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Tessa Allingham

    Language, Hegemony and the European Union
    Sociolinguistics
    Making Communism Hermeneutical
    Norfolk Table: One County, Twenty Chefs
    Naturalists at Sea
    The Prize of All the Oceans
    • The Prize of All the Oceans

      • 288pages
      • 11 heures de lecture
      4,2(21)Évaluer

      The startling history of Anson's voyage round the world in 1740. 'A quite remarkably erudite and deeply informed book' Patrick O'Brian, Daily Telegraph

      The Prize of All the Oceans
    • Naturalists at Sea

      • 309pages
      • 11 heures de lecture
      3,9(19)Évaluer

      Tales of the intrepid early naturalists who set sail on dangerous voyages of discovery in the vast, unknown Pacific

      Naturalists at Sea
    • Sociolinguistics

      • 294pages
      • 11 heures de lecture

      Originally published in 1992. This provocative and controversial book calls for a critical analysis of the philosophical assumptions underpinning sociolinguistics. Going back to the philosophical roots of the study of language in society, it argues that they lie in the consensual attitude to society derived from eighteenth and nineteenth-century social thought. The leading figures in the field are challenged for their unequivocal acceptance of the sociological theory on which they draw. For researchers of language in society, this book emphasises the sociological rather than the linguistic side of the subject.

      Sociolinguistics
    • Language, Hegemony and the European Union

      Re-examining ‘Unity in Diversity’

      • 344pages
      • 13 heures de lecture

      This book critically examines the European Union’s “Unity in Diversity” mantra with regard to language. It uses a theoretical framework based on hegemony both as a system and as a relationship. Operating within sociolinguistics, the book replaces the notion of ideology in poststructuralist thought with that of hegemony. The authors argue that forging unity across language communities contradicts the tenets of classical liberal theory. Global neo-liberalism influences this orthodoxy, shifting the parameters of power and political control. Over nine chapters, the authors cover topics such as globalization and social change, justice, governance and education. The book will be of interest to sociolinguists, political scientists, sociologists, as well as scholars of language and globalization and European studies.

      Language, Hegemony and the European Union