwe Bontiya, Janine Harry, Koki Kapa, Jaclisse Mayoma, Sibonile Mpendukana, Amiena Peck, Jason Richardson & Shanleigh Roux
Stroud, Christopher & Jason Richardson
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