Language and Sustainability, Linguistic Sustainability: Between Economization and Simulative Democracy?

The study is intended as a contribution to linguistic reflection on the desideratum of sustainability in relation to the use of language and to discourses on language. Starting from the question of how the concept of linguistic sustainability is used in different languages and linguistic approaches...

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Main Author: Goranka Rocco
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: University of Ljubljana Press (Založba Univerze v Ljubljani) 2024-12-01
Series:Linguistica
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.uni-lj.si/linguistica/article/view/21700
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author Goranka Rocco
author_facet Goranka Rocco
author_sort Goranka Rocco
collection DOAJ
description The study is intended as a contribution to linguistic reflection on the desideratum of sustainability in relation to the use of language and to discourses on language. Starting from the question of how the concept of linguistic sustainability is used in different languages and linguistic approaches, it discusses the results of early research in the field of ecolinguistics and the ecology of language, as well as the competing and partly overlapping concepts of (linguistic) diversity and vitality. It then explores the question of how sustainability, hegemonic aspirations and monolingual or multilingual language habitus relate to each other, especially in an age of increasing economization of knowledge and growing ranking pressure on educational and research institutions: Is the goal of linguistic sustainability and the preservation of linguistic-cultural diversity seriously pursued and perceived as achievable, or are the corresponding key terms (multilingualism, diversity) primarily part of a basically inconsequential “post-materialist” discourses? The considerations lead to a reflection on the possibilities and limits of linguistic sustainability with regard to the progressive economization of knowledge and science, which influence language use, and on the other hand with regard to the gap between real developments, which seem to privilege one or at best a few languages, and the official narratives on the promotion of multilingualism. This gap is interpreted in the context of the hypothesis of structural or systemic social unsustainability (Blühdorn 2020) and particularly in line with Blühdorn’s concept of ‘Simulative Democracy’ (2013).
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institution Kabale University
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language deu
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher University of Ljubljana Press (Založba Univerze v Ljubljani)
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spelling doaj-art-07396093c9b84853b56b2ce84a465bf82025-01-24T14:16:04ZdeuUniversity of Ljubljana Press (Založba Univerze v Ljubljani)Linguistica0024-39222350-420X2024-12-0164110.4312/linguistica.64.1.11-39Language and Sustainability, Linguistic Sustainability: Between Economization and Simulative Democracy?Goranka Rocco0University of Ferrara, Italy The study is intended as a contribution to linguistic reflection on the desideratum of sustainability in relation to the use of language and to discourses on language. Starting from the question of how the concept of linguistic sustainability is used in different languages and linguistic approaches, it discusses the results of early research in the field of ecolinguistics and the ecology of language, as well as the competing and partly overlapping concepts of (linguistic) diversity and vitality. It then explores the question of how sustainability, hegemonic aspirations and monolingual or multilingual language habitus relate to each other, especially in an age of increasing economization of knowledge and growing ranking pressure on educational and research institutions: Is the goal of linguistic sustainability and the preservation of linguistic-cultural diversity seriously pursued and perceived as achievable, or are the corresponding key terms (multilingualism, diversity) primarily part of a basically inconsequential “post-materialist” discourses? The considerations lead to a reflection on the possibilities and limits of linguistic sustainability with regard to the progressive economization of knowledge and science, which influence language use, and on the other hand with regard to the gap between real developments, which seem to privilege one or at best a few languages, and the official narratives on the promotion of multilingualism. This gap is interpreted in the context of the hypothesis of structural or systemic social unsustainability (Blühdorn 2020) and particularly in line with Blühdorn’s concept of ‘Simulative Democracy’ (2013). https://journals.uni-lj.si/linguistica/article/view/21700linguistic sustainabilitylinguistic diversitymonolingual habituseconomizationsimulative democracy
spellingShingle Goranka Rocco
Language and Sustainability, Linguistic Sustainability: Between Economization and Simulative Democracy?
Linguistica
linguistic sustainability
linguistic diversity
monolingual habitus
economization
simulative democracy
title Language and Sustainability, Linguistic Sustainability: Between Economization and Simulative Democracy?
title_full Language and Sustainability, Linguistic Sustainability: Between Economization and Simulative Democracy?
title_fullStr Language and Sustainability, Linguistic Sustainability: Between Economization and Simulative Democracy?
title_full_unstemmed Language and Sustainability, Linguistic Sustainability: Between Economization and Simulative Democracy?
title_short Language and Sustainability, Linguistic Sustainability: Between Economization and Simulative Democracy?
title_sort language and sustainability linguistic sustainability between economization and simulative democracy
topic linguistic sustainability
linguistic diversity
monolingual habitus
economization
simulative democracy
url https://journals.uni-lj.si/linguistica/article/view/21700
work_keys_str_mv AT gorankarocco languageandsustainabilitylinguisticsustainabilitybetweeneconomizationandsimulativedemocracy