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The linguistic landscapes of Chisinau – Forms and functions of urban public signs in a post‐Soviet setting

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The linguistic landscapes of Chisinau – Forms and functions of urban public signs in a post‐Soviet setting. / Muth, Sebastian; Wolf, Frederik.
Proceedings of the LAEL PG4 Lancaster University. 2010.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

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@inproceedings{e4cd17c0550b4b9f89a1fd88e32f2c88,
title = "The linguistic landscapes of Chisinau – Forms and functions of urban public signs in a post‐Soviet setting",
abstract = "As one of the fairly new fields of research in linguistics, the study of linguistic landscapes (LL) is concerned with language as a medium of communication in its written form. This includes virtually all displays of written language such as shop signs, billboards, placards and other formal and informal displays of written language visible to us in publicly accessible places. Apart from a purelydiscursive dimension, this approach also serves as a useful tool to study language use in multilingual urban settings where the linguistic landscape often is a highly contested and politicized space. In this paper we explore the linguistic landscape of such a multilingual agglomeration, Chisinau, the capital of the Republic of Moldova. Based on a corpus of digital pictures displays of written language this paper explores the status, various functions andquantitative distribution of the country{\textquoteright}s two main languages, Romanian and Russian. Keeping historical as well as political aspects in mind, assumptions on language preferences and functional domains of the languages displayed will be made, allowing for an insight into patterns of language use in a post‐Soviet republic.",
author = "Sebastian Muth and Frederik Wolf",
year = "2010",
language = "English",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the LAEL PG4 Lancaster University",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - The linguistic landscapes of Chisinau – Forms and functions of urban public signs in a post‐Soviet setting

AU - Muth, Sebastian

AU - Wolf, Frederik

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - As one of the fairly new fields of research in linguistics, the study of linguistic landscapes (LL) is concerned with language as a medium of communication in its written form. This includes virtually all displays of written language such as shop signs, billboards, placards and other formal and informal displays of written language visible to us in publicly accessible places. Apart from a purelydiscursive dimension, this approach also serves as a useful tool to study language use in multilingual urban settings where the linguistic landscape often is a highly contested and politicized space. In this paper we explore the linguistic landscape of such a multilingual agglomeration, Chisinau, the capital of the Republic of Moldova. Based on a corpus of digital pictures displays of written language this paper explores the status, various functions andquantitative distribution of the country’s two main languages, Romanian and Russian. Keeping historical as well as political aspects in mind, assumptions on language preferences and functional domains of the languages displayed will be made, allowing for an insight into patterns of language use in a post‐Soviet republic.

AB - As one of the fairly new fields of research in linguistics, the study of linguistic landscapes (LL) is concerned with language as a medium of communication in its written form. This includes virtually all displays of written language such as shop signs, billboards, placards and other formal and informal displays of written language visible to us in publicly accessible places. Apart from a purelydiscursive dimension, this approach also serves as a useful tool to study language use in multilingual urban settings where the linguistic landscape often is a highly contested and politicized space. In this paper we explore the linguistic landscape of such a multilingual agglomeration, Chisinau, the capital of the Republic of Moldova. Based on a corpus of digital pictures displays of written language this paper explores the status, various functions andquantitative distribution of the country’s two main languages, Romanian and Russian. Keeping historical as well as political aspects in mind, assumptions on language preferences and functional domains of the languages displayed will be made, allowing for an insight into patterns of language use in a post‐Soviet republic.

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

BT - Proceedings of the LAEL PG4 Lancaster University

ER -