ABSTRACT
The Routledge Handbook of Language in Conflict presents a range of linguistic approaches as a means for examining the nature of communication related to conflict. Divided into four sections, the Handbook critically examines text, interaction, languages and applications of linguistics in situations of conflict. Spanning 30 chapters by a variety of international scholars, this Handbook:
- includes real-life case studies of conflict and covers conflicts from a wide range of geographical locations at every scale of involvement (from the personal to the international), of every timespan (from the fleeting to the decades-long) and of varying levels of intensity (from the barely articulated to the overtly hostile)
- sets out the textual and interactional ways in which conflict is engendered and in which people and groups of people can be set against each other
- considers what linguistic research has brought, and can bring, to the universal aim of minimising the negative effects of outbreaks of conflict wherever and whenever they occur.
The Routledge Handbook of Language in Conflict is an essential reference book for students and researchers of language and communication, linguistics, peace studies, international relations and conflict studies.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part Section I|1 pages
Text in conflict
chapter 2|16 pages
Discursive (re)construction of the prelude to the 2003 Iraq War in op/ed press
chapter 3|20 pages
Stark choices and brutal simplicity
chapter 4|19 pages
Projecting your “opponent’s” views
chapter 5|20 pages
Ideological positioning in conflict
chapter 6|25 pages
Homosexuality in Latvian and Polish parliamentary debates 1994–2013
chapter 7|17 pages
Conflict and categorisation
part Section II|1 pages
Interaction in conflict
part Section III|1 pages
Languages in conflict
chapter 20|19 pages
Linguistic landscape as an arena of conflict
chapter 21|18 pages
“You are shamed for speaking it or for not speaking it good enough”
part Section IV|1 pages
Linguistics in conflict