
Language and Identity in the Balkans Serbo-Croatian and Its Disintegration
by Greenberg, Robert D.Buy New
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Summary
Author Biography
Robert Greenberg is Associate Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of New Haven and Adjunct Associate Professor in the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures at Yale University. He received his Ph.D. from Yale University in 1991 where he taught 1991-1992. He then taught at Georgetown University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill before taking up his current position in 2003.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements | p. ix |
Introduction | p. 1 |
Overview | p. 1 |
Goals and methodology | p. 4 |
Language as a marker of ethnic identity | p. 6 |
Language in the context of Balkan nationalism | p. 9 |
Serbo-Croatian: A dying tongue? | p. 13 |
Serbo-Croatian: United or not we fall | p. 16 |
Introduction: The precarious language union | p. 16 |
Models for unified languages | p. 18 |
Centrally monitored unity | p. 20 |
Government-imposed unity | p. 21 |
Pluricentric unity | p. 23 |
Controversies connected with Serb/Croat language accords | p. 24 |
The Literary Agreement (1850) | p. 24 |
The Novi Sad Agreement (1954) | p. 29 |
The power of competing dialects | p. 32 |
The Stokavian dialects and ethnicity: An overview | p. 34 |
Dilemmas of dialects: Ownership and citizenship? | p. 35 |
Standard pronunciations, variants, or idioms | p. 39 |
The writing on the wall: Alphabets and writing systems | p. 41 |
A multiplicity of alphabets | p. 41 |
Spell-bound: Clashes over spelling rules | p. 44 |
Vocabulary: A reflection of divergent approaches to identity | p. 47 |
Croatian purism | p. 48 |
The supremacy of the vernacular for the Serbs | p. 50 |
Divergent attitudes towards foreign borrowings | p. 51 |
The turbulent history of the language union: A chronology | p. 54 |
Serbian: Isn't my language your language? | p. 58 |
Introduction | p. 58 |
One language, two variants | p. 59 |
The two alphabets | p. 60 |
The two pronunciations | p. 63 |
The factions in Serbian linguistic circles | p. 65 |
Orthographic chaos: 1993-1994 | p. 69 |
The battle between the ekavian and ijekavian dialects | p. 77 |
The triumph of the academies | p. 83 |
Conclusions | p. 85 |
Montenegrin: A mountain out of a mole hill? | p. 88 |
Introduction | p. 88 |
Montenegro's dialects and its literary traditions | p. 91 |
The sociolinguistics of dialect geography | p. 92 |
The literary traditions in Montenegro | p. 94 |
Montenegro's two factions | p. 97 |
The Neo-Vukovites | p. 98 |
Nikcevic and his supporters | p. 99 |
The proposed standard | p. 102 |
New letters and new pronunciations | p. 103 |
The expansion of ijekavian features | p. 104 |
Conclusions | p. 105 |
Croatian: We are separate but equal twins | p. 109 |
Introduction | p. 109 |
Croatian from Broz to Brozovic | p. 111 |
Contributions of the "Croat Vukovites": Traitors or Croat patriots? | p. 111 |
Tito's Yugoslavia: Croatian and not Croato-Serbian | p. 115 |
The new Croatian | p. 118 |
The Cakavian and Kajkavian lexical stock | p. 120 |
Infusing the new standard with native Croatian forms | p. 122 |
Recent orthographic controversies | p. 125 |
The prescriptivist Pravopis | p. 125 |
The descriptivist Pravopis | p. 128 |
Conclusions | p. 132 |
Bosnian: A three-humped camel? | p. 135 |
Introduction | p. 135 |
History is on our side: The origins of the Bosnian language | p. 137 |
It's all in the name: Bosnian or Bosniac | p. 139 |
The peculiarities of the new Bosnian standard | p. 142 |
The dialectal base | p. 143 |
Is Bosnian a mixture of Serbian and Croatian? | p. 146 |
The first Symposium on the Bosnian language | p. 150 |
Closing ranks: A new charter for a new century | p. 155 |
Conclusions | p. 156 |
Conclusion | p. 159 |
The Serbo-Croatian successor languages: Shared obstacles and divergent solutions | p. 159 |
My language, my land | p. 164 |
Postscript: Developments since 2004 | p. 168 |
Observations four years later | p. 168 |
Scholarly attitudes towards the new language realities in ex-Yugoslavia | p. 168 |
Croatia: A round table controversy | p. 171 |
Bosnia-Herzegovina: two new dictionaries on their way | p. 175 |
Montenegro: The pains of language separation | p. 177 |
Serbia: Recent perspectives | p. 180 |
Final remarks and future research | p. 181 |
Text of the 1850 Literary Agreement | p. 183 |
Text of the 1954 Novi Sad Agreement | p. 187 |
Works cited | p. 190 |
Index | p. 199 |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
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