Language and social change in Java : linguistic reflexes of modernization in a traditional royal polity
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Language and social change in Java : linguistic reflexes of modernization in a traditional royal polity
(Monographs in international studies, . Southeast Asia Series ; no. 65)
Ohio University Center for International Studies, Center for Southeast Asian Studies, 1985 [i.e. 1991]
[1st ed., 2nd printing]
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Note
Bibliography: p. 195-204
Includes indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Errington explores linguistic evidence of social change among the traditional priyayi elite of Surakarta in south-central Java. Employing data from texts, interviews, observed speech, and questionnaires, he shows a progressive leveling in the language used to denote traditional status differences, and he demonstrates how perceptions of speech styles reflect etiquette and the views of the users.
Errington suggests that a reciprocal assimilation process changes the way members of Java's traditional elite deal with each other in a modern urban milieu. The argument and the material on which it is based will be of interest to historians, linguists, anthropologists and other concerned with social and political change in southeast Asia.
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