<p>‘In 1956, the French philologist Marcel Cohen suggested that language practices could usefully be understood as a form of work. Finally, decades later, we have a volume which takes up this idea seriously, exploring what language work/language as work tells us about questions of value, the social construction of reality, and social inequality in contemporary conditions. You won’t look at a keyboard – or a pen – the same way after you have read this book.’<br />Monica Heller, Editor of the Journal of Sociolinguistics</p><p>‘This pioneering volume on the production of high-end wordsmithery explores previously unengaged aspects of the political economy of language. In detailed examinations of the work of journalists, PR writers, marketers, linguists, and others, we see their word-craft in ways that clarify their critical and often invisible roles as semiotic brokers.’ <br />Bonnie Urciuoli, Hamilton College (Emeritus), USA</p>

The Business of Words examines the practices of ‘high-end’ language workers or wordsmiths where we find words being professionally designed, institutionally managed, and, inevitably, objectified for status and profit.

Aligned with existing work on language and political economy in critical sociolinguistics and discourse studies, the volume offers a novel, complementary insight into the relatively elite practices of language workers such as advertisers, dialect coaches, publishers, judges, translators, public relations officers, fine artists, journalists, and linguists themselves. In fact, the book considers what academics might learn about language from other wordsmiths, opening a space for ‘dialogue’ between those researching language and those who also stake a claim to linguistic expertise and a way with words.

Bringing together an array of leading international scholars from the cognate fields of discourse studies, sociolinguistics, and linguistic anthropology, this book is an essential resource for researchers, advanced undergraduate, and postgraduate students of English language, linguistics and applied linguistics, communication and media studies, and anthropology.

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The Business of Words examines the practices of 'high-end' language workers or wordsmiths. An essential resource for researchers, advanced undergraduate and postgraduate students of English Language, Linguistics and Applied Linguistics, Communication and Media Studies, and Anthropology.

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List of Contributors

Chapter 1 – The (Grubby) Business of Words: What ‘George Clooney’ Tells Us

Part 1: Language Work and the Business of Words

Chapter 2 – Unequal Language Work(ers) in the Business of Words

Chapter 3 – The Linguistic Business of Marketing

Part 2: Wordsmiths and Professional Language Work

Chapter 4 – Unwriteable Discourse? Co-crafting the Language of Science News

Chapter 5 – Voice Work: Learning About and From Dialect Coaches

Chapter 6 – EAT, LOVE and Other (Small) Stories: Tellability and Multimodality in Robert Indiana’s Word Art

Chapter 7 – Judges as Wordsmiths: Crafting Clarity and Neutrality in Summing-up for Juries

Chapter 8 – Making (up) the News: The Artful Language Work of Journalists in ‘Reporting’ Taboo

Part 3: Linguists and Political Economies of Expertise

Chapter 9 – Framing Elite Knowledge in Shifting Linguistic Economies: The Case of Minority Language Translation

Chapter 10 – Beyond the Academic ‘But’: The Pleasures and Politics of Collaborative Language Work in the Publishing Industry

Chapter 11 – The Commercialisation of Linguistic Expertise in the Asylum Vetting Process

Chapter 12 – Engaging with School Principals as Language Policy Workers

Index

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781138485266
Publisert
2019-08-12
Utgiver
Vendor
Routledge
Vekt
317 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
U, G, 05, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
210

Redaktør

Biografisk notat

Crispin Thurlow is Professor of Language and Communication in the Department of English at the University of Bern, Switzerland.