Whereas in previous decades autonomous, self-directed or 'independent' learning may have been assumed to be an alternative to classroom learning, the emphasis has now shifted to the point where learner autonomy, viewed as capacity to take charge of oneβs own learning, is increasingly being promoted
Language and Control
β Scribed by Roger Fowler, Bob Hodge, Gunther Kress, Tony Trew
- Publisher
- Routledge
- Year
- 2018
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 233
- Series
- Routledge Library Editions: Sociolinguistics 2
- Edition
- Reprint
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Originally published in 1979. This book studies language variation as a part of social practice - how language expresses and helps regulate social relationships of all kinds. Different groups, classes, institutions and situations have their special modes of language and these varieties are not just stylistic reflections of social differences; speaking or writing in a certain manner entails articulating certain social meanings, however implicit. This book focuses on the repressive and falsifying side of linguistic practice but not without recognising the power of language to reveal and communicate. It analyses the language used in a variety of situations, including news reporting, interviews, rules and regulations, even such apparently innocuous language as the rhymes on greetings cards. It argues for a critical linguistics capable of exposing distortion and mystification in language, and introduces some basic tools for a do-it-yourself analysis of language, ideology and control.
β¦ Table of Contents
Contents
Preface
1 Orwellian linguistics β’ Bob Hodge and Roger Fowler
2 Rules and regulations β’ Roger Fowler and Gunther Kress
3 The social values of speech and writing β’ Gunther Kress
4 Interviews β’ Gunther Kress and Roger Fowler
5 The ideology of middle management β’ Bob Hodge, Gunther Kress and Gareth Jones
6 Theory and ideology at work β’ Tony Trew
7 βWhat the papers sayβ: linguistic variation and ideological difference β’ Tony Trew
8 Newspapers and communities β’ Bob Hodge
9 Birth and the community β’ Bob Hodge
10 Critical linguistics β’ Roger Fowler and Gunther Kress
Notes
Index
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