Publications
Publication details [#45407]
Thije, Jan D. ten and Ludger Zeevaert, eds. 2007. Receptive Multilingualism. Linguistic analyses, language policies and didactic concepts. (Hamburg Studies on Multilingualism 6). John Benjamins. x+ 328 pp.
Publication type
Book – edited volume
Publication language
English
Keywords
Annotation
Receptive multilingualism refers to the language constellation in which interlocutors use their respective mother tongue while speaking to each other. Since the mid-nineties receptive multilingualism is promoted by the European commission on par with other possibilities of increasing the mobility of the European citizens. Throughout the last ten years a marked increase in the research on this topic has been observable. This volume reveals new perspectives from different theoretical frameworks on linguistic analyses of receptive multilingualism in Europe. Case studies are presented from contemporary settings, along with analyses of historical examples, theoretical considerations and, finally, descriptions of didactical concepts established in order to transfer and disseminate receptive multilingual competence. The book contains results from research carried out at the Research Center on Multilingualism at the University of Hamburg as well as contributions by various international scholars working in the field of receptive multilingualism.
Articles in this volume
Braunmüller, Kurt. Receptive multilingualism in Northern Europe in the Middle Ages: A description of a scenario. 25–47
Schjerve-Rindler, Rosita and Eva Vetter. Linguistic diversity in Habsburg Austria as a model for modern European language policy. 49–70
Ribbert, Anne and Jan D. ten Thije. Receptive multilingualism in Dutch–German intercultural team cooperation. 73–101
Baumgarten, Nicole and Juliane House. Speaker stances in native and non-native English conversation: I + verb constructions. 195–214