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Auteur
Olga Solovova (PhD in Sociolinguistics) is a researcher at the Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies (CEIS20), University of Coimbra, Portugal. She was a Marie Skodowska Curie postdoctoral fellow at the Center for Multilingualism in Society across the Lifespan, University of Oslo, Norway with a project on the use of Russian in the trilateral Norway-Russia-Finland borderland. Her research interests include language policies, semiotic landscapes, and speaker-centered approaches to multilingualism.
Sabina Vakser holds a PhD in Applied Linguistics from the University of Melbourne. Her doctoral work focused on multilingualism, transnational identity, experiences of migration, and Russianness in family life. Her research interests include the sociolinguistics of mobility, semiotics, somatics, and a sociology of the senses.
Résumé
This collection contributes to emerging work in critical sociolinguistics, using a multidisciplinary and multi-scalar approach to understanding the diasporic experience in the Russian-speaking world. This book will be of interest to students and scholars in sociolinguistics, multilingualism, language and linguistic anthropology.
Contenu
Contents, List of Contributors, Preface, Acknowledgements, Introduction: Contextualizing the Volume Olga Solovova and Sabina Vakser, Chapter 1 The dissolution of the USSR, the Newly Independent States and their Diaspora Policies Olga Gulina, Chapter 2 Towards Post-Russianness? Narrative Adjustment among Kazakhstani Teachers of Russian Juldyz Smagulova and Eleonora Suleimenova, Chapter 3 Russian Immigrants in Portugal: Diasporic Nationalism and Identities Elena Bulakh, Chapter 4 Workplace Experiences of Russian-speaking Women in Japan: Victimhood Narrated Ksenia Golovina and Varvara Mukhina, Chapter 5 Russian Speakers in Finland: Online Discussions of the Russian language Vera Zvereva, Chapter 6 Bridging and Bonding on-line: Russian-speaking Migrants in the United Kingdom and Their Social Networks Oksana Morgunova, Chapter 7 How to Immigrate into History: Russian Speakers in the Finnish Border Region and the Politics of Memory in Transnational Settings Olga Davydova-Minguet, Concluding remarks Renewal as the Unfolding Future: Ways Forward in Multilingual, Diasporic Research Sabina Vakser and Olga Solovova, Index