Hegemony and Counter-Hegemony in Language Campaigns in China: A Regional Comparison
Tuesday 8 March 2022, 1:00pm to 2:00pm
Venue
Onine Via TeamsOpen to
All Lancaster University (non-partner) students, Alumni, Applicants, External Organisations, Families and young people, Postgraduates, Prospective International Students, Prospective Postgraduate Students, Prospective Undergraduate Students, Public, Staff, UndergraduatesRegistration
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Event Details
Online Talk on dialect politics in China, by Jocelin Lingxia Zhou, Lancaster University, Tuesday 8 March 2022, 1pm-2pm (UK time)
Online Talk by Jocelin Lingxia Zhou, Lancaster University
Tuesday 8 March 2022, 1pm-2pm (UK time)
In recent years, "dialect-protection" campaigns have emerged in major Chinese “dialect” speaking areas in China. In more economically developed regions and individualized societies, local “dialect” speakers are more assertive and vocal about their linguistic rights and the preservation of the local language and culture. However, awareness of linguistic diversity and appreciation of the local languages can be raised through the power of mass media and consciousness-raising by celebrities. Those campaigns challenge the linguistic hegemony created by the national language policy of Mandarin promotion, and foster regional varieties of Chinese language that are under pressure from Mandarin promotion, as well as internal migration and globalization. The response of the central government shows the Chinese Communist Party's negotiation with an increasingly individualistic Chinese society as a strategy to enhance its "consultative Leninism", without negating the promotion of the official language in order to reinforce nationalism and a homogeneous Chinese national identity.
Speaker
Zhou Lingxia
Languages And Cultures, Lancaster University
Jocelin Lingxia Zhou is Confucius Institute Teaching Lead and Lecturer in Chinese at the Department of Languages and Cultures (DeLC) at Lancaster University. Jocelin’s research investigates language policy and campaigns in China from the perspectives of sociolinguistics and political science. She was previously a lecturer in Chinese at Princeton University.
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