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Sociolinguistics towards a culturalist turn: a sociolinguistic response to the challenges of mankind [Journal of Multicultural Discourses]

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Published/Copyright: December 3, 2024

Abstract

The 50 years of the devotion of sociolinguistics under the International Journal of the Sociology of Language have brought us remarkable insights into language in relation to society. For the next half century, for the discipline to engage more effectively with the radically and fast changing human society, i. e. in answer to the provocative questions raised by Wolfgang Klein in Schreiben oder Lesen, aber nicht beides, oder: Vorschlag zur Wiedereinführung der Keilschrift mittels Hammer und Meißel, (1989. Zeitschrift für Literaturwissenschaft und Linguistik 74. 116–119 [repr. in this issue]) it may do well to take a culturalist turn, or its seminal sociocultural return, by studying language and society, or rather, language-in-society, as a system of culturally diversified and competing discourses with a view to neutralizing the human cultural chasm on the one hand and to enhancing human cultural harmony and prosperity on the other hand.


Corresponding author: Shi-xu, Centre for Contemporary Chinese Discourse Studies, Hangzhou Normal University, Hangzhou, China, E-mail:

References

Klein, Wolfgang. 1989. Schreiben oder Lesen, aber nicht beides, oder: Vorschlag zur Wiedereinführung der Keilschrift mittels Hammer und Meißel, Zeitschrift für Literaturwissenschaft und Linguistik 74. 116–119. Repr. 2024 in International Journal of the Sociology of Language 289–290. 5–18.Search in Google Scholar

Labov, William. 1973. Sociolinguistic patterns (No. 4). Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.Search in Google Scholar

Shi-xu (ed.). 2024. Handbook of cultural discourse studies. London: Routledge.10.4324/9781003207245Search in Google Scholar

Trudgill, Peter. 2000. Sociolinguistics: An introduction to language and society. London: Penguin UK.Search in Google Scholar

Wardhaugh, Ronald. & Janet M. Fuller. 2021. An introduction to sociolinguistics. London: John Wiley & Sons.Search in Google Scholar

Received: 2024-08-21
Accepted: 2024-08-27
Published Online: 2024-12-03
Published in Print: 2024-09-25

© 2024 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Frontmatter
  2. Editorial
  3. Reading: An anniversary conversation with journal editors
  4. Article
  5. Schreiben oder Lesen, aber nicht beides, oder: Vorschlag zur Wiedereinführung der Keilschrift mittels Hammer und Meißel
  6. Commentaries
  7. Sobre el acceso a la bibliografía académica desde el Sur: diagnóstico, estrategias de resistencia y un proyecto disruptivo concreto [Anuario de Glotopolítica]
  8. Toward un-WEIRDing academic publishing about language [Applied Linguistics]
  9. Recognising the human in humanities [Australian Review of Applied Linguistics]
  10. 文字简化、学术产出与技术进化—来自中国的经验 [Chinese Journal of Language Policy and Planning]
  11. Meine kleine Lesemaschine: Reflexion zur Begrenzung der Produktion von wissenschaftlichen Texten [International Journal of Multilingualism]
  12. The politics of writing and reading: An Arabic sociolinguistics perspective [Journal of Arabic Sociolinguistics]
  13. To read is to cite: A moral proposition [Journal of Linguistic Anthropology]
  14. Sociolinguistics towards a culturalist turn: a sociolinguistic response to the challenges of mankind [Journal of Multicultural Discourses]
  15. Wolfgang Klein as Don Quixote [Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development]
  16. An extended lunch break: a response to Wolfgang Klein [Journal of Pragmatics]
  17. The economic reterritorialization of academic publishing and the politics of reading [Journal of Sociolinguistics]
  18. How I learned to stop worrying and love the explosion of information [Journal of Southeast Asian Linguistics Society]
  19. Writing and publishing language studies in the Arab region [Khitabaat Journal]
  20. Accouchons des idées, pas des articles: politiser la proposition de Wolfgang Klein pour repenser le travail scientifique [Langage et Société]
  21. Reading or writing is not the question: politicizing the politics of scholarly production and reception [Language, Culture and Society]
  22. Writing to be read, or how to achieve more through less [Language Matters]
  23. Writing or reading? An incommensurable choice? [Language in Society]
  24. Can we escape the textocalypse? Academic publishing as community building [Language on the Move]
  25. Acceleration, capitalist temporalities and collective challenges in academic publishing [Language Policy]
  26. On close reading and slow writing [Multilingua]
  27. Where global discourses meet local realities: the case of scholarly publishing in Sinhala [Sāhityaya]
  28. Navigating a national linguistics journal through local interests and global pressures: an editorial view on the problem of academic overproduction [Slovo a slovesnost]
  29. What is the place of African languages in knowledge production? [South African Journal of African Languages]
  30. Publishing issues and overwhelm [Southern African Linguistics and Applied Language Studies]
  31. Strengthening local academic publishing in the age of academic fast fashion [TILAMSIK]
  32. Dromm und die verlorene Balance [The Mouth: Critical Studies on Language, Culture and Society]
  33. Meritocracy, governmental intervention, and academic nepotism: a South Korean academic publishing landscape [The Sociolinguistic Journal of Korea]
  34. Indagando a aceleração da produção acadêmica com bom humor: Uma visão do sul [Trabalhos em Linguística Aplicada]
  35. Final Commentary
  36. How to amend the supply-demand imbalance in research?
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