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1
W Sejmie : Ślōnskiego języka nie ma, ale może być etnolekt ; In the Polish Parliamentthe Silesian language does not exist, but the Silesian ethnolect may
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2
Yiddish, or Jewish German? : the Holocaust, the Goethe-Institut and Germany’s neglected obligation to peace and the common cultural heritage
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3
Global language politics : Eurasia versus the Rest
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4
Yiddish, or Jewish German? : The Holocaust, the Goethe-Institut, and Germany’s neglected obligation to peace and the common European cultural heritage
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5
Bulgaria’s secret empire : an ultimatum to North Macedonia
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6
Words in space and time : a historical atlas of language politics in modern Central Europe
Kamusella, Tomasz Dominik. - : Central European University Press, 2021
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7
Xenophobia and anti-Semitism in the concept of Polish literature
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8
Central Europe through the lens of language and politics : on the sample maps from the Atlas of language politics in modern Central Europe
Kamusella, Tomasz Dominik; Nomachi, Motoki; Gibson, Catherine. - : Slavic-Eurasian Research Center, Hokkaido University, 2018
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9
The triple division of the Slavic languages : a linguistic finding, a product of politics, or an accident?
Kamusella, Tomasz Dominik. - : Institut für die Wissenschaften vom Menschen, 2018
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10
Codzienność komunikacyjno-językowa na obszarze historycznego Górnego Śląska ; The everyday language use in historical Upper Silesia
Kamusella, Tomasz. - : Narodowa Oficyna Śląska, 2018
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11
Russian : a monocentric or pluricentric language?
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12
The rise and dynamics of the normative isomorphism of language, nation, and state in Central Europe
Kamusella, Tomasz Dominik. - : Harvard University Press, 2017
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13
The political expediency of language-making in Central Europe : the case of Czechoslovak
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14
Creating languages in Central Europe: a longue durée perspective
Kamusella, Tomasz Dominik. - : Joshibi University of Art and Design, 2016
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15
Snježana Kordić, Jezik i nacjonalizam [Language and Nationalism]
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16
Central Europe from a Linguistic Viewpoint
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17
Tsentralnaia Evropa s lingvisticheskoi tochki zreniia ; Central Europe from the Linguistic Point of View
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18
Scripts and politics in modern Central Europe
Abstract: At present two scripts are employed in Central Europe, Latin and Cyrillic, or three,if we include Greece in the region. In this article I set out to problematise this oversimplisticpicture drawing at examples from the past and pointing to various politicaland identificational uses of scripts today. Until the mid-20th century, also other scripts(and different types of the Latin and Cyrillic script, for that matter) were used forofficial purposes and in book production, namely Arabic, Armenian, Church Cyrillic,Gothic and Hebrew. In addition, Glagolitic and Runes (both Nordic and Hungarian)were sometimes recalled for ideological reasons. Each of these scripts was used forwriting in numerous languages. Initially, script choices were dictated by religion(Latin letters for Western Christianity, Church Cyrillic for Slavophone OrthodoxChristians, or the Arabic writing system for Muslims), usually connected to a holybook in an ecclesiastical language committed to parchment in a specific script. Whenvernaculars began to make an appearance in writing, especially in the 16th centuryand later, their users stuck to the scripts of their holy books. Two factors, the processof building ethnolinguistically defined nation-states and changing ideas about whatmodernity should be about in the sphere of culture, radically limited the number ofscripts in official and de facto use. Only in Bosnia-Hercegovina, Kosovo, Macedonia,Moldova, Montenegro and Ukraine are two scripts in official use, to varying degrees inthe different countries. The European Union already uses three official scripts, Cyrillic,Greek and Latin; if its actions follow its words and it admits some or all of thesestates to membership, it stands a good chance of reviving the tradition of Europeanmultiscripturality, alongside its legally enshrined commitment to multilingualism. ; Postprint ; Peer reviewed
Keyword: Albanian languages and literature; Baltic; Central Europe; Language politics; Literacy; PG; PG Slavic; Politics; Scripts; Writing
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10023/3346
https://doi.org/10.1553/moeg154s9
http://hw.oeaw.ac.at/?arp=0x002d997a
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