波斯尼亚语、克罗地亚语、塞尔维亚语:萨拉热窝语言景观中固有的译语

IF 0.8 Q3 LINGUISTICS European Journal of Applied Linguistics Pub Date : 2021-02-24 DOI:10.1515/eujal-2019-0041
Ana Tankosić, Jason Litzenberg
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引用次数: 2

摘要

摘要东南欧巴尔干地区的语言有着复杂而动荡的历史,尤其体现在波斯尼亚和黑塞哥维那(波黑)的三方和三语国家,在那里,波斯尼亚人、克罗地亚人和塞尔维亚人都声称拥有自己相互可懂的当地“语言”。这项研究利用语言景观方法来考虑波黑首都萨拉热窝的语言使用情况,这场残酷的战争导致了波黑的建立,大约20年后。数据来自萨拉热窝州内的三个市镇,即老城、中心和伊利德扎,因为它们代表了该地区的多样性和历史。标志根据三种主要语言种类进行分类,即波斯尼亚语、克罗地亚语、塞尔维亚语;BCS,代表了三种变体之间的共同核心,以及英语、其他语言和混合语言。与该地区其他语言使用研究相比,BCS的应用使本研究具有独特的地位,并允许对用户的交际倾向进行更细致、不那么政治和民族语言学的分析。更具体地说,数据表明,语言景观中的参与者超越了他们的国家、种族和宗教身份的界限,倾向于更中性的BCS,这表明他们倾向于比以前的多样化方法更跨语言的倾向。因此,萨拉热窝的语言景观表明了一种包容和语言平等主义的趋势,而不是语言身份政治的分裂。
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Bosnian, Croatian, Serbian: Inherent Translanguaging in the Linguistic Landscape of Sarajevo
Abstract Language in the Balkan region of Southeastern Europe has a complex and turbulent history, acutely embodied in the tripartite and trilingual state of Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH) in which Bosniaks, Croats, and Serbs all make claim to their own mutually-intelligible varieties of local “languages”. This study utilizes a linguistic landscape methodology to consider language use in Sarajevo, the capital of BiH, approximately 20 years after a brutal war that led to the establishment of the country. Data originate from three municipalities within the Sarajevo Canton – namely, Old Town, Center, and Ilidža – because of their representation of the region’s diversity and history. Signs were classified according to the three primary language varieties, i.e., Bosnian, Croatian, Serbian; BCS, representing a common core among the three varieties, as well as English, other languages, and mixed languages. The application of BCS uniquely positions the present research in comparison to other studies of language use in the region and allows for a more nuanced, less politically and ethnolinguistically fraught analysis of the communicative tendencies of users. More specifically, data indicate that actors in the linguistic landscape transcend the boundaries of their national, ethnic, and religious identities by tending towards the more neutral BCS, suggesting an orientation towards more translingual dispositions than previous variety-bound approaches have indicated. Thus, instead of the divisiveness of linguistic identity politics, the linguistic landscape of Sarajevo indicates a tendency toward inclusion and linguistic egalitarianism.
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