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Language and Society
Volume 10
Language and Society
Volume 10
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Description
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
PART 1: USERS AND USES
Editor's Introduction
1. The Users and Uses of Language
PART 2: SOCIOLINGUISTIC THEORY
Editor's Introduction
2. Language in a Social Perspective
3. Language and Social Man
4. Sociological Aspects of Semantic Change
5. Language as Social Semiotic: Towards a General Sociolinguistic Theory
6. Some Aspects of Sociolinguistics
PART 3: LANGUAGE AND SOCIAL CLASS
Editor's Introduction
7. 'Foreword' to Basil Bernstein's Class, Codes and Control Vol. II: Applied Studies towards a Sociology of Language
8. Language and the Theory of Codes
PART 4: LANGUAGE AND SOCIAL STRUCTURE
Editor's Introduction
9. An Interpretation of the Functional Relationship between Language and Social Structure
10. Anti-languages
Bibliography
Product details
Published | 31 May 2007 |
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Format | Hardback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 320 |
ISBN | 9780826458766 |
Imprint | Continuum |
Dimensions | 234 x 156 mm |
Series | Collected Works of M.A.K. Halliday |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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"I don't recall what inspired so many of us most was it Michael Halliday's Inaugural Address with its title 'Grammar, Society and the Noun', or the perhaps apocryphal remark that all linguistics is sociolinguistics; but what is crystal-clear in reading this final volume in his Collected Works edited with such care and devotion by Jonathan Webster for the benefit of all, is how modern it all reads with its interwoven links between texture and community, its implication of action in text - the can do, inherent in meaning potential but at the same time how definitive: the framework of analysis of an integrated general theory which now seems so much embedded in our modes of practice. Everyone will come away from this reading and re-reading of Michael Halliday's writings on language and society with a different insight: for me it is two matters; every persons capacity for creativity in exploiting meaning potential, and the central importance of establishing a unifying system able not only to capture form but to relate it consequentially and functionally to our understandings of social life." Chris Candlin, Senior Research Professor, Macquarie University, Sydney
Chris Candlin, Senior Research Professor, Macquarie University, Sydney
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"an initiative greatly to be welcomed." Reviewed in IH Journal, 2008

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