Back to Main Search Page
Do Another Search by Subject Heading
Your subject heading is: Sociolinguistics.
| Author: Rado L. Lencek | |||
| Title: | The language revolution in Slovene romantic poetry | ||
| Subject Headings: | Literature; Poetry; Sociolinguistics | ||
| Publication: | PSS | ||
| Volume: | 1978 | ||
| Number: | |||
| Year: | 1981 | ||
| Type: | Article | ||
| Lencek, Rado L. 1981. * "The language revolution in Slovene romantic poetry," PSS 1978: 15-44. | |||
| Lencek, Rado L. 1981: "The language revolution in Slovene romantic poetry" A sociolinguistic discussion of the Kopitar-Čop-Prešeren debate on the Slovene language question. Emphasis is on the main problem of the debate, the need for adoption both of a standard idiom for an essentially urban culture and a common language of literature for the Slovenes. The conflict was essentially in Čop's and Prešeren's preoccupation with the prestige function of the poetic language, which was not a concern of the pragmatic Kopitar. | |||
| Author: Rado L. Lencek | |||
| Title: | A paradigm of Slavic national evolution: Bible -- grammar -- poet | ||
| Subject Headings: | Grammar; Poetry; Religion; Socioculture; Sociolinguistics | ||
| Publication: | SS | ||
| Volume: | 6 | ||
| Number: | 1-2 | ||
| Year: | 1985 | ||
| Type: | Article | ||
| Lencek, Rado L. 1985.* "A paradigm of Slavic national evolution: Bible -- grammar -- poet," SS 6/1-2: 57-71. | |||
| Lencek, Rado L. 1985: "A paradigm of Slavic national evolution: Bible - grammar - poet" The article presents sociocultural and sociolinguistic observations. The three supreme cultural events in the philological history of a nationality are: the translation of the Bible into its specific language; the creation of a Grammar in this language; and the appearance of a national poet. In terms of the Slovene cultural paradigm, these events are Jurij Dalmatin's Bible, Adam Bohorič's Grammar and France Prešeren's poetry. | |||
| Author: Rado L. Lencek | |||
| Title: | On literature in diasporas and the life span of their medium | ||
| Subject Headings: | Immigration; Majority language; Religious communities; Sociolinguistics | ||
| Publication: | SS | ||
| Volume: | 10 | ||
| Number: | 2 | ||
| Year: | 1989 | ||
| Type: | Article | ||
| Lencek, Rado L. 1989.* "On literature in diasporas and the life span of their medium," SS 10/2: 119-123. | |||
| Lencek, Rado L. 1989: "On literature in diasporas and the life span of their medium." A sociolinguistic interpretation of why an ethnic community in emigration shifts from producing literature in its native language to the majority language by the second generation. Only the primary language of a community undergoes the everyday reinforcement, adaptation, and creative production that enable writers to express themselves adequately. Second generation immigrants who become writers are separated from that reinforcement of their native language and find their voices in the majority language. | |||
| Author: Rado L. Lencek | |||
| Title: | The dimensions of sociolinguistic language attitudes | ||
| Subject Headings: | Emigration; Sociolinguistics | ||
| Publication: | SS | ||
| Volume: | 13 | ||
| Number: | 1 | ||
| Year: | 1992 | ||
| Type: | Article | ||
| Lencek, Rado L. 1992.* "The dimensions of sociolinguistic language attitudes," SS 13/1: 27-32. | |||
| Lencek, Rado L. 1992: "The dimensions of sociolinguistic language attitudes" The author contrasts three facets of speakers' attitudes toward language -- language loyalty, language pride, and awareness of the norm -- as they apply to three populations of Slovenes: those within Slovenia; those living in Italy, Austria and Hungary; and Slovenes in emigration. | |||
| Author: Herta Maurer-Lausegger | |||
| Title: | Situationally-motivated speaking habits among Carinthian Slovenes | ||
| Subject Headings: | Sociolinguistics; Spoken language | ||
| Publication: | SS | ||
| Volume: | 15 | ||
| Number: | 1-2 | ||
| Year: | 1995 | ||
| Type: | Article | ||
| Maurer-Lausegger, Herta. * 1995. "Situationally-motivated speaking habits among Carinthian Slovenes," SS 15/1-2: 87-99. | |||
| Maurer-Lausegger, Herta 1995: "Situationally-motivated speaking habits among Carinthian Slovenes" The author describes the dynamic character of the sociolinguistic position in Carinthia. She then focuses her attention on the linguistic situation in small towns and villages; language acquisition in bilingual families; research on linguistic behavior; linguistic behavior in selected localities; and code-switching. | |||
| Author: Dušan Nećak | |||
| Author: Albina Nećak-Lük | |||
| Title: | Slovene as a minority language: Historical background and socio-linguistic prospects | ||
| Subject Headings: | Minority language; Sociolinguistics | ||
| Publication: | SS | ||
| Volume: | 12 | ||
| Number: | 2 | ||
| Year: | 1992 | ||
| Type: | Article | ||
| Nećak-Lük, Albina & Dušan Nećak. 1992.* "Slovene as a minority language: Historical background and socio-linguistic prospects," SS 12/2: 169-181. | |||
| Nećak-Lük, Albina and Dušan Nećak 1992: "Slovene as a minority language: Historical background and sociolinguistic prospects" The authors discuss the status of Slovene in the ethnically Slovene territories in Austria, Hungary, and Italy. In each nation Slovene and its speakers have experienced assimilation pressures. There were some successes in the promotion of Slovene in minority areas, particularly the Slovene school law in Gorizia and Trieste, but the maintenance of Slovene in all three areas is endangered by a continuing lack of equality with the majority languages that dominate the public spheres. | |||
| Author: Joseph Paternost | |||
| Title: | Sociolinguistic aspects of the Slovene spoken in America | ||
