Transformation des dynamiques minoritaires, paradigmes sociolinguistiques et émotions
Year:
2019
Volume and number:
, No 12
Publishing Company:
, Inclusion, exclusion et hiérarchisation des pratiques langagières dans les espaces plurilingues au 21e siècle
Journal:
, Linguistic Minorities and Society
Pages :
, 31-50
DOI :
https://doi.org/10.7202/1066520ar
Abstract
Linguistic minorization is one of sociolinguistics’ areas of study. Regardless of the cultural and social context, linguistic domination is a phenomenon of exclusion, of rejection of others, but also of one’s own group. However, these mechanisms can be reversed in order to affirm a group’s desire for emancipation. The description and analysis of these different reactions to domination are revealed in particular historical moments that are socially and scientifically significant. This article aims to show how sociolinguistics has described these relations of domination since the 1970s and what notions it has mobilized in regard to the social and scientific ideologies considered, such as conflictual diglossia, and how one could apprehend these relations of domination today by the yardstick of individual or social feelings and processes, such as shame and agentivity, which are more connected to the individuation of contemporary societies.
Theme :
CanadaLinguistic minoritiesSociolinguistic
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