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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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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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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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Words in space and time : a historical atlas of language politics in modern Central Europe
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Xenophobia and anti-Semitism in the concept of Polish literature
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Central Europe through the lens of language and politics : on the sample maps from the Atlas of language politics in modern Central Europe
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The triple division of the Slavic languages : a linguistic finding, a product of politics, or an accident?
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Codzienność komunikacyjno-językowa na obszarze historycznego Górnego Śląska ; The everyday language use in historical Upper Silesia
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The rise and dynamics of the normative isomorphism of language, nation, and state in Central Europe
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The political expediency of language-making in Central Europe : the case of Czechoslovak
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Creating languages in Central Europe: a longue durée perspective
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Abstract:
Languages are made into discrete entities, as we know them nowadays, from the ‘mass of the continuous linguistic’ by the technology of writing in the service of power centers, usually state capitals. All the choices made on the way – planned or not – amount to standardization (homogenization, or doing away with territorial and social particularities and inconsistences), which intensifies the bigger a percentage of population are literate. Long lasting extant states and religion decidedly shaped the constellation of written languages across (Central) Europe. This constellation, having emerged in the 10th-11th centuries was dramatically remade during the religious wars with the emergence of printing, from the 15th-17th centuries, heralding a growing correlation between vernaculars and written languages, first in Catholic and Protestant Europe, during the 18th-19th centuries in Orthodox Europe, and only in the 20th century in Islamic Europe. The last century also saw the implementation of the political principle of ethnolinguistic nationalism – especially in Central Europe – which claims that the nation-state is legitimate only if it is monolingual and monoscriptural, and does not share its official language with another polity. ; Postprint
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Keyword:
Central Europe; Ethnolinguistic nationalism; Europe; Language creation; Language politics; Language standardiztaion; Literacy; Script; Script politics; Writing
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10023/9440
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Snježana Kordić, Jezik i nacjonalizam [Language and Nationalism]
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Tsentralnaia Evropa s lingvisticheskoi tochki zreniia ; Central Europe from the Linguistic Point of View
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