Название: The Battle for Ukrainian. A Comparative Perspective Автор: Edited by Michael S. Flier and Andrea Graziosi Издательство: HUP Год: 2017 Формат: pdf+djvu Страниц: 636 Для сайта:litgu.ru Размер: 17.0 Мб Язык: английский
In 1863 the Valuev Circular restricted the use of the Ukrainian language in the Russian Empire. In the 150 years since, Ukrainian has followed a tortuous path, reflecting or anticipating tsarist, Soviet, and post-Soviet history. This volume documents that path, studying the language’s emergence in southern Rus?, its shifting fortunes in the Russian Empire and Soviet Union, and its variable status after 1991. Ukrainian can serve as a useful prism for assessing 150 years of imperial disintegration and reformation, and worldwide state and nation building—a period in which other languages have been created, promoted, and repressed, or have come to coexist in multilingual nations. Case studies of Gaelic, Finnish, Yiddish, the Baltic group, and of language policy in Canada, India, and the former Yugoslavia illuminate similarities and differences in chronological, comparative, international, and transnational terms. The result is an interdisciplinary study that is essential for understanding language, history, and politics in Ukraine and in the post-imperial world.
Contributors Introduction [Michael S. Flier and Andrea Graziosi] 1. The Ukrainian Language Question: Linguistics, History, Politics Ukrainian—Russian: Poles Apart? [Michael S. Flier] Against All Odds: Ukrainian in the Russian Empire in the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century [Johannes Remy] The “Doubling of Hallelujah” for the “Bastard Tongue”: The Ukrainian Language Question in Russian Ukraine, 1905–1916 [Andrii Danylenko] The Fate of the “Ruthenian or Little Russian” (Ukrainian) Language in Austrian Galicia (1772–1867) [Michael A. Moser] Ukrainian in Austria-Hungary (1905–1918) and Interwar Eastern Europe (1918–1939) [Jan Fellerer] An Empire of Substitutions: The Language Factor in the Russian Revolution [Michael G. Smith] Bolshevik Language Policy as a Reflection of the Ideas and Practice of Communist Construction, 1919–1933 [Hennadii Yefimenko] Language Policy as a Political Linguistics: The Implicit Model of Linguistics in the Discussion of the Norms of Ukrainian and Belarusian in the 1930s [Patrick S?riot] The Ukrainian Language under Totalitarianism and Total War [Yurii Shapoval] Wings to Lift the Truth Up High: The Role of Language for the Shistdesiatnyky [Simone A. Bellezza] Language, Status, and State Loyalty in Ukraine [Dominique Arel] Language Attitudes in Independent Ukraine: Differentiation and Evolution [Volodymyr Kulyk] Purism and Pluralism: Language Use Trends in Popular Culture in Ukraine since Independence [Laada Bilaniuk] Ukrainian Language Legislation and the National Crisis [Bohdan Azhniuk] 2. Models for Comparison Language, Politics, and the State(s): Reflections from Ireland [Tony Crowley] The Rise and Dynamics of the Normative Isomorphism of Language, Nation, and State in Central Europe [Tomasz Kamusella] When the West Meets the East: Slavia Romana at the Crossroads [Anita Peti-Stanti?] The Formation of the Finnish Polity within the Russian Empire: Language, Representation, and the Construction of Popular Political Platforms, 1863–1906 [Jussi Kurunm?ki and Ilkka Liikanen] The Divergent Fates of Yiddish and Hebrew [Zvi Gitelman] When is Language a Language? The Case of Former Yugoslavia [Robert D. Greenberg] India and the Soviet Model: The Linguistic State Reorganization and the Problem of Hindi [Andrea Graziosi] After Status Reversal: The Use of Titular Languages and Russian in the Baltic Countries [Martin Ehala] The Art of Defining Linguistic Minorities in Quebec and Canada [Fran?ois Charbonneau] Index
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