Multilingual Matters
Ethnography, Superdiversity and Linguistic Landscapes
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Jan Blommaert
About this book
Superdiversity has rendered places, groups and practices complex and the usual tools of analysis need rethinking. Using an innovative approach to linguistic landscaping, the author investigates his own neighbourhood from a complexity perspective and demonstrates how multilingual signs can be read as chronicles documenting the histories of a place.
Author / Editor information
Jan Blommaert is Professor in the Department of Culture Studies and Director of Babylon, Center for the Study of Superdiversity at Tilburg University, the Netherlands.
Jan Blommaert is Professor of Language, Culture and Globalization and Director of the Babylon Center for the Study of Superdiversity, Tilburg University (Netherlands) and Professor of Applied Linguistics, Center for Diversity and Learning, Ghent University (Belgium). His publications include Discourse: A Critical Introduction (CUP, 2005), The Sociolinguistics of Globalization (CUP, 2010) and Ethnographic Fieldwork: A Beginner's Guide (Multilingual Matters, 2010).
Reviews
This book contains valuable reflections on the role of sociolinguistics in describing critical phenomena in highly diverse urban contexts, and it is sure to inspire researchers in related areas of study.
Stefania Tufi, Liverpool University, UK:
The text is clear, accessible and interspersed with practical examples of ‘experienced’ semioticised space. Blommaert never disappoints in his compassionate, original and thoroughly enjoyable narrative(...) For the LL postgraduate student, the text is useful because it discusses the main developments of LLS, identifies its shortcomings clearly and succinctly, and presents fresh data within a newly conceived framework.
Ben Rampton, King's College London, UK:
Both lucid and profound, integrating a compelling theoretical imagination with very practical methodology, this book is yet another remarkable advance in Blommaert's powerful remapping of sociolinguistics.
Adam Jaworski, The University of Hong Kong:
This is not just another landmark book in Jan Blommaert's rich oeuvre. It's a conversation he's having with all of us on today's sociolinguistic landscapes. He argues they are chaotic and complex. His book is anything but. Written in cogent and clear style, provocative at times, boring never. A Berchem delight.
Crispin Thurlow, University of Washington, USA:
Jan Blommaert offers a sweeping tour of the complex geographies of contemporary sociolinguistics. Effortlessly combining erudition with accessibility, he maps a new terrain for linguistic landscapes through the deeper contours of ethnography; all of which is grounded in the intimate, culturally diverse histories of his own backyard. This, argues Blommaert, is how sociolinguists should be looking to untether themselves from the stability and predictability of synchronic analysis and seeking instead to live (and research) in the moment.
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
v -
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Preface and Acknowledgments
vii -
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Series Editors’ Preface
ix -
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1. Introduction: New Sociolinguistic Landscapes
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2. Historical Bodies and Historical Space
23 -
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3. Semiotic and Spatial Scope
38 -
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4. Signs, Practices, People
50 -
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5. Change and Transformation
70 -
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6. The Vatican of the Diaspora
90 -
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7. Conclusion: The Order of Superdiversity
107 -
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References
121 -
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Index
126