The ecological perspective: Benefits and risks for sociolinguistics and language policy and planning

Fecha de publicación

2019-10-24T08:06:32Z

2019-10-24T08:06:32Z

2002

Resumen

In recent years, in order to answer the fundamental questions in the field of linguistic policy and planning, we have made metaphorical use of the conceptualization and organization of biological phenomena into systems, known popularly as ecology. Of course, sociolinguistic objects are not fundamentally (or exclusively) biological; they belong to a different, emerging order of phenomena. Nonetheless the analogies we construct, the concepts we adapt, the questions we raise, and, above all, the paradigm we seek to produce - by considering languages as cultural 'species' living in a particular environment with their own ecosystems - are likely to be illuminating and suggestive. We should, of course, be clear at all times that the model is metaphorical, and be aware of the potential dangers of a reification of systems of linguistic communication. Though we place them in broader sociocultural contexts than those usually considered, there is always the risk of neglecting individuals inside the model and of forgetting the fact that these cultural 'species' are, in the final analysis, the product and function of the cognitive and communicative activity of human beings.

Tipo de documento

Capítulo o parte de libro


Versión publicada

Lengua

Inglés

Publicado por

Alwin Fill et al.

Documentos relacionados

Capítol del llibre: Fill, Alwin et al. (eds.), Colourful green ideas. Berna: Peter Lang, 2002, pp. 77-88. Papers from the conference "30 years of language and ecology (Graz, 2000)

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Derechos

cc-by-nc-nd (c) Bastardas i Boada, Albert, 2002

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es/

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