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Language ideology in discourses of resistance to dominant hierarchies of linguistic worth: Mandarin C hinese and C hinese ‘dialects’ in S ingapore
Author(s) -
Tan Sherman
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
the australian journal of anthropology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.245
H-Index - 25
eISSN - 1757-6547
pISSN - 1035-8811
DOI - 10.1111/taja.12004
Subject(s) - mandarin chinese , presupposition , ideology , linguistics , sociology , variety (cybernetics) , value (mathematics) , language ideology , normative , hegemony , political science , law , politics , philosophy , computer science , artificial intelligence , machine learning
In Singapore, government language policy promotes M andarin as the official Chinese variety, while discouraging the use of other C hinese ‘dialects’. This article examines Singaporean citizens' comments in blogs and discussion forums about the value and relevance of these stigmatised languages. Although these online discourses overtly contrast with state discourses in their positive evaluations of the non‐Mandarin languages, both bodies of discourse presuppose a common ground of language ideology: namely, that a language is an alienable commodity that can be actively manipulated and that it possesses a specific value. The discourses also follow shared patterns of constructing sociolinguistic difference through semiotic processes of iconisation, recursivity, and erasure. My analysis distinguishes between the discourses' implicit language‐ideological presuppositions and their explicitly articulated linguistic‐evaluative content and traces the interrelation of these. The shared presuppositions are important for actors' bids to enlist (different) normative sociolinguistic hierarchies in the service of projects of hegemonic nation‐building, as well as for the purposes of politically subversive identity work.

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