
The Japanese Are Often Characterized As Exclusive And Ethnocentric, Yet A Close Examination Of Their Linguistic And Cultural History Reveals A Very Different Picture: Although Theirs Is Essentially A Monolingual Speech Community They Emerge As A People Who Have Been Significantly Influenced By Other Languages And Cultures For At Least 2000 Years. In This Primarily Sociolinguistic Study Professor Loveday Takes An Eclectic Approach, Drawing On Insights From Other Subfields Of Linguistics Such As Comparative And Historical Linguistics And Stylistics, And From A Number Of Other Disciplines - Cultural Anthropology, Social Psychology And Semiotics. Focusing In Particular On The Influence Of Chinese And English On Japanese, And On How Elements From These Languages Are Modified When They Are Incorporated Into Japanese, Professor Loveday Offers A General Model For Understanding Language Contact Behaviour Across Time And Space. The Study Will Be Of Value To Those In Search Of Cross-cultural Universals In Language Contact Behaviour, As Well As To Those With A Particular Interest In The Japanese Case.
This book investigates the historical and sociolinguistic mechanisms through which the Japanese language has integrated external influences despite its reputation as a monolingual society. Professor Leo J. Loveday utilizes an interdisciplinary framework, synthesizing data from historical linguistics, cultural anthropology, social psychology, and semiotics to analyze the evolution of Japanese. The work posits that the Japanese speech community has been shaped by continuous interaction with foreign languages, particularly Chinese and English, over the past two millennia.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and linguists recognize this text as a significant contribution to the study of language contact within East Asian contexts. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which requires a foundational understanding of sociolinguistic terminology to fully appreciate the author's theoretical model.
Page Count:
256
Publication Date:
1996-01-01
Publisher:
Clarendon Press
ISBN-10:
0191583693
ISBN-13:
9780191583698
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