The Invention of Monolingualism

ISBN
9781501318054
$150.00
Author Gramling, David
Format Trade Cloth
Details
  • 8.8" x 5.8" x 1.0"
  • Active Record
  • Individual Title
  • 2016
  • 272
  • Yes
  • CFDM CB JNSV JNKC
  • 20
  • PB36.G55 2016
The Invention of Monolingualism harnesses literary studies, applied-linguisitics, translation studies, and cultural studies to offer a ground-breaking investigation of monolingualism. After briefly describing what "monolingual+? means in scholarship and public discourse, and the pejorative effects this common use may have on non-elite, non-cosmopolitan populations, Gramling sets out, across four chapters, to discover a new conception of monolingualism. Along the way, he explores how writers-Arabic, Latin American, German, and English-language-have in recent decades confronted monolingualism in their texts, and how they have critiqued the World Literature industry's increasing hunger for "translatable+? novels. Moving from surprising and startlingly original case studies to brilliant reappraisals of widely-taught concepts in literary studies, The Invention of Monolingualism is a book to be reckoned with for students and scholars of literary theory, world literature, and the political and cultural implications of translation.