Hospitable Linguistics

Alternative, Indigenous and Critical Approaches to Language Research and Language Encounters

Anne Storch editor Nicholas G Faraclas editor Viveka Velupillai editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Multilingual Matters

Publishing:11th Mar '25

£44.95

This title is due to be published on 11th March, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

This paperback is available in another edition too:

Hospitable Linguistics cover

Experimental volume that transgresses the boundaries of linguistics

Challenging the boundaries of linguistics as a field, and transgressing the limitations of genre in writing about language, this book explores the possibilities of what the authors call a ‘hospitable linguistics’. It represents a crucial intervention in attempts to fashion a more integrative, responsible and respectful linguistics.

Challenging the boundaries of linguistics as a field, and transgressing the limitations of genre in writing about language, this book explores the possibilities of what the authors call a ‘hospitable linguistics’. It offers a critical discussion of how linguistics endeavors to domesticate, subdue and integrate both people and languages into existing academic structures and theories, and how as a discipline academic linguistics has barely begun to move beyond its colonial, patriarchal and conservative foundations. In this book, leading figures in their fields reflect on their own and others’ practices and experiences in three key areas: the agency and power of refugees and migrants; indigenous people’s (in)hospitable responses to strangers; and hospitable language as expressed through art, music and artefacts. As a whole, the book represents a crucial intervention in attempts to fashion a new, more integrative, responsible and respectful linguistics that makes way for the ideas of people who are often the object of study. 

This is a wonderful volume that examines how mother tongues can articulate resistance to colonial sovereignty. This book contributes significantly to research around indigenous languages – keeping stories alive, telling the untold tales and highlighting the wrongs of colonialism. * Helen J. Balfour, Murdoch University, Australia *
This volume is an urgent must-read for social-justice activists with interest in language and linguistics. Its multilingual approach to topics well beyond the conventional confines of linguistics contributes to the multidisciplinary foundation that's needed for truly inclusive research where Indigenous and marginalised voices have a say in discourses of decolonisation. * Michel DeGraff, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA *
This rigorous publication invites the reader to consider that the boundaries created between disciplines and languages by the colonial order are artificial. The inclusive methodologies in each chapter and the transformative approach of the book in its entirety challenge us to reflect on new ways of understanding the study of language. * Juan Carlos Suárez Villegas, University of Seville, Spain *

ISBN: 9781788929691

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

350 pages