Book contents
- Language Politics and Policies
- Language Politics and Policies
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- Contributor Personal Statements
- Introduction
- Part I Theoretical Orientations
- 1 The Liberal Tradition in America
- 2 The Political Ethics of Linguistic In-Betweenness
- 3 Alienation, Language Work, and the So-Called Commodification of Language
- 4 Canadian Language Politics in Global and Theoretical Contexts
- Part II The United States Context
- Part III The Canadian Context
- Index
- References
2 - The Political Ethics of Linguistic In-Betweenness
from Part I - Theoretical Orientations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 July 2019
- Language Politics and Policies
- Language Politics and Policies
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- Contributor Personal Statements
- Introduction
- Part I Theoretical Orientations
- 1 The Liberal Tradition in America
- 2 The Political Ethics of Linguistic In-Betweenness
- 3 Alienation, Language Work, and the So-Called Commodification of Language
- 4 Canadian Language Politics in Global and Theoretical Contexts
- Part II The United States Context
- Part III The Canadian Context
- Index
- References
Summary
The political theorizing of language is unavoidably reliant on at least certain basic assumptions concerning the nature of language and linguistic agency. In multilingual and multicultural societies such as Canada, the task of identifying, articulating, and ultimately evaluating such assumptions is more complex, given their more heterogeneous linguistic landscape, and the (sometimes conflicting) clusters of beliefs, attitudes, anxieties, hopes, and expectations attached by speakers to particular languages as well as to the broader repertoire. The chapter focuses its attention on the debate over multiculturalism/interculturalism in the Canadian context. It explores and defends the argument that this debate can be seen in fact as a debate between two distinct conceptions of language and linguistic agency, namely the designative (“Lockean”, i.e., language as detached from a partial and intersubjective human experience) and the constitutive (“Herderian”, i.e., language as inextricably linked to a contextualized social epistemology), respectively. The distinctive logic and reasoning of both models, the chapter argues, can only be defended by embracing a non-holistic “in-betweenness” experience (and conception) of language as an underlying constitutive commonality.
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- Language Politics and PoliciesPerspectives from Canada and the United States, pp. 45 - 59Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019