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Multilingualism in China. The Politisc of Writing Reforms for Minority Languages 1949 - 2002

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  • 458 stránok
  • 17 hodin čítania

Viac o knihe

Minglang Zhou's highly erudite and well-researched volume on the policies concerning writing reforms for China's minorities since 1949 provides an original and well-reasoned summary of a complex process. It documents how different script reforms meet dramatically different fates according to local preferences, history, cross-border ties, and the vitality of previously-used scripts. It convincingly shows that no single variable is decisive in the success of a script, and that language planners' fixation with technical details is doomed to failure, without careful coordination of extra-code factors. It also documents the little-known Sino-Soviet cooperation in the area of writing reforms. In a style accessible to both undergraduate and graduate students, Zhou's book is of interest to language planners, sinologists, applied linguists, writing theorists, and ethnologists.

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Multilingualism in China. The Politisc of Writing Reforms for Minority Languages 1949 - 2002, Minglang Zhou

Jazyk
Rok vydania
2003
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Titul
Multilingualism in China. The Politisc of Writing Reforms for Minority Languages 1949 - 2002
Jazyk
anglicky
Rok vydania
2003
Väzba
pevná
Počet strán
458
ISBN10
3110178966
ISBN13
9783110178968
Série
Anotácia
Minglang Zhou's highly erudite and well-researched volume on the policies concerning writing reforms for China's minorities since 1949 provides an original and well-reasoned summary of a complex process. It documents how different script reforms meet dramatically different fates according to local preferences, history, cross-border ties, and the vitality of previously-used scripts. It convincingly shows that no single variable is decisive in the success of a script, and that language planners' fixation with technical details is doomed to failure, without careful coordination of extra-code factors. It also documents the little-known Sino-Soviet cooperation in the area of writing reforms. In a style accessible to both undergraduate and graduate students, Zhou's book is of interest to language planners, sinologists, applied linguists, writing theorists, and ethnologists.