ABSTRACT

Modern Arabic Sociolinguistics outlines and evaluates the major approaches and methods used in Arabic sociolinguistic research with respect to diglossia, codeswitching, language variation and attitudes and social identity.

This book:

  • outlines the main research findings in these core areas and relates them to a wide range of constructs, including social context, speech communities, prestige, power, language planning, gender and religion
  • examines two emerging areas in Arabic sociolinguistic research, internet-mediated communication and heritage speakers, in relation to globalization, language dominance and interference and language loss and maintenance
  • analyses the interplay between the various sociolinguistic aspects and examines the complex nature of the Arabic multidialectal, multinational, and multiethnic sociolinguistic situation.

Based on the author’s recent fieldwork in several Arab countries this book is an essential resource for researchers and students of sociolinguistics, Arabic linguistics, and Arabic studies.

chapter 1|8 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|36 pages

Arabic varieties and diglossia

chapter 3|33 pages

Methodological considerations

chapter 4|44 pages

Language attitudes

chapter 5|50 pages

Social identity

chapter 6|44 pages

Language variation and change

chapter 7|42 pages

Codeswitching

chapter 8|37 pages

Digital media and language use

chapter 9|29 pages

Heritage Arabic speakers

A different paradigm

chapter 10|9 pages

General conclusion