| Subject Headings: | Sociolinguistics | ||
| Publication: | SS | ||
| Volume: | 1 | ||
| Number: | 1 | ||
| Year: | 1979 | ||
| Type: | Article | ||
| Paternost, Joseph. 1979.* "Sociolinguistic aspects of the Slovene spoken in America," SS 1/1: 14-24. | |||
| Paternost, Joseph 1979: "Sociolinguistic aspects of the Slovene spoken in America" Several promising areas of study of the changes Slovene has undergone in America are suggested: the Slovenization of vowels in words borrowed from English by American Slovene speakers; differences among American Slovene speakers' morphology and syntax; varieties of loanword; changes in word order; the influence of other Slavic languages on American Slovene; changes in Slovene surnames; and differences in body language. | |||
| Author: Joseph Paternost | |||
| Title: | Problems in language contact and the social meaning of language among American Slovenes | ||
| Subject Headings: | Sociolinguistics | ||
| Publication: | SS | ||
| Volume: | 5 | ||
| Number: | 2 | ||
| Year: | 1984 | ||
| Type: | Article | ||
| Paternost, Joseph. 1984.* "Problems in language contact and the social meaning of language among American Slovenes," SS 5/2: 207-18. | |||
| Paternost, Joseph 1984: "Problems in language contact and the social meaning of language among American Slovenes" The author studies phonological, morphosyntactic, and lexical difficulties that arise in the interaction of American English and Slovene, as well as the social meaning involved in transferences between the two languages. Pronunciation, declension, and loanword-loanblend problems among non-native speakers of English and Slovene are described. The use of Slovene in American English contexts is characterized as a family bond, a secret language, and a vehicle for entertainment. | |||
| Author: Joseph Paternost | |||
| Title: | A sociolinguistic tug of war between Slovene and Serbo-Croatian in Slovenia today | ||
| Subject Headings: | Sociolinguistics | ||
| Publication: | SS | ||
| Volume: | 6 | ||
| Number: | 1-2 | ||
| Year: | 1985 | ||
| Type: | Article | ||
| Paternost, Joseph. 1985.* "A sociolinguistic tug of war between Slovene and Serbo-Croatian in Slovenia today," SS 6/1-2: 227-242. | |||
| Paternost, Joseph 1985: "A sociolinguistic tug of war between Slovene and Serbo-Croatian in Slovenia today" This paper deals with several realms of Slovene-Serbo-Croatian language contact, with emphasis on the Slovenes' attitudes toward their own language. On the one hand the Slovene language supports national consolidation; on the other there are linguistic practices which work in the opposite direction. Serbo-Croatian is becoming an "official" language in more and more domains of Yugoslav public life, and is perceived abroad as the "Yugoslav language". | |||
| Author: Tom M. S. Priestly | |||
| Title: | The case of the Slovene minority in Austria | ||
| Subject Headings: | Minority; Sociolinguistics | ||
| Publication: | SS | ||
| Volume: | 13 | ||
| Number: | 1 | ||
| Year: | 1992 | ||
| Type: | Article | ||
| Priestly, Tom M. S. 1992.* "The case of the Slovene minority in Austria," SS 13/1: 46-51. | |||
| Priestly, Tom M.S. 1992: "The case of the Slovene minority in Austria" Four aspects of the sociolinguistic situation are stressed: the harmful legacy of Habsburg policies; the extreme complexity of the current situation; the irrationality of many of the arguments advanced for the maintenance of Slovene; and the extremes of variation in personal and communal `ethnic consciousness' among Carinthian Slovenes. Finally, the author emphasizes the enormous importance of the Carinthian dialects for the maintenance of any kind of Slovene in the province. | |||
| Author: David F. Stermole | |||
| Title: | Some factors affecting the maintenance of bilingualism in Carinthia | ||
| Subject Headings: | Government; Language; Minority; Political system; Politics; Sociolinguistics | ||
| Publication: | PSS | ||
| Volume: | 1977 | ||
| Number: | |||
| Year: | 1978 | ||
| Type: | Article | ||
| Stermole, David F. 1978.* "Some factors affecting the maintenance of bilingualism in Carinthia," PSS 1977: 40-50. | |||
| Stermole, David F. 1978: "Some factors affecting the maintenance of bilingualism in Carinthia" A review of the trend toward assimilation of the Slovene-speaking population and the factors affecting the maintenance of bilingualism. Negative factors include: German nationalism; its support by Slovene `renegades'; divisions within the minority; the political system of Slovenia; the various levels of Austrian government; discrimination; the lack of Slovene owned industry. The Church is both a positive and a negative factor. Among the positive factors: Slovene cultural institutions, banks and farmers' co-operatives; the Slovenska Zvezna Gimnazija. | |||
| Author: Jože Toporišič | |||
| Title: | The social situation of the Slovene literary language in 1584 and 1984 | ||
| Subject Headings: | Sociolinguistics | ||
| Publication: | SS | ||
| Volume: | 6 | ||
| Number: | 1-2 | ||
| Year: | 1985 | ||
| Type: | Article | ||
| Toporišič, Jože. 1985.* "The social situation of the Slovene literary language in 1584 and 1984," SS 6/1-2: 247-258. | |||
| Toporišič, Jože 1985: "The social situation of the Slovene literary language in 1584 and 1984" The situation of literary Slovene in 1584 and its situation in 1984 are very similar. Slovene has always been used among a very small group within the larger context. In terms of its functions, Slovene does not prevail in basic governmental structures nowadays, just as in the past. Quotations by l6th C. authors transposed to the present situation illustrate the author's thesis. | |||
Programmed 4 Jan 2002
Last modified 20 Aug 2006
Generated 9 September 2010, 2:44 pm