Lingue e migrazione. Un caso di studio: l’Australia

Abstract – This chapter focuses upon two contrasting features of the linguistic situation in Australia. On the one hand, together with nationhood, the past hundred or so years have seen the evolution of a distinct national variety of English in Australia recognizable also outside Australia. On the o...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Thomas Wulstan Christiansen
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:German
English
Spanish
French
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Published: Università del Salento 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doaj.org/article/6e6cde0a555c4aec941212dde699d9ec
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:oai:doaj.org/article:6e6cde0a555c4aec941212dde699d9ec 2023-05-15T16:16:56+02:00 Lingue e migrazione. Un caso di studio: l’Australia Languages and migration. A case study: Australia Thomas Wulstan Christiansen 2016-01-01 https://doaj.org/article/6e6cde0a555c4aec941212dde699d9ec de en es fr it pt ru ger eng spa fre ita por rus Università del Salento 2239-0367 2239-0359 https://doaj.org/article/6e6cde0a555c4aec941212dde699d9ec undefined Lingue e Linguaggi, Vol 16, Iss 0, Pp 597-619 (2016) Australian English multilingualism National Language Policy phil litt Journal Article https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_6501/ 2016 fttriple 2023-01-22T17:59:40Z Abstract – This chapter focuses upon two contrasting features of the linguistic situation in Australia. On the one hand, together with nationhood, the past hundred or so years have seen the evolution of a distinct national variety of English in Australia recognizable also outside Australia. On the other, Australia, though a young nation, has been continuously inhabited by the various Aborigine and Torre Strait Islander communities for thousands of years. These have traditionally spoken a wide variety of different languages, some of which of great interest to linguists due to their peculiarity. Increasingly, although the use of Aborigine languages has until very recently been in steady decline, since the 1950s in particular, diverse ethnic groups speaking a variety of languages, both European and Asian, have settled in Australia. The National Policy on Languages (1987) formally directed Australia towards multilingualism and the teaching of English as a first and second language is promoted together with that of Aborigine and community languages. Consequently, Australia has been one of the first nations to try to capitalise on its own linguistic diversity, both as a means of strengthening links with the outside world and as a way of promoting a multiethnic and multicultural society at home. Australia presents then an interesting case study for those working with discourse in immigration domains who are concerned with the way that language policy (or the lack of one) may effect social harmony and serve not only as an indicator of the way that migrants are received and treated, but also a catalyst in itself for greater mutual respect. Article in Journal/Newspaper First Nations Unknown Torre ENVELOPE(-59.729,-59.729,-62.413,-62.413)
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id fttriple
language German
English
Spanish
French
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
topic Australian English
multilingualism
National Language Policy
phil
litt
spellingShingle Australian English
multilingualism
National Language Policy
phil
litt
Thomas Wulstan Christiansen
Lingue e migrazione. Un caso di studio: l’Australia
topic_facet Australian English
multilingualism
National Language Policy
phil
litt
description Abstract – This chapter focuses upon two contrasting features of the linguistic situation in Australia. On the one hand, together with nationhood, the past hundred or so years have seen the evolution of a distinct national variety of English in Australia recognizable also outside Australia. On the other, Australia, though a young nation, has been continuously inhabited by the various Aborigine and Torre Strait Islander communities for thousands of years. These have traditionally spoken a wide variety of different languages, some of which of great interest to linguists due to their peculiarity. Increasingly, although the use of Aborigine languages has until very recently been in steady decline, since the 1950s in particular, diverse ethnic groups speaking a variety of languages, both European and Asian, have settled in Australia. The National Policy on Languages (1987) formally directed Australia towards multilingualism and the teaching of English as a first and second language is promoted together with that of Aborigine and community languages. Consequently, Australia has been one of the first nations to try to capitalise on its own linguistic diversity, both as a means of strengthening links with the outside world and as a way of promoting a multiethnic and multicultural society at home. Australia presents then an interesting case study for those working with discourse in immigration domains who are concerned with the way that language policy (or the lack of one) may effect social harmony and serve not only as an indicator of the way that migrants are received and treated, but also a catalyst in itself for greater mutual respect.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Thomas Wulstan Christiansen
author_facet Thomas Wulstan Christiansen
author_sort Thomas Wulstan Christiansen
title Lingue e migrazione. Un caso di studio: l’Australia
title_short Lingue e migrazione. Un caso di studio: l’Australia
title_full Lingue e migrazione. Un caso di studio: l’Australia
title_fullStr Lingue e migrazione. Un caso di studio: l’Australia
title_full_unstemmed Lingue e migrazione. Un caso di studio: l’Australia
title_sort lingue e migrazione. un caso di studio: l’australia
publisher Università del Salento
publishDate 2016
url https://doaj.org/article/6e6cde0a555c4aec941212dde699d9ec
long_lat ENVELOPE(-59.729,-59.729,-62.413,-62.413)
geographic Torre
geographic_facet Torre
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_source Lingue e Linguaggi, Vol 16, Iss 0, Pp 597-619 (2016)
op_relation 2239-0367
2239-0359
https://doaj.org/article/6e6cde0a555c4aec941212dde699d9ec
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