Book Chapter Details
Mandatory Fields
Kelly-Holmes, Helen
2015 December
Language and the Media
Language and the Media: General Introduction
Routledge
Abingdon and New York
Published
0
Optional Fields

 While linguists were previously primarily concerned with ‘real’ one-to-one language, interest in the media among linguists – in particular in discourse analysis and sociolinguistics – has grown greatly in recent decades. This is probably not surprising due to the increasingly mediated nature of contemporary life and the blurring of boundaries between mediated and unmediated language practices in people’s everyday experiences (Androutsopoulos 2014: 4). What makes language in the media different from ‘everyday’ or ‘person-to-person’ domains is the presence - seen or unseen, human or technical – of some intermediary or facilitator or controller. This facilitation or mediation both impacts on language and is impacted on by language and it is this intersection, in all its facets, that is the focus of this collection. While the study of language and media has, up to recently, tended to focus more on discourse aspects, the language aspect in the broader sense, in terms of e.g. multilingualism, language policy, meta-language and language ideologies, has increasingly come under academic scrutiny. In this collection, the understanding of language and media is seen as encompassing not just discourse (the language in and of the media) but also all decisions around language and discussions of language in the media. The role of language in the media is conceptualised in three distinct, but inter-related ways across the four volumes: language as a means of managing the media audience, which involves policy-making around which languages to use for which media, which speakers to select, and the role of language in creating and delineating particular speech communities; language as a topic in the media, how it is reported and discussed, and how this thematizing of language assumes, enhances and maintains, but also potentially challenges prevailing language ideologies; and, thirdly, how language is used as a mode of media communication and the linguistic and discursive practices which take place in the media. By way of introducing the collection, this first chapter outlines the key themes and concepts underpinning our consideration of the relationship between language and media, which are identified here as technology, markets, globalization, and agency. Following this, the themes of the four volumes within the collection - language policy and management; language as topic and content in the media; and language practices in the media are introduced and reviewed.

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