This chapter examines beliefs about language(s), showing how they are rooted in and help maintain a standard language ideology, i.e. the conviction that certain languages exist in uniform standardised forms and that such forms are desirable. Such an ideology is widespread, although not universal, and has influenced lay and expert approaches to the study of language(s), as I show for example in a discussion of the concepts “vernacular” and “variety”. Characteristics of the standard, like uniformity and determinacy, are postulated as ideal characteristics of all varieties. Speakers influenced by standard language ideology often interpret language contact and language “mixing” negatively as incompetent or sloppy language use. I discuss alternative ways of conceptualising language that might encourage a more positive view of multilingualism.
2024. Codification in the shadow of standards: ideologies in early nineteenth-century metalinguistic texts on Luxembourgish. Language & History► pp. 1 ff.
Lech, Kasia
2024. Multilingual Web: On Europe, Its Languages, and Performances of Difference. In Multilingual Dramaturgies [New Dramaturgies, ], ► pp. 27 ff.
2023. Recommendations for the meanings of words by Estonian language planning – justified and necessary, or not?. Taikomoji kalbotyra 20 ► pp. 53 ff.
Wiese, Heike
2022. Urban Contact Dialects. In The Cambridge Handbook of Language Contact, ► pp. 115 ff.
Wendy Ayres-Bennett & John Bellamy
2021. The Cambridge Handbook of Language Standardization,
Ayres-Bennett, Wendy & John Bellamy
2021. Introduction. In The Cambridge Handbook of Language Standardization, ► pp. 1 ff.
McLelland, Nicola
2021. Language standards, standardisation and standard ideologies in multilingual contexts. Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development 42:2 ► pp. 109 ff.
2014. REVIEWS - Dialektologie in neuem Gewand. Zu Mikro-/Varietätenlinguistik, Sprachenvergleich und Universalgrammatik. Ed. by Werner Abraham and Elisabeth Leiss (Linguistische Berichte. Sonderheft 19.) Hamburg: Helmut Buske Verlag. Pp. 271. Paperback. ζ49.90.. Journal of Germanic Linguistics 26:4 ► pp. 395 ff.
[no author supplied]
2019. A Multilingual Turn in German Studies: Premises, Provisos, and Prospects. Die Unterrichtspraxis/Teaching German 52:1 ► pp. 14 ff.
[no author supplied]
2022. Multilingualism. In The Cambridge Handbook of Language Contact, ► pp. 27 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 19 september 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
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