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This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open
Access programme and is available on www.bloomsburycollections.com.
It is funded by the University of Klagenfurt, Austria. Discussing
key issues of current relevance and setting the tone for future
research in world Englishes, this book provides new perspectives on
the diverse realities of Englishes around the world. Written by an
international team of established and renowned scholars, it is the
inaugural volume in the new series Bloomsbury Advances in World
Englishes, dedicated to advancing research in the field. Chapters
discuss important topics in contemporary world Englishes research,
including de-colonial approaches, emerging varieties in
post-protectorates and international uses as communicative events
to highlight the globalizing aspect of English as a semiotic code.
The book also expands on cultural conceptualizations to investigate
the connections between Englishes and localized cultural knowledge
and ongoing changes and attitudes towards local forms in
multilingual settings. Closing with an examination of how world
Englishes and the use of English as a lingua franca could influence
the future teaching of Englishes, Research Developments in World
Englishes presents a detailed picture of contemporary research
approaches and points the way towards exciting future directions.
While cognitive linguistics has become established as a
comprehensive research paradigm over the last three decades, it has
so far hardly contributed to investigations into processes of
lexical creation as traditionally captured in research on word
formation. In light of this, the volume at hand is the first one to
take a step ahead towards illuminating diverse aspects of word
formation from cognitive perspectives. The book combines
contributions to the 2nd International Cognitive Linguistics
Conference of the German Cognitive Linguistics Association with a
selection of invited papers by scholars working on issues of word
formation and cognitive linguistics. This selection is guided by
pluralism in both methodology and topics. Thus, some contributions
are of a primarily theoretical nature discussing, for example,
recombinance as a model of word formation and a taxonomy of word
formation processes as construction types. Several articles address
interface issues such as word formation and phrasal constructions,
word formation and inflection, as well as phonology and word
formational patterns. The majority of the studies focuses on
individual types of word formation (compounding, affixation, and
conversion), and they contribute to reframing our understanding of
these processes. With a focus on mostly Germanic languages
(Afrikaans, Dutch, English, German, Luxembourgish, and Norwegian),
data-driven analyses include corpus linguistic investigations,
elicited data, psycholinguistic experiments, and computational
linguistic applications. A few contributions follow a mainly
introspective path of reasoning based on the discussion of selected
examples as in the analysis of creative compounds. Overall, the
volume provides a rich array of topics emerging under the umbrella
of cognitive linguistic thought and established patterns and
processes of word formation. The various studies add to a yet
marginal body of research in cognitive word formation and, thus,
advance our awareness about the benefits of applying cognitive
linguistic thoughts for investigating processes of lexical
creation.
The book offers a detailed account of English influence on German
based on a large scale corpus analysis of the newsmagazine 'Der
Spiegel'. The study is structured into three parts covering
fundamental questions and as of yet unsolved and disputed issues in
the domain of anglicism research and language contact. Part 1
discusses the terminological uncertainty in the field, puts forward
a model of the influence of English on German, and proposes a
principled classification of the term anglicism. Part 2 portrays
the numerical impact of anglicisms in an extensive corpus and draws
general conclusions about the overall quantitative influence of
English on German. Part 3 conclusively investigates the integration
of anglicisms in German across the various lexical and syntactic
paradigms. Particular focus is attributed to the salient
morphological features of gender, plural, genitive case, and to
verbal and adjectival inflection. Furthermore, word formational
processes are substantively analyzed including compounding,
derivation, and peripheral types of word formation. A functional
classification of written codeswitching concludes part 3, and the
book closes with a brief outlook on future challenges of anglicism
research. In its breadth and detailed manner of analysis, the study
sets the current standards of research in the field.
Wordplay involving several linguistic codes represents an important
modality of ludic language. It is attested in different epochs,
communicative situations, genres, and contexts of use. The
translation of wordplay, which is generally seen as a challenging
enterprise, illustrates another dimension of crossing linguistic
borders in wordplay. The third volume of the series The Dynamics of
Wordplay unites contributions from different disciplines which
study the creative and playful use of elements from different
languages and the transfer of ludic language into other linguistic
systems. It sheds light on the multi-dimensionality, special
linguistic make-up, and specific interactive potential of wordplay
at the interface of different languages and cultures. The
individual studies collected in this volume will be of interest to
scholars from different scientific fields, such as linguistics and
literary studies as well as cultural and media studies.
This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open
Access programme and is available on www.bloomsburycollections.com.
It is funded by the University of Klagenfurt, Austria. Discussing
key issues of current relevance and setting the tone for future
research in world Englishes, this book provides new perspectives on
the diverse realities of Englishes around the world. Written by an
international team of established and renowned scholars, it is the
inaugural volume in the new series Bloomsbury Advances in World
Englishes, dedicated to advancing research in the field. Chapters
discuss important topics in contemporary world Englishes research,
including de-colonial approaches, emerging varieties in
post-protectorates and international uses as communicative events
to highlight the globalizing aspect of English as a semiotic code.
The book also expands on cultural conceptualizations to investigate
the connections between Englishes and localized cultural knowledge
and ongoing changes and attitudes towards local forms in
multilingual settings. Closing with an examination of how world
Englishes and the use of English as a lingua franca could influence
the future teaching of Englishes, Research Developments in World
Englishes presents a detailed picture of contemporary research
approaches and points the way towards exciting future directions.
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