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Contact Talk
The Discursive Organization of Contact and Boundaries
By Zane Goebel (Edited by), Deborah Cole (Edited by), Howard Manns

Rating
Format
Paperback, 204 pages
Other Formats Available

Hardback : $256.00

Published
United Kingdom, 1 November 2019


1. Theorizing the Semiotic Complexity of Contact Talk: Contact Registers and Scalar Shifters


Zane Goebel, Deborah Cole and Howard Manns


2. Indonesia and Indonesian


Howard Manns, Deborah Cole and Zane Goebel


3. Reentering the Margins? The Scale of "Local Language" in a Decentralizing Indonesia


Adam Harr


4. Moving Languages: Bivalency and Scalar Shifters in Central Javanese Language Ecologies


Lauren Zentz


5. From "Top-down" to "Bottom-up": The New Order¿s Vertical Synchronicity and the Vintage Aesthetics of the Margins in Post-Suharto Political Oratory


Aurora Donzelli


6. Revaluing and Rescaling National and Ethnic Language Boundaries in Online Discourse


Howard Manns and Simon Musgrave


7. Adolescent Interaction, Local Languages and Peripherality in Teen Fiction


Dwi Noverini Djenar


8. Modeling Contact Talk on Television


Zane Goebel


9. Localizing Person Reference among Indonesian Youth


Michael C. Ewing


10. Revaluing Papuan Malay


Izak Morin and Zane Goebel


11. The Emergent Selectivity of Semiotically Playful Utterances


Deborah Cole


12. Coda


Zane Goebel

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Product Description


1. Theorizing the Semiotic Complexity of Contact Talk: Contact Registers and Scalar Shifters


Zane Goebel, Deborah Cole and Howard Manns


2. Indonesia and Indonesian


Howard Manns, Deborah Cole and Zane Goebel


3. Reentering the Margins? The Scale of "Local Language" in a Decentralizing Indonesia


Adam Harr


4. Moving Languages: Bivalency and Scalar Shifters in Central Javanese Language Ecologies


Lauren Zentz


5. From "Top-down" to "Bottom-up": The New Order¿s Vertical Synchronicity and the Vintage Aesthetics of the Margins in Post-Suharto Political Oratory


Aurora Donzelli


6. Revaluing and Rescaling National and Ethnic Language Boundaries in Online Discourse


Howard Manns and Simon Musgrave


7. Adolescent Interaction, Local Languages and Peripherality in Teen Fiction


Dwi Noverini Djenar


8. Modeling Contact Talk on Television


Zane Goebel


9. Localizing Person Reference among Indonesian Youth


Michael C. Ewing


10. Revaluing Papuan Malay


Izak Morin and Zane Goebel


11. The Emergent Selectivity of Semiotically Playful Utterances


Deborah Cole


12. Coda


Zane Goebel

Show more
Product Details
EAN
9781138370753
ISBN
1138370754
Publisher
Other Information
Illustrated
Dimensions
23.1 x 15.5 x 1.3 centimeters (0.33 kg)

Table of Contents

1. Theorizing the Semiotic Complexity of Contact Talk: Contact Registers and Scalar Shifters

Zane Goebel, Deborah Cole and Howard Manns

2. Indonesia and Indonesian

Howard Manns, Deborah Cole and Zane Goebel

3. Reentering the Margins? The Scale of "Local Language" in a Decentralizing Indonesia

Adam Harr

4. Moving Languages: Bivalency and Scalar Shifters in Central Javanese Language Ecologies

Lauren Zentz

5. From "Top-down" to "Bottom-up": The New Order’s Vertical Synchronicity and the Vintage Aesthetics of the Margins in Post-Suharto Political Oratory

Aurora Donzelli

6. Revaluing and Rescaling National and Ethnic Language Boundaries in Online Discourse

Howard Manns and Simon Musgrave

7. Adolescent Interaction, Local Languages and Peripherality in Teen Fiction

Dwi Noverini Djenar

8. Modeling Contact Talk on Television

Zane Goebel

9. Localizing Person Reference among Indonesian Youth

Michael C. Ewing

10. Revaluing Papuan Malay

Izak Morin and Zane Goebel

11. The Emergent Selectivity of Semiotically Playful Utterances

Deborah Cole

12. Coda

Zane Goebel

About the Author

Zane Goebel is Associate Professor in Indonesian and Applied Linguistics in the School of Languages and Cultures, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Queensland, Australia.

Deborah Cole is Associate Professor in the Department of Language, Literature and Communication, College of Humanities at Utrecht University, the Netherlands.

Howard Manns is Lecturer in Linguistics in the School of Languages, Literature, Cultures and Linguistics at Monash University, Australia.

Reviews

"This is an immensely important volume in which a synthesis is achieved of decades of theoretical debate, now integrated in an original and innovative framework for a sociolinguistics of complexity. Offering a range of richly documented studies within a coherent framework, this book is compelling reading for anyone interested in the contemporary dynamics of language and society." — Professor Jan Blommaert, Director of Babylon, Department of Culture Studies, Tilburg School of Humanities and Digital Sciences, Tilburg University, Tilburg, the Netherlands"This book shows that although Indonesia has arguably the world's most successful national language in one of the world's most linguistically diverse countries, the problem of contact languages has not been 'solved'. With ethnographically rich examples and introducing the concepts of 'scalar shifter' and 'contact register', the authors show beautifully how language remains a pivotal resource for the construction of difference and sameness in the midst of massive decentralization and globalization." — Joel Kuipers, Professor of Anthropology and International Affairs, George Washington University, USA

"This is an immensely important volume in which a synthesis is achieved of decades of theoretical debate, now integrated in an original and innovative framework for a sociolinguistics of complexity. Offering a range of richly documented studies within a coherent framework, this book is compelling reading for anyone interested in the contemporary dynamics of language and society." — Professor Jan Blommaert, Director of Babylon, Department of Culture Studies, Tilburg School of Humanities and Digital Sciences, Tilburg University, Tilburg, the Netherlands"This book shows that although Indonesia has arguably the world's most successful national language in one of the world's most linguistically diverse countries, the problem of contact languages has not been 'solved'. With ethnographically rich examples and introducing the concepts of 'scalar shifter' and 'contact register', the authors show beautifully how language remains a pivotal resource for the construction of difference and sameness in the midst of massive decentralization and globalization." — Joel Kuipers, Professor of Anthropology and International Affairs, George Washington University, USA

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