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15. The Role of Small Languages in the Media II: Presence of Picard in Medial Communication

  • Judith Visser
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Manual of Romance Languages in the Media
This chapter is in the book Manual of Romance Languages in the Media

Abstract

The introduction of mass media had a negative impact on the chances of survival of small languages. Changes in the media landscape in the 20th and 21st century seem to change this situation. The expansion of the Internet makes it possible to publish texts in regional idioms or to discuss language issues. At the same time, globalization and new tendencies in language policy enlarge public awareness of the importance of language plurality. The group of actors comprises linguists as well as laymen. The following study will discuss the perspectives of changes in the media landscape for the evolution of endangered languages. The northern group of French regional varieties subsumed under the designation Picard will serve as an example. A comparison between traditional and new media, focusing on the types of media, texts, actors and target groups, is supposed to show perspectives of modern media for small languages and the importance of access to media for the identity of their speakers.

Abstract

The introduction of mass media had a negative impact on the chances of survival of small languages. Changes in the media landscape in the 20th and 21st century seem to change this situation. The expansion of the Internet makes it possible to publish texts in regional idioms or to discuss language issues. At the same time, globalization and new tendencies in language policy enlarge public awareness of the importance of language plurality. The group of actors comprises linguists as well as laymen. The following study will discuss the perspectives of changes in the media landscape for the evolution of endangered languages. The northern group of French regional varieties subsumed under the designation Picard will serve as an example. A comparison between traditional and new media, focusing on the types of media, texts, actors and target groups, is supposed to show perspectives of modern media for small languages and the importance of access to media for the identity of their speakers.

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Manuals of Romance Linguistics V
  3. Table of Contents VII
  4. Media and Linguistics
  5. 0. Preface 3
  6. 1. Media Linguistics: Interfaces to Media and Communication Studies 10
  7. Text Linguistic Approaches to Language in the Media
  8. 2. Text Linguistic Approaches I: Analysis of Media Texts 35
  9. 3. Text Linguistic Approaches II: Textuality of Online Media 54
  10. 4. Television Text Types 73
  11. 5. Online Text Types 94
  12. 6. Aspects of Advertising Language Online 110
  13. Orality and Literacy of Media Text Types
  14. 7. Orality and Literacy in Cinema and Television 133
  15. 8. Orality and Literacy of Telephony and SMS 154
  16. 9. Orality and Literacy of Online Communication 176
  17. Methods in Linguistic Media Research
  18. 10. Critical Discourse Analysis and New Media 203
  19. 11. Analyzing Multicodal Media Texts 245
  20. 12. Language in the Media: The Process Perspective 263
  21. 13. Tertiary Media Corpora of the Romance Languages 290
  22. Romance Matters
  23. 14. The Role of Small Languages in the Media I: Presence of Romanian in Medial Communication 325
  24. 15. The Role of Small Languages in the Media II: Presence of Picard in Medial Communication 343
  25. 16. Audiovisual Latino Media in the US: The Emergence of Bilingual Media Text Genres in the Interface between Language Contact, Language Policy and Translation 363
  26. 17. Language Change through Medial Communication 381
  27. 18. Broadcast Advertising – Issues of Linguistic Research (with Special Regard to Italy and France) 411
  28. Media Texts and Multilingualism
  29. 19. Minority Languages in Media Communication 453
  30. 20. Audiovisual Translation 471
  31. 21. Crowdsourcing Translation 489
  32. 22. Software Localization into Romance Languages 506
  33. Index 521
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