In:Contested Languages: The hidden multilingualism of Europe
Edited by Marco Tamburelli and Mauro Tosco
[Studies in World Language Problems 8] 2021
► pp. v–vi
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Published online: 21 January 2021
https://doi.org/10.1075/wlp.8.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/wlp.8.toc
Table of contents
Introduction
Chapter 1.What are contested languages and why should linguists care?
3
Marco Tamburelli
Mauro Tosco
Section 1.The broader picture
Chapter 2.Contested languages and the denial of linguistic rights in the 21st century
21
Marco Tamburelli
Chapter 3.Democracy: A threat to language diversity?
41
Mauro Tosco
Section 2.Identifying and perceiving contested languages
Chapter 4.Mixing methods in linguistic classification: A hidden agenda against multilingualism? The contestedness of Gallo-“Italic” languages within the Romance
family
59
Lissander Brasca
Chapter 5.The cost of ignoring degrees of Abstand in defining a regional language: Evidence from South Tyrol
87
Mara Maya Victoria Leonardi
Marco Tamburelli
Chapter 6.Deconstructing the idea of language: The effects of the patoisation of Occitan in France
105
Aurélie Joubert
Chapter 7.Surveying the ethnolinguistic vitality of two regional collateral languages: The case of Kashubian and Piedmontese
125
Nicole Dołowy-Rybińska
Claudia Soria
Chapter 8.Contested orthographies: Taking a closer look at spontaneous writing in Piedmontese
143
Emanuele Miola
Chapter 9.Revitalising contested languages: The case of Lombard
163
Paolo Coluzzi
Lissander Brasca
Simona Scuri
Section 3.Working with contestedness: experiences from the field
Chapter 10.Community-based language planning: Bringing Sicilian folktales back to life
185
Andrea Musumeci
Chapter 11.Teaching Piedmontese: A challenge?
199
Nicola Duberti
Mauro Tosco
Chapter 12.Publishing a grammar and literature anthology of a contested language: An experience of crowdfunding
209
Andrea Francesco Daniele Di Stefano
Chapter 13.Which Sardinian for education? The chance of CLIL-based laboratories: A case study
221
Federico Gobbo
Laura Vardeu
Section 4.Beyond contested languages: When contestedness creeps in
Chapter 14.Citizenship and nationality: The situation of the users of revived Livonian in Latvia
237
Christopher Moseley
Chapter 15.The language ideology of Esperanto: From the world language problem to balanced multilingualism
247
Federico Gobbo
Index
269
