
The shift to Hebrew as a national language is at the root of the creation of Israel, yet many Jewish immigrants still use the language of their country of origin. Ultra-orthodox communities retain their own codes, and the use of Arabic remains a clear marker of the Israeli-Arab town and village. At the same time Israel's position in international affairs has encouraged a wide penetration of the society, along class lines, by languages of world-wide communication. These very same languages, for example English and French, have different values in their local context, and play active and different roles in the formation of social boundaries. In his analysis, Ben-Rafael focuses on linguistic resources and symbols which reflect and reveal the complex structure of class, ethnic, religious, and national identities and cleavages in Israeli society. More generally, he uses the Israeli case to show how sociolinguistic ideas may be related to sociological approaches to test some general sociological propositions about social aspects of language use.
How do linguistic choices and language contact function as indicators of social stratification, religious identity, and national belonging within the state of Israel? Eliezer Ben-Rafael, a prominent sociologist, utilizes the Israeli experience to bridge the gap between sociolinguistic theory and broader sociological frameworks. By examining the interplay between Hebrew, Arabic, and various immigrant languages, he argues that language serves as a primary mechanism for both the construction and the maintenance of social boundaries. The text provides a rigorous analysis of how these linguistic resources reflect the complex, often fractured, nature of Israeli society.
What You Will Find
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of language contact and social stratification in the Middle East. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is best suited for scholars and students of sociology or linguistics.
Page Count:
304
Publication Date:
1994-04-14
Publisher:
Clarendon Press
ISBN-10:
0198240724
ISBN-13:
9780198240723
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