Peeling the onion top-down: Language policy in Serbia between power and myth
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Stefanović, Marija
Stanković, Branimir
This paper considers the issue of language policy and planning in Serbia, as managed by the main competent institution, the Serbian Language Standardization Committee, a trans-state, national institution dealing with vital issues of language policy and planning. Specifically, assuming a Bourdieusian perspective, it investigates the ideology behind the Committee’s policies, grounded in a series of language myths, and the way these policies influence professionals and everyday language users. The effects of a rigid, strict educational system and a standard language culture by educators are shown in detail focusing on the Torlak dialect in Southern Serbia. The Serbian case reveals a constant promotion of censorship and a heightened understanding of the benefits of self-censorship in the language market. This can be seen in the pressure exerted on certain speakers and the threat their mother tongue represents for their status in the labor market.
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Aegean Working Papers in Ethnographic Linguistics; Τόμ. 2 Αρ. 1 (2018): Ethnographic accounts of linguistic issues in the Yugoslav successor states; 17-41
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Aegean Working Papers in Ethnographic Linguistics; Vol. 2 No. 1 (2018): Ethnographic accounts of linguistic issues in the Yugoslav successor states; 17-41
(EN)
Copyright (c) 2019 Branimir Stanković, Marija Stefanović
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