Lexington Books
Pages: 168
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7391-0597-9 • Hardback • October 2003 • $114.00 • (£88.00)
978-0-7391-0598-6 • Paperback • November 2003 • $51.99 • (£40.00)
978-0-7391-5728-2 • eBook • October 2003 • $49.00 • (£38.00)
Selma K. Sonntag is Professor of Government and Politics at Humboldt State University.
Chapter 1 Introduction: What is Global English?
Chapter 2 Globalization and the Politics of Language
Chapter 3 Language Politics in the United States: Projecting a Global Vision?
Chapter 4 Language Politics in France, or How Do You Say Junk Food in Breton?
Chapter 5 Subaltern Language Politics in India
Chapter 6 Language Politics in Democratic Transitions: Comparing South Africa and Nepal
Chapter 7 Understanding Linguistic Globalization
The focus of Professor Sonntag?s book, local political responses to the globalization of English, becomes more important every day, and it has the potential to illuminate our understanding of a wide range of political phenomena. The book?s use of well-chosen case studies within a nicely framed analytical structure provides just the right combination of theory and empirical data to fulfill its promise. Theoretically grounded, empirically rich, written in accessible prose, and filled with deeply thoughtfulinsights and reflections, this book makes a substantial contribution to the literatures on language politics, comparative politics, globalization, and socio-linguistics...
— Ronald Schmidt Sr.
Analyzing the global spread of English, Selma Sonntag demonstrates the political significance of linguistic globalization. Lucidly written and teeming with brilliant insights, Sonntag's study represents an important contribution to the emerging field of globalization studies....
— Manfred B. Steger, Professor of Global Politics, University of Hawai'i-Manoa
In this study, Sonntag skillfully integrates a number of disparate concepts and ideas (such as 'hegemony,' 'resistance,' 'globalization,' and 'subaltern,' to mention just a few), and links them to the spread of English globally. In this she deftly revealssome unexpected, 'topsy-turvy' developments....
— Harold F. Schiffman
By juxtaposing typologies from political science and language studies and applying them to five distinctive national contexts—France, India, Nepal, South Africa, and the United States—Sonntag demonstrates the complex relationships between processes of globalization and language use. Her lucid analysis demonstrates that English can serve both as a language of economic integration and as a vehicle of resistance to such integration and promotes careful identification of the multiple local forces that shapethe social valence and symbolic resonances invoked by particular language choices...
— Mary McGroarty
Sonntag's effort to exemplify complicated issues of global English and local politics is very valuable and timely. . . . This book offers a wonderful resource to anyone who wants to grasp a broad idea of the controversy over global English at the level oflocal politics and it will be especially useful to students in undergraduate course in political science, global studies and linguistics....
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