Presented to you through Paradigm Publishing Services
Edinburgh University Press
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
4. What is Russian in Ukraine? Popular Beliefs Regarding the Social Roles of the Language
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Notes on Contributors vii
- Cyrillic Transliteration System Adopted in the Book xi
- Introduction: The Russian Language, Challenged by Globalisation 1
-
Part I: Russian and Its Legal Status
- Part I: Russian and Its Legal Status 1. International Law, Minority Language Rights and Russian(s) in the ‘Near Abroad’ 33
- 2. The Russian Language in Ukraine: Complicit in Genocide, or Victim of State-Building? 56
-
Part II: Linguistic Perceptions and Symbolic Values
- 3. The Russian Language in Belarus: Language Use, Speaker Identities and Metalinguistic Discourse 81
- 4. What is Russian in Ukraine? Popular Beliefs Regarding the Social Roles of the Language 117
-
Part III: Russian-Speaking Communities and Identity Negotiations
- 5. Post-Soviet Russian-Speaking Diaspora in Italy: Results of a Sociolinguistic Survey 143
- 6. Ethnolinguistic Vitality and Acculturation Orientations of Russian Speakers in Estonia 166
- 7. Linguistic Performance of Russianness among Russian- Israeli Parents: Child-Raising Practices in the Immigrant Community 189
-
Part IV: Language Contact and the Globalisation of Russian
- 8. Similarities and Differences between American-Immigrant Russian of the 1970s and 1980s and Post-Soviet Russian in the Motherland 209
- 9. Predictors of Pluricentricity: Lexical Divergences between Latvian Russian and Russian Russian 225
-
Part V: Globalisation of Russian as Soft Power
- 10. Russian with an Accent: Globalisation and the Post-Soviet Imaginary 249
- Index 282
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Notes on Contributors vii
- Cyrillic Transliteration System Adopted in the Book xi
- Introduction: The Russian Language, Challenged by Globalisation 1
-
Part I: Russian and Its Legal Status
- Part I: Russian and Its Legal Status 1. International Law, Minority Language Rights and Russian(s) in the ‘Near Abroad’ 33
- 2. The Russian Language in Ukraine: Complicit in Genocide, or Victim of State-Building? 56
-
Part II: Linguistic Perceptions and Symbolic Values
- 3. The Russian Language in Belarus: Language Use, Speaker Identities and Metalinguistic Discourse 81
- 4. What is Russian in Ukraine? Popular Beliefs Regarding the Social Roles of the Language 117
-
Part III: Russian-Speaking Communities and Identity Negotiations
- 5. Post-Soviet Russian-Speaking Diaspora in Italy: Results of a Sociolinguistic Survey 143
- 6. Ethnolinguistic Vitality and Acculturation Orientations of Russian Speakers in Estonia 166
- 7. Linguistic Performance of Russianness among Russian- Israeli Parents: Child-Raising Practices in the Immigrant Community 189
-
Part IV: Language Contact and the Globalisation of Russian
- 8. Similarities and Differences between American-Immigrant Russian of the 1970s and 1980s and Post-Soviet Russian in the Motherland 209
- 9. Predictors of Pluricentricity: Lexical Divergences between Latvian Russian and Russian Russian 225
-
Part V: Globalisation of Russian as Soft Power
- 10. Russian with an Accent: Globalisation and the Post-Soviet Imaginary 249
- Index 282