The Locator -- [(subject = "Language policy")]

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Author:
DeWispelare, Daniel, author.
Title:
Multilingual subjects : on standard English, its speakers, and others in the long eighteenth century / Daniel DeWispelare.
Publisher:
University of Pennsylvania Press,
Copyright Date:
2017
Description:
viii, 336 pages ; 24 cm
Subject:
English language--History--English-speaking countries--History--18th century.
English language--History--Great Britain--History--18th century.
Multilingualism--English-speaking countries--History--18th century.
English language--History--English-speaking countries--History--18th century.
Sociolinguistics--English-speaking countries--History--18th century.
English language--English-speaking countries--History--History--18th century.
English language--History--English-speaking countries--History--18th century.
Language policy--English-speaking countries--History--18th century.
Language and languages--History--History--18th century.
Translating and interpreting--English-speaking countries--History--18th century.
English language--Political aspects.
English language--Social aspects.
English language--Standardization.
English language--Variation.
Language and languages--Philosophy.
Language policy.
Multilingualism.
Sociolinguistics.
Translating and interpreting.
English-speaking countries.
Great Britain.
1700-1799
History.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Summary:
In the eighteenth century, the British Empire pursued its commercial ambitions across the globe, greatly expanding its colonial presence, and with it, the reach of the English language. During this era, a standard form of English was taught in the British provinces just as it was increasingly exported from the British Isles to colonial outposts in North America, the Caribbean, South Asia, Oceania, and West Africa. Under these conditions, a monolingual politics of Standard English came to obscure other forms of multilingual and dialect writing, forms of writing that were made to appear as inferior, provincial, or foreign oddities. Daniel DeWispelare's Multilingual Subjects at once documents how different varieties of English became sidelined as "dialects" and asserts the importance of both multilingualism and dialect writing to eighteenth-century anglophone culture. By looking at the lives of a variety of multilingual and nonstandard speakers and writers who have rarely been discussed together-individuals ranging from slaves and indentured servants to translators, rural dialect speakers, and others-DeWispelare suggests that these language practices were tremendously valuable to the development of anglophone literary aesthetics even as Standard English became dominant throughout the ever-expanding English-speaking world.
ISBN:
0812249097
9780812249095
OCLC:
(OCoLC)960292526
LCCN:
2016050486
Locations:
USUX851 -- Iowa State University - Parks Library (Ames)

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