French: From Dialect to Standard

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A01=R. Anthony Lodge
Author_R. Anthony Lodge
bon
Bon Usage
Bourdieu 1977a
Category=CB
Category=CJ
Category=DS
codification theory
Colloquial Latin
Common Language
community
Della
Diglossic Community
distance
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_dictionaries-language-reference
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Frankish Kingdom
Frankish Settlement
French Language
historical sociolinguistics
King's French
King’s French
La Langue
language
language standardisation
language variation analysis
Le XIe
linguistic
Middle Class Speakers
Modern Language
Mutual Intelligibility
norm selection process
norms
Occitan language influence
Oral Vernaculars
Patois Speakers
Regional Languages
shift
sociolinguistic standardisation frameworks
speech
Standard Language
Strasbourg Oaths
Superstratum Influence
Unplanned Discourse
usage
varieties
Vernacular Writing Systems
Villehardouin
West Germany

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415080712
  • Weight: 550g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Mar 1993
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Written as a text, this book looks at the external history of French from its Latin origins to the present day through some of the analytical frameworks developed by contemporary sociolinguistics. French is one of the most highly standardized of the world's languages and the author invites us to see the language as heterogenous, rather than a monolithic entity, using the model proposed by E. Haugen as a useful comparative grid to plot the development of standardization. After an introductory section which examines the dialectalization of Latin in Gaul, the four central chapters of the book are constructed around the basic processes invoved in standardization as identified by Haugen: the selection of norms, the elaboration of function, codification and acceptance. The concluding chapter deals with language variability and the wide gulf that has now developed between French used for formal purposes and that used in everyday speech, with particular reference to Occitan speaking regions. Emphasizing the ordinary speakers of the language, rather than the statesmen or great authors as agents of change, the book combines a traditional history of the language' approach with a sociolinguistic framework to provide a broad and comparative overview of the problem of language standardization.

R. Anthony Lodge is Professor of French Language and Linguistics at the University of St Andrews. He is the author of Le Livre des Manieres d'Etienne de Fougeres (1979), Le Plus Ancien Registre de comptes des Consuls de Montferrand (1985), French: From Dialect to Standard (1993), Exploring the French Language (With N. Armstrong, Y. Ellis and J. Shelton, 1997) and The Earliest Branches of the Roman de Renart (With K. Varty, 2001).

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