Social engineers and myth-busters: A comparative research on Lithuanian, Norwegian and Serbian language experts

This article compares the language ideologies of language experts (both academic and non-academic) in online news media in Lithuania, Norway and Serbia. The results will reveal that language is understood in diametrically opposed ways amongst Lithuanian and Serbian academic experts on the one, and...

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Main Author: Vuk Vukotić
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Vilnius University Press 2019-01-01
Series:Taikomoji kalbotyra
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.journals.vu.lt/taikomojikalbotyra/article/view/17240
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spelling doaj-ebf40b65b168483b87b031e99374c7022020-11-25T03:41:19ZdeuVilnius University PressTaikomoji kalbotyra2029-89352019-01-011210.15388/TK.2019.17240Social engineers and myth-busters: A comparative research on Lithuanian, Norwegian and Serbian language expertsVuk Vukotić0Institute of Lithuanian Language, Lithuania This article compares the language ideologies of language experts (both academic and non-academic) in online news media in Lithuania, Norway and Serbia. The results will reveal that language is understood in diametrically opposed ways amongst Lithuanian and Serbian academic experts on the one, and Norwegian academic experts on the other hand. Lithuanian and Serbian academic experts are influenced by modernist ideas of language as a single, homogenous entity, whose borders ideally match the borders of an ethnic group. Norwegian academic experts function in the public sphere as those who try to deconstruct the modernist notion of language by employing an understanding of language as a cognitive tool that performs communicative and other functions. On the other hand, non-academic experts in all the three countries exhibit a striking similarity in their language ideologies, as the great majority expresses modernist ideals of language. https://www.journals.vu.lt/taikomojikalbotyra/article/view/17240language ideologieslanguage expertsvirtual spheremodernitymonolingualism
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vuk Vukotić
spellingShingle Vuk Vukotić
Social engineers and myth-busters: A comparative research on Lithuanian, Norwegian and Serbian language experts
Taikomoji kalbotyra
language ideologies
language experts
virtual sphere
modernity
monolingualism
author_facet Vuk Vukotić
author_sort Vuk Vukotić
title Social engineers and myth-busters: A comparative research on Lithuanian, Norwegian and Serbian language experts
title_short Social engineers and myth-busters: A comparative research on Lithuanian, Norwegian and Serbian language experts
title_full Social engineers and myth-busters: A comparative research on Lithuanian, Norwegian and Serbian language experts
title_fullStr Social engineers and myth-busters: A comparative research on Lithuanian, Norwegian and Serbian language experts
title_full_unstemmed Social engineers and myth-busters: A comparative research on Lithuanian, Norwegian and Serbian language experts
title_sort social engineers and myth-busters: a comparative research on lithuanian, norwegian and serbian language experts
publisher Vilnius University Press
series Taikomoji kalbotyra
issn 2029-8935
publishDate 2019-01-01
description This article compares the language ideologies of language experts (both academic and non-academic) in online news media in Lithuania, Norway and Serbia. The results will reveal that language is understood in diametrically opposed ways amongst Lithuanian and Serbian academic experts on the one, and Norwegian academic experts on the other hand. Lithuanian and Serbian academic experts are influenced by modernist ideas of language as a single, homogenous entity, whose borders ideally match the borders of an ethnic group. Norwegian academic experts function in the public sphere as those who try to deconstruct the modernist notion of language by employing an understanding of language as a cognitive tool that performs communicative and other functions. On the other hand, non-academic experts in all the three countries exhibit a striking similarity in their language ideologies, as the great majority expresses modernist ideals of language.
topic language ideologies
language experts
virtual sphere
modernity
monolingualism
url https://www.journals.vu.lt/taikomojikalbotyra/article/view/17240
work_keys_str_mv AT vukvukotic socialengineersandmythbustersacomparativeresearchonlithuaniannorwegianandserbianlanguageexperts
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