Description |
1 online resource (xiii, 123 pages) |
Series |
Oxford studies in the anthropology of language |
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Oxford studies in the anthropology of language.
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Summary |
"Over sixty years Indonesian has become the language of the world’s fourth most populous nation and third largest democracy, but has no native speakers. This book describes some of the paradoxes that have enabled this extraordinary linguistic and national development, and shows how other-than-standard Indonesians figure in an alternate “success story” of national modernization. The focus is on young persons whose ethnic backgrounds vary, but who have acquired broadly similar educations and national allegiances. A small part of the plurality of the Indonesians they speak are described within a national integrative dynamic, and among members of a new middle class. These ways of speaking are shown also to differ, as do the urbanizing dynamics in which they are situated, but to be similarly enabled by the absence of Indonesian native speakers. Empirical particulars in this way help frame Indonesian as a revealing exception to widespread assumptions or ideologies about native, “natural” connections between language and national identity. “The Indonesian case” in this way helps revisit issues of linguistic nationalism in a time of globalization beyond one nation of the Global South"--Publisher's description |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index |
Notes |
Description based on online resource; title from home page (Oxford Academic, viewed on August 18, 2023) |
Subject |
Indonesian language -- Variation
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Comparative linguistics.
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Comparative linguistics
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Form |
Electronic book
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ISBN |
9780197563717 |
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0197563716 |
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9780197563694 |
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0197563694 |
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9780197563700 |
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0197563708 |
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