Semiotic Landscapes is an exciting addition to the study of linguistic landscapes. It looks at how landscape generates meaning and combines three major areas of scholarly interest each concerned with central dimensions of contemporary life: language and visual discourse, spatial practices, and also the changes bought about by global capitalism and ever increasing mediatization. The editors look at: the textual/discursive construction of place; the use of space as a semiotic resource; the extent to which these processes are shaped by wider economic and political re-orderings of post-industrial or advanced capitalism; changing patterns of human mobility and transnational flows of ideas and images. The collection demonstrates the way written discourse interacts with all other discursive modalities: visual images, nonverbal communication, architecture and the built environment. From the red light districts of Switzerland to the transgressive public art of graffiti, all landscape can be seen to generate meaning. Semiotic Landscapes looks at how and why, and places this meaning generation in an interdisciplinary and thoroughly modern cross-section of global trends.
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Offers a look at how landscape generates meaning. This title combines three major areas of scholarly interest each concerned with central dimensions of contemporary life: language and visual discourse, spatial practices, and also the changes bought about by global capitalism and mediatization.
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Introduction, Adam Jaworski and Crispin Thurlow; 1. Changing landscapes: New languages and old policies in the Dublin linguistic landscape, Jeffrey L. Kallen (Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland); 2. Discourses in transit, Mark Sebba (Lancaster, UK); 3. The entextualisation of language ideologies: Welsh linguistic landscapes, Nikolas Coupland (Cardiff, UK); 4. (W)rites of passage: Nonstandard texts and signage in Jamaica, Susan Dray (Lancaster, UK); 5. 'A Latino community takes hold': Semiotic landscape and media discourse, Thomas D. Mitchell (Carnegie Mellon University, USA); 6. Monumental identities: Semiotic legitimacy of Jewish illegal immigration in public space, Elana Shohamy and Shoshi Waksman (Tel Aviv University, Israel); 7. Contesting public space: Tourism and the transgressive art of graffiti, Alastair Pennycook (University of Technology, Sydney, Australia); 8. Silence is golden: Linguascaping and social exclusion in elite tourism representations, Crispin Thurlow and Adam Jaworski (University of Washington, Cardiff University, UK); 9. Sexing multilingualism: The semiotics of the sex industry in Switzerland, Ingrid Piller (Macquarie University, Australia); 10. Physical spaces and virtual environments, Rodney H. Jones (City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong); 11. Faces of place: Facades and the city as spectacle, laboratory and text, Irina Gendelman and Giorgia Aiello (University of Washington, USA); 12. Semiosis takes place or radical uses of quaint theories, Ella Chmielewska (University of Edinburgh, Scotland); Index.
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Semiotic landscapes is described on the dust jacket as an ‘‘exciting addition to the study of linguistic landscapes'' and does not fall short of this claim. In a range of different geographic settings, this volume expands the discussion in several refreshing ways, inviting others to respond to the challenges, issues and questions identified in this cutting-edge growth area of sociolinguistics.
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Landscapes generate meaning and impact on three major areas of scholarly interest: language and visual discourse, spatial practices and global capitalism.
Beautifully illustrated with over 60 illustrations.
Since the emergence of sociolinguistics as a new field of enquiry in the late 1960s, research into the relationship between language and society has advanced almost beyond recognition. In particular, the past decade has witnessed the considerable influence of theories drawn from outside of sociolinguistics itself. Thus rather than see language as a mere reflection of society, recent work has been increasingly inspired by ideas drawn from social, cultural, and political theory that have emphasised the constitutive role played by language/discourse in all areas of social life. The Advances in Sociolinguistics series seeks to provide a snapshot of the current diversity of the field of sociolinguistics and the blurring of the boundaries between sociolinguistics and other domains of study concerned with the role of language in society.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781847061829
Publisert
2010-04-08
Utgiver
Vendor
Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
320

Biographical note

Adam Jaworski is Professor in Language and Communication at the Centre for Language and Communication Research, Cardiff University, UK. Crispin Thurlow is Associate Professor of Communication and adjunct Assistant Professor of Linguistics at the University of Washington, USA.