PARALLELLINGUALISM AND PARALLEL LANGUAGE USE IN THE RHETORIC OF NORDIC LANGUAGE PLANNING. FROM CONFUSION TO RELATIVE CLARITY AND CONSCIOUS EFFORTS
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Parallellingualism, Rhetoric, Nordic language, Concept analysisRésumé
First paragraph: Language issues are political issues. This becomes evident when following current debates about globalization and its effects on the position of national languages. In his critique of the depoliticizing of language in recent political discussions, Ives (2010: 517) points out that in order to understand the complex ongoing changes concerning language, political community and globalization, we need more explicit engagement with the politics of language. An example, of when such deeper engagement seemsto be needed is in the discussions of multilingualism in the European Union (Phillipson, 2003; Van Parijs, 2004) as well as of the role of English in globalization (cf. e.g. Fishman 1998).
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