: Anju Saxena, Lars Borin
: Lesser-Known Languages of South Asia Status and Policies, Case Studies and Applications of Information Technology
: De Gruyter Mouton
: 9783110197785
: Trends in Linguistics. Studies and Monographs [TiLSM]ISSN
: 1
: CHF 203.70
:
: Sonstige Sprachen / Sonstige Literaturen
: English
: 394
: Wasserzeichen/DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: PDF

We do not at the present time know how the language situation in a multilingual region such as South Asia will be affected by modern information and communication technologies: Will linguistic diversity be strengthened or weakened as they become increasingly prevalent in all walks of life? This volume brings together articles on South Asian descriptive linguistics and sociolinguistics, documentary linguistics, issues of intellectual and cultural property and fieldwork ethics, and language technology. The book provides the reader with some basic knowledge of the problems concerned and some directions from which solutions could be forthcoming.


Anju Saxena, Uppsala University, Sweden;Lars Borin, Göteborg University, Sweden.

Frontmatter1
Contents7
Status of lesser-known languages in India39
Minority language policies and politics in Nepal69
Language policy, multilingualism and language vitality in Pakistan81
Vanishing voices: A typological sketch of Great Andamanese115
Lisu orthographies and email133
Shina in contemporary Pakistan145
The rise of ethnic consciousness and the politicization of language in west-central Nepal169
Why Ladakhi must not be written – Being part of the Great Tradition: Another kind of global thinking183
The impact of technology on language diversity and multilingualism203
The impact of technological advances on Tamil language use and planning211
Corpus-building for South Asian languages219
Digitized resources for languages of Nepal251
Multimedia: A community-oriented information and communication technology265
Language survival kits287
Grammatically based language technology for minority languages301
Supporting lesser-known languages: The promise of language technology325
Worrying about ethics and wondering about “informed consent”: Fieldwork from an Americanist perspective347
Backmatter379