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pro vyhledávání: '"Marnie Holborow"'
Autor:
Marnie Holborow
`A very welcome and much-needed broadening of current theoretical perspectives′ - Professor Norman Fairclough, University of Lancaster This book offers a major reappraisal of the role of language in the social world. Focusing on three main areas -
Autor:
Marnie Holborow
Homes in Crisis Capitalism explores the core social reproduction role that individual households fulfil in our societies, and the class and racial effects of this on gender inequality and discrimination. Women now make up nearly half of the paid work
Autor:
Marnie Holborow
Publikováno v:
Language Sciences. 70:58-67
Language commodification, a term now current in sociolinguistics and linguistic anthropology, describes how language has become reconfigured for market purposes and treated as an economic resource. One aspect of this is the commodification of workers
Autor:
Marnie Holborow
Publikováno v:
Language and Intercultural Communication. 18:520-532
Languages and language skills are commonly tagged as a marketable asset, or ‘human capital’. The article analyses the implications and social effects of Human Capital Theory. I show that the posses...
Autor:
Marnie Holborow, John O’Sullivan
Publikováno v:
Higher Education in Austerity Europe. :107-126
Autor:
Marnie Holborow
Publikováno v:
The Encyclopedia of Applied Linguistics. :1-6
Autor:
Marnie Holborow
Publikováno v:
Applied Linguistics Review. 4:229-257
Neoliberalism and neoliberal ideology has only recently begun to gain attention within applied linguistics. This paper seeks to contribute to this development with a focus on neoliberal keywords in official texts. The ideological content of these key
Autor:
Marnie Holborow
Language and Neoliberalism examines the ways in which neoliberalism, or the ideology of market rule, finds expression in language. In this groundbreaking original study, Holborow shows at once the misleading character of ideological meaning and the u
Autor:
Marnie Holborow
Publikováno v:
Journal of Language and Politics. 6:51-73
When the ideas of capitalist globalisation appear to speak as one across the world, it is timely to re-examine the interconnections between language and ideology. The global market and its dominant neoliberal ideology, increasingly expressed in Engli