Sprache, Gesellschaft und Nation in Ostmitteleuropa
Institutionalisierung und Alltagspraxis
Tilman Berger, Detlef Brandes, Klaus Buchenau, Klaas-Hinrich Ehlers, Nataliya Golovchak, Frank Henschel, Jitka Jonová, Sandra Kreisslová, Georg Melika, Marek Nekula, Mirek Nemec, Barbara Neuber, Martina Niedhammer, Václav Petrbok, Tamara Scheer, Hermann Scheuringer, Jan Surman, Frauke Wetzel
Language has an immense effect on society – and vice versa. Language reflects social relations and also functions as an instrument of interpretation and power. In the development of the modern nation language has had the important role of standardizing and institutionalizing mores. In this volume philologists and historians study the role of language as a cultural and historical vehicle based on the example of Eastern Middle Europe. Other themes addressed include the preparation of dictionaries, the tense relationship between status planning and everyday practices, and the institutional approach to polyglotism.