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£34.99

Neo-Colonial Mentalities in Contemporary Europe? Language and Discourse in the Construction of Identities

Edited By: Anne Ife, Guido Rings

£34.99

How do colonial experiences shape identity in contemporary Europe? This timely volume explores the impact on migrant diasporas, new EU states, and regional groups. Multi-disciplinary contributors offer new analyses within a post-colonial framework.

In the rapidly evolving context of contemporary Europe many citizens have previous experience of colonial, or neo-colonial, forms of domination. This raises questions about the…
£34.99
£34.99
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In the rapidly evolving context of contemporary Europe many citizens have previous experience of colonial, or neo-colonial, forms of domination. This raises questions about the impact of such experiences on the shaping of identities within an environment that is itself constantly evolving. How do such people see themselves and their community? How are they perceived? What effect does this have on their integration into the wider European community? This timely volume brings together a series of papers which explore such questions through the discourse relating to those people, both self- and other-generated.

The originality of this book stems not only from its thematic focus but also from the multi-national, multi-disciplinary background of the contributions which offer new interpretations and analyses, in particular within a framework of post-colonial and critical discourse theory. Contributors from across Europe and North America bring perspectives from applied linguistics, language and literary studies, communication studies, sociology, and social psychology. Primary texts examined include literature, news media, film, political discourse, both written and spoken, and original interview data. Language is observed both in its usage and for its participatory role in identity formation.

Three different groupings are identified for observation, namely: 1) migrant diasporas originating from the traditional areas of European colonisation in Africa and Asia; 2) citizens of newer member states of the European Union, including former Soviet satellite states like Latvia, or aspiring members, like Turkey; and 3) a number of regional groups (Irish, Welsh), whose relationship with the central government shares neo-colonial characteristics.

The book is intended for all those interested in understanding the factors influencing the rapidly evolving character of Europe and its populations, and is intended to form a platform for future exploration and research in this area.

Guido Rings is Professor of Postcolonial Studies at Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge. His research areas are postcolonialism, intercultural communication and gender studies with a focus on questions of identity and alterity in contemporary European literature and film. He is author of Narrating against the Tide (Erzählen gegen den Strich 1996) and Conquered Conquerors (Eroberte Eroberer 2005), and co-editor of European Cinema: Inside Out (2003), Bilderwelten-Textwelten-Comicwelten (2007) and GFL (www.gfl-journal.com).

Anne Ife is Reader in European Studies at Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge. Her research interests are second language acquisition, the policy and practice of second language use, including lingua franca communication, and language diversity and policy in Europe. She has published many articles in those areas and also co-edited Language across Boundaries (Continuum).

Hardback

  • ISBN: 1-84718-512-6
  • ISBN13: 978-1-84718-512-9
  • Date of Publication: 2008-03-19

Subject Codes:

  • BIC: CFB, CFD, CFG
  • THEMA: CFB, CFD, CFG
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