Diglossia and the present language situation in Greece: A sociological approach to the interpretation of diglossia and some hypotheses on today's linguistic reality

In the first part of the article, an approach to Greek diglossia is proposed, focusing on the differing social functions of the two coexisting Greek languages. The adoption of "pure" Greek in the early 19th century represented a compromise, which made possible the rejection of Ancient Gree...

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Veröffentlicht in:Language in society 1992-09, Vol.21 (3), p.365-381
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description In the first part of the article, an approach to Greek diglossia is proposed, focusing on the differing social functions of the two coexisting Greek languages. The adoption of "pure" Greek in the early 19th century represented a compromise, which made possible the rejection of Ancient Greek as the official language of the new state. The language question that developed at the turn of the century represented an effort to modernize Greek culture in the context of economic and social change brought about by the rise of the bourgeoisie. Starting in the interwar period and increasingly after the civil war, "pure" Greek became associated exclusively with authoritarian politics. The language reform of 1976, which formally abolished diglossia, thus came at the end of a long process of devaluation of the official "pure" language. Yet, in recent years, a metalinguistic prophecy of language decline has received wide-spread acceptance. The second half of the article examines the reasons for its success and the resulting revival of the argumentation questioning Demotic Greek, and concludes that they should be attributed to a crisis of national identity.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Jstor Complete Legacy; Sociological Abstracts; Periodicals Index Online; Cambridge University Press Journals Complete
subjects Ancient Greece
Diglossia
Economic change
Evolutionary linguistics
Foreign Countries
Greece
Greek
Greek language
Language
Language Standardization
Language Usage
Language Variation
Linguistics
National identity
National Programs
Nonnative languages
Political debate
Political Factors
Public Policy
Social change
Social Factors
Sociolinguistics
Sociological aspects
Theoretical linguistics
Uncommonly Taught Languages
Words
title Diglossia and the present language situation in Greece: A sociological approach to the interpretation of diglossia and some hypotheses on today's linguistic reality
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