Family Language Transmission
Actors, Issues, Outcomes
					
	
		©2008
		Thesis
		
			
				
					XIV,
				
				310 Pages
			
		
	
				
				
					
						
					
				
				
				
					
						Series: 
	
		
			
				Variolingua. Nonstandard – Standard – Substandard, Volume 32
			
		
	
					
				
				
			Summary
			
				This book examines the whys and wherefores of family language transmission from the perspective of parents as language planners and managers of their linguistic resources. It draws on a qualitative, interview-based study of twenty families in which German is, was, or could have been the target language. Successive census analyses have charted a marked decline in the number of German speakers in Australia, indicating that motivation for transmitting German has waned. The situations where it is presently being transmitted are therefore particularly interesting. Data analysis was facilitated by a decision map depicting the planning, implementation and outcome phases of the transmission undertaking. The main findings show that the parents’ decision is negotiated around their own needs, interests and ambitions in terms of child-focussed, reciprocal and parent-centred motives. These, in turn, are linked to transmission strategies and the linguistic outcomes for the children. Through an understanding of the motivational issues arising in this context, it will hopefully be possible to better predict the effectiveness of the transmission strategies presently applied.
			
		
	Details
- Pages
 - XIV, 310
 - Publication Year
 - 2008
 - ISBN (Softcover)
 - 9783631573761
 - Language
 - English
 - Keywords
 - Australien Deutsche Spracherhaltung Soziolinguistik bilingualism identity language maintenance and shift
 - Published
 - Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2008. XIV, 310 pp., num. fig. and tables
 - Product Safety
 - Peter Lang Group AG