1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910452499403321

Titolo

A political history of Spanish : the making of a language / / edited by Jose del Valle [[electronic resource]]

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Cambridge : , : Cambridge University Press, , 2013

ISBN

1-107-27233-5

1-139-89038-7

1-107-27176-2

1-107-53365-1

1-107-27508-3

1-107-27834-1

1-107-27385-4

0-511-79433-9

1-107-27711-6

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (xiv, 430 pages) : digital, PDF file(s)

Disciplina

460.9

Soggetti

Spanish language - Political aspects - History

Communication in politics - History

Spanish-speaking countries Politics and government

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015).

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

; Part I. Theoretical underpinnings. Language, politics and history : an introductory essay / José del Valle -- ; Part II. The making of Spanish: Iberian perspectives. Introduction to the making of Spanish : Iberian perspectives / Alberto Medina, José del Valle and Henrique Monteagudo -- The prehistory of written Spanish and the thirteenth-century nationalist zeitgeist / Roger Wright -- Language, nation and empire in early modern Iberia / Miguel Martínez -- The seventeenth century debate over the origins of Spanish : links of language ideology to the Morisco question / Kathryn A. Woolard -- The institutionalization of language in eighteenth-century Spain / Alberto Medina -- The officialization of Spanish in mid-nineteenth century Spain : the Academy's authority / Laura Villa -- Spanish and other languages of



Spain in the Second Republic / Henrique Monteagudo -- ; Part III. The making of Spanish: Latin American and Transatlantic perspectives. Introduction to the making of Spanish : Latin American and Transatlantic perspectives / Elvira Narvaja de Arnoux and José del Valle -- Language, religion and unification in early colonial Peru / Paul Firbas -- Grammar and the state in the Southern Cone in the nineteenth century / Elvira Narvaja de Arnoux -- The politics of lexicography in the Mexican Academy in the late nineteenth century / Bárbara Cifuentes -- Language in the Dominican Republic : between Hispanism and Panamericanism / Juan R. Valdez -- Language diversity and national unity in the history of Uruguay / Graciela Barrios -- Language debates and the institutionalization of philology in Argentina in the first half of the twentieth century / Guillermo Toscano y García -- Linguistic emancipation and the academies of the Spanish language in the twentieth century : the 1951 turning point / José del Valle -- ; Part IV. The making of Spanish: US perspectives. Introduction to the making of Spanish : US perspectives / José del Valle and Ofelia García -- Language, church and state in territorial Arizona / Elise M. DuBord -- The politics of Spanish and English in territorial New Mexico / Arturo Fernández-Gibert -- Public health and the politics of Spanish in early twentieth-century Texas / Glenn A. Martinez -- Categorizing Latinos in the history of the US Census : the official racialization of Spanish / Jennifer Leeman -- ; Part V. The making of Spanish beyond Spain and the Americas. Introduction to the making of Spanish beyond Spain and the Americas / Mauro Fernández and José del Valle -- The status of Judeo-Spanish in the Ottoman Empire / Yvette Bürki -- Language and the hispanization of Equatorial Guinea / Susana Castillo Rodríguez -- The representation of Spanish in the Philippine Islands / Mauro Fernández.

Sommario/riassunto

Spanish is spoken as a first language by almost 400 million people in approximately 60 countries, and has been the subject of numerous political processes and debates since it began to spread globally from Iberia in the thirteenth century. A Political History of Spanish brings together a team of experts to analyze the metalinguistic origins of Spanish and evaluate it as a discursively constructed artefact; that is to say, as a language which contains traces of the society in which it is produced, and of the discursive traditions that are often involved and invoked in its creation. This is a comprehensive and provocative new work which takes a fresh look at Spanish from specific political and historical perspectives, combining the traditional chronological organization of linguistic history and spatial categories such as Iberia, Latin America and the US, whilst simultaneously identifying the limits of these organizational principles.