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Watts, Richard J. – Multilingua: Journal of Cross-Cultural and Interlanguage Communication, 2010
The present article argues that the social category of "standardisation" has been instrumental in creating a Foucaultian discourse archive governing what may and what may not be stated on the subject of the history of English. It analyses the question of how language attitudes have been instrumental in creating the myths that have driven…
Descriptors: Dialects, Language Attitudes, Information Sources, Foreign Countries
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Deumert, Ana – Multilingua: Journal of Cross-Cultural and Interlanguage Communication, 2010
While the concept of standardization is well-established in linguistics, destandardization is a more recent addition to linguistic terminology. Drawing on historiographic and ethnographic data from isiXhosa, one of South Africa's indigenous languages, this paper reflects on both of these concepts. Standardization is discussed as a modernist grand…
Descriptors: Diachronic Linguistics, African Languages, Ethnography, Speech Communication
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Bolander, Brook; Watts, Richard J. – Multilingua: Journal of Cross-Cultural and Interlanguage Communication, 2009
This article constitutes a re-reading of and an attempt to rehabilitate Basil Bernstein, both of which are important in light of the interpretation of Bernstein as a proponent of the verbal deficit view, and the general discrediting of his work on social class differences in the British educational system, as related to what he later called…
Descriptors: Standard Spoken Usage, Social Class, Compensatory Education, Verbal Learning