In:The Politics of Multilingualism: Europeanisation, globalisation and linguistic governance
Edited by Peter A. Kraus and François Grin
[Studies in World Language Problems 6] 2018
► pp. 89–110
Chapter 5From glossophagic hegemony to multilingual pluralism?
Re-assessing the politics of linguistic identity in Europe
Published online: 10 September 2018
https://doi.org/10.1075/wlp.6.05kra
https://doi.org/10.1075/wlp.6.05kra
Abstract
The chapter assesses the politics of multilingualism in contemporary Europe by focusing on the role of options and ligatures in the framing of linguistic identities. Whereas nation-state construction mostly entailed the establishment of monolingual spaces that should make for a convergence of linguistic ligatures and linguistic options, the emergence of new transnational settings at different levels is contributing to an increasing disconnection between language-as-an-option and language-as-a-ligature that affects not only minority, but also majority, members. This dynamic may have important implications for how demands for linguistic recognition are articulated by different groups.
Article outline
- 1.“Glossophagia” and the modern European polity
- 2.Options and ligatures in the making of linguistic identity
- 3.The issue of recognition and the limits of glossophagia
- 4.The politics of multilingualism in a context of complex diversity
Notes References
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2022. The politics of inclusion, citizenship and multilingualism. In Advances in Interdisciplinary Language Policy [Studies in World Language Problems, 9], ► pp. 129 ff.
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