DE eng

Search in the Catalogues and Directories

Page: 1 2 3 4 5...26
Hits 1 – 20 of 515

1
"Into"-causatives in world Englishes
In: English world-wide. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins 43 (2022) 1, 1-32
BLLDB
Show details
2
Intensifying and downtoning in South Asian Englishes : empirical perspectives
In: English world-wide. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins 43 (2022) 1, 33-65
BLLDB
Show details
3
Substrate language influence in postcolonial Asian Englishes and the role of transfer in the complementation system
In: English studies. - Abingdon : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 102 (2021) 7-8, 1151-1170
BLLDB
Show details
4
A Kaffrinha dos Burghers da Província Oriental. Uma etnografia no Sri Lanka
BASE
Show details
5
Synchronic variation in Sri Lanka Portuguese personal pronouns
BASE
Show details
6
"Make us difficult" : portrait of a non-standard construction
In: English world-wide. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins 41 (2020) 3, 352-367
BLLDB
Show details
7
Talking Saivism in a Tamil migrant faith classroom
Perera, Niru. - : Taylor & Francis, 2020
BASE
Show details
8
Progressive or simple? : A corpus-based study of aspect in World Englishes
In: Corpora. - Edinburgh : Univ. Press 15 (2020) 1, 77-106
BLLDB
Show details
9
Documenting modern Sri Lanka Portuguese
Cardoso, Hugo C.; Radhakrishnan, Mahesh; Costa, Patrícia. - : University of Hawaii Press, 2020
BASE
Show details
10
Bibliometric analysis on global e-learning literature in Web of Science database: with special reference to Sri Lankan context
In: Library Philosophy and Practice (e-journal) (2020)
BASE
Show details
11
The coding of perfect meaning in African, Asian and Caribbean Englishes
In: English language and linguistics. - Cambridge : Cambridge Univ. Press 23 (2019) 3, 509-529
BLLDB
Show details
12
Family chat: Burgher food ; slp084_4 ; Documentation of Sri Lanka Portuguese
BASE
Show details
13
Peace Education Studies and Post-Conflict Sri Lanka
BASE
Show details
14
Peace Education Studies and Post-Conflict Sri Lanka
BASE
Show details
15
Documenting modern Sri Lanka Portuguese
Cardoso, Hugo C.; Radhakrishnan, Mahesh; Costa, Patrícia. - : University of Hawai'i Press, 2019
BASE
Show details
16
Documenting modern Sri Lanka Portuguese
Cardoso, Hugo C.; Radhakrishnan, Mahesh; Costa, Patrícia. - : University of Hawai'i Press, 2019
BASE
Show details
17
Buddha as Progenitor of Pali, the Non-parole Lingua Dhammica
Mihita, Bhikkhu. - 2019
BASE
Show details
18
The Politics of English in Sri Lanka: Perspectives from Postcolonial Anglophone Literature
Anver, Gazala. - : The University of Sydney, 2019. : Department of English, 2019. : Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, School of Literature, Art and Media, 2019
Abstract: Anglophone literature by writers from former British colonies has been viewed by literary critics as an act of writing back to the colonial centre. Such a view presents these writers as located in the margins, where they re-appropriate and re-fashion the language of the coloniser in service of those it once oppressed, to paraphrase Salman Rushdie and Ashcroft et al. However, in framing postcolonial Anglophone literature within this centre-periphery binary, this mode of reading presents the writer as resisting the colonial metropole but fails to address the status of English in relation to racial, ethno-linguistic and class conflicts in postcolonial countries like Sri Lanka. English in Sri Lanka is constitutionally recognised as a “link language” under the presumption that it mitigates linguistic conflicts that have erupted between the country’s various ethnic groups, notably between the Sinhalese and Tamils. This contributes to English functioning as a “vanishing mediator”, as Aamir Mufti calls it, where in acting as a mediator it assumes an aura of transparency which obscures its function as a vehicle for generating “elite cultural capital” in Sarah Brouillette’s words. Departing from the centre-periphery model, this thesis examines two Sri Lankan Anglophone literary texts, Shehan Karunatilaka’s Chinaman (2010) and Michael Ondaatje’s Running in the Family (1982) to understand the status of English in relation to the politics of ethnicity, race, class and language in Sri Lanka. A novel about cricket, I read Karunatilaka’s depiction of the imperial cultural product, which has been appropriated by the former colony, as an analogy for the English language, one that allows for an interrogation of the assumptions that English and cricket can unite and “link” the nation amidst competing Sinhala-Tamil nationalisms. An exploration of his Anglophone Burgher cultural heritage, Ondaatje’s text brings to the fore the complicity of this ethnically privileged minority subject, which I read as challenging the assumptions about ethnicity, race and language boundaries in Sri Lanka. My analyses of these texts interrogate the assumptions of “link language” implied in the country’s constitution, while revealing that English in Sri Lanka both exposes the fault lines of Sri Lankan society while disrupting notions of ethno-linguistic purity that have come to define the Sinhala-Tamil conflict and post-colonial race relations in the country.
Keyword: link language; Michael Ondaatje "Running in the Family"; politics of English; Shehan Karunatilaka "Chinaman"; Sri Lanka; Sri Lankan Anglophone literature
URL: https://hdl.handle.net/2123/21739
BASE
Hide details
19
Ethnolinguistic concordance and the receipt of postpartum IUD counseling services in Sri Lanka.
BASE
Show details
20
Do tigers confess? : an interdisciplinary study of confessionary evidence in counter-terrorism measures of Sri Lanka
BASE
Show details

Page: 1 2 3 4 5...26

Catalogues
17
0
6
0
0
7
3
Bibliographies
64
0
0
0
0
0
0
3
4
Linked Open Data catalogues
0
Online resources
0
0
0
0
Open access documents
433
0
0
0
0
© 2013 - 2024 Lin|gu|is|tik | Imprint | Privacy Policy | Datenschutzeinstellungen ändern