Multilingualism and linguistic landscapes across space and time in the public railway system in South Africa: A multisemiotic analysis

Philosophiae Doctor - PhD === During apartheid, the infrastructure in South Africa was built by the government and was designed to keep Blacks away from White areas. This infrastructure comprised inter alia the public railway system which was intended to benefit mainly the White minority populati...

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Main Author: Johnson, Ian Lyndon
Other Authors: Banda, Felix
Language:en
Published: University of the Western Cape 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11394/6647
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uwc-oai-etd.uwc.ac.za-11394-66472019-04-12T03:40:00Z Multilingualism and linguistic landscapes across space and time in the public railway system in South Africa: A multisemiotic analysis Johnson, Ian Lyndon Banda, Felix Apartheid Dialogicality Geosemiotics Identity Railways Philosophiae Doctor - PhD During apartheid, the infrastructure in South Africa was built by the government and was designed to keep Blacks away from White areas. This infrastructure comprised inter alia the public railway system which was intended to benefit mainly the White minority population, as it momentarily allowed Blacks to provide the cheap labour needed in White areas and businesses. While Whites predominantly resided within the suburbs adjacent to the railways, Blacks were relegated to the outskirts of the cities to areas which became known as townships and homelands. Racial segregation was rigorously enforced and consequently, the signs displayed in trains and on railway infrastructure primarily served to demarcate spaces and places that were designated for use by either Whites or Blacks, respectively. Against this backdrop, the main aim of this research was to present an ethnographic, multisemiotic study of the linguistic landscape (LL) of the public railways in post-apartheid South Africa across space and time. The study focussed on the languages used on signs displayed in the individual research sites. A mixed-methods research design was employed which entailed consideration of both quantitative and qualitative data. Thus, data was collected during ethnographic fieldwork over a six month period and was analysed using a multimodal/multisemiotic approach. The results reveal insights into the social structuring of languages and the mobility of linguistic and semiotic resources across regional and national boundaries in space and time since the end of apartheid. 2019-04-10T08:59:53Z 2019-04-10T08:59:53Z 2018 http://hdl.handle.net/11394/6647 en University of the Western Cape University of the Western Cape
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Apartheid
Dialogicality
Geosemiotics
Identity
Railways
spellingShingle Apartheid
Dialogicality
Geosemiotics
Identity
Railways
Johnson, Ian Lyndon
Multilingualism and linguistic landscapes across space and time in the public railway system in South Africa: A multisemiotic analysis
description Philosophiae Doctor - PhD === During apartheid, the infrastructure in South Africa was built by the government and was designed to keep Blacks away from White areas. This infrastructure comprised inter alia the public railway system which was intended to benefit mainly the White minority population, as it momentarily allowed Blacks to provide the cheap labour needed in White areas and businesses. While Whites predominantly resided within the suburbs adjacent to the railways, Blacks were relegated to the outskirts of the cities to areas which became known as townships and homelands. Racial segregation was rigorously enforced and consequently, the signs displayed in trains and on railway infrastructure primarily served to demarcate spaces and places that were designated for use by either Whites or Blacks, respectively. Against this backdrop, the main aim of this research was to present an ethnographic, multisemiotic study of the linguistic landscape (LL) of the public railways in post-apartheid South Africa across space and time. The study focussed on the languages used on signs displayed in the individual research sites. A mixed-methods research design was employed which entailed consideration of both quantitative and qualitative data. Thus, data was collected during ethnographic fieldwork over a six month period and was analysed using a multimodal/multisemiotic approach. The results reveal insights into the social structuring of languages and the mobility of linguistic and semiotic resources across regional and national boundaries in space and time since the end of apartheid.
author2 Banda, Felix
author_facet Banda, Felix
Johnson, Ian Lyndon
author Johnson, Ian Lyndon
author_sort Johnson, Ian Lyndon
title Multilingualism and linguistic landscapes across space and time in the public railway system in South Africa: A multisemiotic analysis
title_short Multilingualism and linguistic landscapes across space and time in the public railway system in South Africa: A multisemiotic analysis
title_full Multilingualism and linguistic landscapes across space and time in the public railway system in South Africa: A multisemiotic analysis
title_fullStr Multilingualism and linguistic landscapes across space and time in the public railway system in South Africa: A multisemiotic analysis
title_full_unstemmed Multilingualism and linguistic landscapes across space and time in the public railway system in South Africa: A multisemiotic analysis
title_sort multilingualism and linguistic landscapes across space and time in the public railway system in south africa: a multisemiotic analysis
publisher University of the Western Cape
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/11394/6647
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