Multifaceted Multilingualism
This volume collects research on language, cognition, and communication in multilingualism. Apart from theoretical concerns including grammatical description, language-specific analyses, and modeling of multilingualism, different fields of study and research interests center around three core themes: The Early Years (aspects of language acquisition and development, including vernaculars or minority languages, reading, writing, and cognition, and multilingual extensions), Issues in Everyday Life (the role of multilingualism in and for speech–language–communication difficulties, including diagnosis, provisions of services, and later language breakdown), and From the Past to the Future (aspects of multilingualism beyond acquisition, education, or pathology, with a focus on heritage languages and translanguaging). Specialists from each of these areas introduce state-of-the-art research, novel experimental studies, and/or quantitative as well as qualitative data bearing on ‘multifaceted multilingualism’. There is a broad spectrum for take-home messages, ranging from new theoretical analyses or approaches to assess multilingual speakers all the way to recommendations for policy-makers.
[Studies in Bilingualism, 66] 2024. x, 434 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 23 March 2024
Published online on 23 March 2024
© John Benjamins
Table of Contents
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Preface | pp. ix–x
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Chapter 1. Introducing multifaceted multilingualismKleanthes K. Grohmann | pp. 1–20
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Part I. The early years: Acquisition, development, and education
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Chapter 2. To acquire a recursive grammar, children start with a recursive procedure (MERGE)Iain Giblin, Peng Zhou, Cory Bill, Jiawei Shi and Stephen Crain | pp. 22–46
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Chapter 3. Pitfalls and promises of dialect in the classroom: The case of/for African American EnglishJulie A. Washington, Bryan K. Murray and Elizabeth Doyne | pp. 47–67
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Chapter 4. Microstructural properties in the narrative retellings of young English learners in EMI schools in India: The role of L2 literacy, minority languages and English input in the classroomIanthi M. Tsimpli, Lina Mukhopadhyay, Anusha Balasubramanian and Jeanine Treffers-Daller | pp. 68–122
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Chapter 5. Multilingual advantages: On the relationship between type of bilingualism and language knowledgePeter Siemund and Eliane Lorenz | pp. 123–151
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Part II. Issues in everyday life: Speech, language, and communication
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Chapter 6. Diglossia and developmental language disorder (DLD) in Arabic: The role of linguistic distance and linguistic proximity?Elinor Saiegh-Haddad and Sharon Armon-Lotem | pp. 154–183
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Chapter 7. “Grammar, I hate” or “I grammar hate”? L1 and L2 word order differences and bilingual DLD assessmentWeifeng Han | pp. 184–203
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Chapter 8. Bilingualism matters: A study of children with autism spectrum disorder and developmental language disorderEleni Peristeri, Eleni Baldimtsi, Ianthi M. Tsimpli and Stephanie Durrleman | pp. 204–231
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Chapter 9. Multimodal story-retelling: Influences of cognitive load on co‑speech and co‑thought gestures for conceptualizationCheng-Xiang Yang and Yen-Liang Lin | pp. 232–253
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Chapter 10. Raising awareness of stroke, stroke survivor-perspectives, and stroke–carer research: A perspective from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds in AustraliaMaria Kambanaros | pp. 254–267
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Part III. From the past to the future: Heritage, translanguaging, and maintenance
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Chapter 11. Heritage language educationJulio Torres | pp. 270–291
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Chapter 12. Explaining gender: Lessons from heritage SpanishZuzanna Fuchs, Maria Polinsky and Gregory Scontras | pp. 292–326
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Chapter 13. Meaning without borders: From translanguaging to transposition in the era of digitally-mediated meaningBill Cope, Mary Kalantzis and Anastasia Olga (Olnancy) Tzirides | pp. 327–368
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Chapter 14. Language alternation is not always translanguaging: Data from Cypriot classroomsStavroula Tsiplakou | pp. 369–394
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Chapter 15. The sociolinguistics of urban multilingualism: Toronto and MelbourneJames A. Walker, John Hajek, Debbie Loakes, Chloé Diskin-Holdaway and Gerard Docherty | pp. 395–413
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Chapter 16. Barossa German: Language documentation, maintenance and renewal in a German-speaking enclave in South AustraliaPeter Mickan | pp. 414–427
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Index | pp. 429–434
Subjects
Main BIC Subject
CFDM: Bilingualism & multilingualism
Main BISAC Subject
LAN009070: LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / Psycholinguistics / Language Acquisition