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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Mohamed BenrabahPublisher: Channel View Publications Ltd Imprint: Multilingual Matters Volume: 154 Dimensions: Width: 14.80cm , Height: 1.70cm , Length: 21.00cm Weight: 0.407kg ISBN: 9781847699640ISBN 10: 1847699642 Pages: 216 Publication Date: 16 May 2013 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsPrologue: Two cultural wars in 50 years Chapter 1: Circumnavigating a term: Language conflict and related concepts Chapter 2: Frenchification: Annihilating indigenous languages Chapter 3: Arabization: At war with diversity Chapter 4: Geopolitics and language rivalry: French versus English Chapter 5: Writers and language as a battlefield: authenticity versus hybridity Epilogue: The language question as a lightning rodReviewsBenrabah presents a compelling and meticulously documented analysis which illustrates that language conflict in Algeria has always been a proxy for political conflict, brought about through authoritarian, anti-democratic, 'top-down' language planning that has ignored popular sentiments. True democracy will only be possible in Algeria once language policy is developed through a 'bottom-up' process which embraces the country's diverse ethnic and language groups. A fascinating and enlightening look at issues of global relevance. James Coffman, Malaysian-American Commission on Educational Exchange (MACEE), Malaysia Since the colonial era, the politics of language has been one of the most corrosive and divisive issues in Algeria. Mohamed Benrabah's detailed and wide-ranging study addresses each aspect of the question, from everyday language attitudes, through the problems of policy and planning, to education, popular culture, and literature. In providing an essential and enlightening analysis of the problem, he also suggests a forward-looking resolution to Algeria's language conflict, both recognizing the real linguistic issues at stake and exposing the ways in which language and identity have served as proxies for other conflicts, in whose own resolution the acceptance of Algeria's vibrant 'multilinguality' has an essential part to play. James McDougall, University of Oxford, UK Benrabah presents a compelling and meticulously documented analysis which illustrates that language conflict in Algeria has always been a proxy for political conflict, brought about through authoritarian, anti-democratic, 'top-down' language planning that has ignored popular sentiments. True democracy will only be possible in Algeria once language policy is developed through a 'bottom-up' process which embraces the country's diverse ethnic and language groups. A fascinating and enlightening look at issues of global relevance. -- James Coffman, Malaysian-American Commission on Educational Exchange (MACEE), Malaysia Since the colonial era, the politics of language has been one of the most corrosive and divisive issues in Algeria. Mohamed Benrabah's detailed and wide-ranging study addresses each aspect of the question, from everyday language attitudes, through the problems of policy and planning, to education, popular culture, and literature. In providing an essential and enlightening analysis of the problem, he also suggests a forward-looking resolution to Algeria's language conflict, both recognizing the real linguistic issues at stake and exposing the ways in which language and identity have served as proxies for other conflicts, in whose own resolution the acceptance of Algeria's vibrant 'multilinguality' has an essential part to play. -- James McDougall, University of Oxford, UK Benrabah has a deep personal involvement with this research. It is both accessible and exciting thanks to new sources and contemporary literary analysis for the more informed reader. His plea for unencumbered linguistic eclecticism and embracing language diversity in Algeria as a way of promoting peaceful social dialogue is compelling and his contribution to such an evolutionary stance is significant at the current juncture in Algerian history. -- Sami Everett, SOAS, University of London, UK The Journal of North African Studies, Vol. 19, No. 5, 857-873 By thoroughly analyzing the Frenchification, followed by the de-Frenchification and finally the Arabization of Algeria's educational system, which occurred during an important transition period, Benrabah has advanced our understanding of how language, identity, education, politics, and religion are intertwined in North Africa. Benrabah's use of a blend of sociolinguistics, anthropology, politics, and history is a model for future studies that may investigate other North African regions or sub-Saharan countries. -- Ali Alalou, University of Delaware, USA French Review, 87.3, 2014 The author provides a compelling documented analysis of language conflict in Algeria, tracing the situation from French colonisation in 1830. Language and cultural identities in Algeria are marked by the use of standard Arabic, Algerian Arabic, Berber and French, which makes for complex language policy...Benrabah's book provides a convenient overview of the language situation in Algeria and illustrates the rich potential for further investigation. -- Abderrahman Zouhir, Wayne State University, USA Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2013 Mohamad Benrabah commands an impressive knowledge of the Algerian linguistic and literary scene, and writes in an engaging way while il1ustrating his points with crisp and lively details. In this brilliant book, which sociolinguists and historians will equally appreciate, he offers a panoramic intellectual and political history of modern Algeria. -- Heather J. Sharkey, University of Pennsylvania, USA Journal of French Language Studies, July 2014, Volume 24, Number 2 Author InformationMohamed Benrabah is Professor of English Linguistics and Sociolinguistics at UniversitA(c) Grenoble 3, France. The author's research interests include applied phonetics/phonology, sociolinguistics, and language management with a particular interest in the Anglophone, Arabophone and Francophone worlds. He has published two books (Langue et Pouvoir en AlgA(c)rie. Histoire daEURO(t)un Traumatisme Linguistique, SA(c)guier, 1999; Devenir Langue Dominante Mondiale. Un DA(c)fi pour l'Arabe, Librairie Droz, 2009), a monograph, and more than fifty articles in journals and chapters in books. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |