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- Volume 4, Issue, 2018
Linguistic Landscape - Volume 4, Issue 1, 2018
Volume 4, Issue 1, 2018
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Emplacing hate
Author(s): Maida Bilkicpp.: 1–28 (28)More LessIn Bosnia-Herzegovina, the 1992–1995 war is the foundation on which its citizens are building their future. Contested spaces marked by violence are (re)created by means of graffiti frequently conveying locally hegemonic (re)narrations of legitimacy and attestation. Following the lead of scholars like Wee (2016) , Stroud (2016) , Rubdy and Ben Said (2015) , this paper scrutinizes how the ongoing struggles of Bosnia-Herzegovina are constituted and sustained through/in the intersection of language and space. The first set of analysed graffiti is taken from an online database and the second is collected during fieldwork in areas where territorial status is especially fraught. I offer a three-part analysis of the key ways explicitly partisan and sometimes intimidating messages are realized through the subtle interplay of semiotic and spatial resources. Turbulent graffscapes ( Stroud, 2016 ) of Bosnia-Herzegovina are materializations of linguistic violence ( Tirrell, 2012 ), generating hateful places which sustain and potentially deepen social tensions between ethnic groups.
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The Linguistic Landscape of religious expression in Israel
Author(s): Sarah Kochavpp.: 29–52 (24)More LessThe religious Linguistic Landscape of the town of Safed in the Upper Galilee in Israel was studied to determine the features, properties, and boundaries signifying the spectrum of belief in the Jewish Orthodox world. In Israel, where much of everyday life is defined within a religious context, signs, posters, stickers, flags, and graffiti are a common sight and express an ongoing dynamic in the Linguistic Landscape by referencing other dimensions expressed in dress, music, and dance as well as the Internet. Expanding on the initial study is a discussion as to whether the Linguistic Landscape is utilized to express the expectation of messianic redemption through the repetition of the images of spiritual leaders and the visual representations of a religious mantra.
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Meat, guns, and God
Author(s): Christopher Jenkspp.: 53–71 (19)More LessA trend exists in linguistic landscape research to examine urban spaces. Interest in urban spaces is a logical expression of ongoing migratory trends. While such research is helpful in advancing scholarship, there remains a need to examine how rural areas participate in the discursive construction of society. To address the recent urbanization of sociolinguistics, this paper examines how roadside billboards in rural areas of the United States discursively construct homeland messages. Using discourse analysis and drawing from linguistic landscape scholarship, the study explores how billboards draw from banal and sentimental homeland messages to forward a contentious issue, support a political candidate, and imagine a collective American identity. These discourses feed into, and are a part of, a larger network of ideologies that fabricate authentic notions of nationhood. The findings demonstrate that roadside billboards reflect a past time that flattens the cultural diversity of a nation into a static national image.
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Constructing Banglatown
Author(s): Sebastian M. Rasingerpp.: 72–95 (24)More LessThis paper explores the linguistic landscape of the East London ward of Spitalfields and Banglatown, with particular emphasis on the visual prevalence of the linguistic and symbolic repertoire of Bangla. It suggests that Banglatown as a social product is constructed not only by its people, but by its semiotic and linguistic landscape and the interaction within it. A qualitative analysis of a sample of signs identifies several interrelated frames, which construct Banglatown as a distinct symbolic entity, whereby multiple layers of linguistic and discourse practices create a space that is as much for the Bangladeshi community as it is about it.
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Making scents of the landscape
Author(s): Alastair Pennycook and Emi Otsuji
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Translanguaging and linguistic landscapes
Author(s): Durk Gorter and Jasone Cenoz
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Skinscapes
Author(s): Amiena Peck and Christopher Stroud
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