Revisiting Levels of Contemporary Arabic in Egypt : Essays on Arabic Varieties in Memory of El-Said Badawi
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
ISBN-10
9774169662
ISBN-13
9789774169663
Publisher
The American University in Cairo Press
Imprint
The American University in Cairo Press
Country of Manufacture
EG
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Feb 20th, 2020
Print length
336 Pages
Weight
602 grams
Dimensions
20.60 x 23.80 x 2.60 cms
Product Classification:
linguisticsLanguage teaching & learning (other than ELT)
Ksh 10,800.00
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El-Said Badawi’s seminal Levels of Contemporary Arabic in Egypt was first published in Arabic in 1973. Its theory of interrelated language levels that are ever-changing along a sociolinguistic continuum inspired a generation of Arabists and Arabic-language educators to re-examine Arabic varieties from a wide range of perspectives, transforming the way scholars carried out research on language variation, lexicography, and teaching Arabic as a foreign language. Since that time, Arabic has witnessed major changes in the way its spoken and written forms are practiced, but informed, scholarly publications on the current reality of the linguistic landscape have been few and far between. This collective study, with contributions from renowned scholars of Arabic applied linguistics, draws on empirical data to bring together original new research on spoken and written language varieties in Egypt today. Thematically, Revisiting Levels of Contemporary Arabic in Egypt explores three broad but interconnected areas: Arabic varieties in context, challenges to Badawi’s Levels model, and the pedagogical implications of varying levels in teaching Arabic as a foreign language. It not only discusses the current applicability of Badawi’s model to contexts such as contemporary Egyptian newspapers and Facebook, but looks at empirical data related to colloquial varieties in Egypt and elsewhere, the role of context in their current use, and the approaches to documenting and deriving colloquial lexicons. It also examines linguistic styles in different genres and contexts and for different audiences.
A leading-edge study of Arabic varieties and how they are used, written by distinguished scholars in the field
El-Said Badawis seminal Mustawayat al-arabiya al-muasira fi Misr (Levels of Contemporary Arabic in Egypt) was first published in Arabic in 1973. Its theory of interrelated language levels that are ever-changing along a sociolinguistic continuum inspired a generation of Arabists and Arabic-language educators to re-examine Arabic varieties from a wide range of perspectives, transforming the way scholars carried out research on language variation, lexicography, and teaching Arabic as a foreign language. Since that time, Arabic has witnessed major changes in the way its spoken and written forms are practiced, but informed, scholarly publications on the current reality of the linguistic landscape have been few and far between. This collective study, with contributions from renowned scholars of Arabic applied linguistics, draws on empirical data to bring together original new research on spoken and written language varieties in Egypt today.
Thematically, Revisiting Levels of Contemporary Arabic in Egypt explores three broad but interconnected areas: Arabic varieties in context, challenges to Badawis Levels model, and the pedagogical implications of varying levels in teaching Arabic as a foreign language. It not only discusses the current applicability of Badawis model to contexts such as contemporary Egyptian newspapers and Facebook, but looks at empirical data related to colloquial varieties in Egypt and elsewhere, the role of context in their current use, and the approaches to documenting and deriving colloquial lexicons. It also examines linguistic styles in different genres and contexts and for different audiences.
Contributors:
El-Said Badawis seminal Mustawayat al-arabiya al-muasira fi Misr (Levels of Contemporary Arabic in Egypt) was first published in Arabic in 1973. Its theory of interrelated language levels that are ever-changing along a sociolinguistic continuum inspired a generation of Arabists and Arabic-language educators to re-examine Arabic varieties from a wide range of perspectives, transforming the way scholars carried out research on language variation, lexicography, and teaching Arabic as a foreign language. Since that time, Arabic has witnessed major changes in the way its spoken and written forms are practiced, but informed, scholarly publications on the current reality of the linguistic landscape have been few and far between. This collective study, with contributions from renowned scholars of Arabic applied linguistics, draws on empirical data to bring together original new research on spoken and written language varieties in Egypt today.
Thematically, Revisiting Levels of Contemporary Arabic in Egypt explores three broad but interconnected areas: Arabic varieties in context, challenges to Badawis Levels model, and the pedagogical implications of varying levels in teaching Arabic as a foreign language. It not only discusses the current applicability of Badawis model to contexts such as contemporary Egyptian newspapers and Facebook, but looks at empirical data related to colloquial varieties in Egypt and elsewhere, the role of context in their current use, and the approaches to documenting and deriving colloquial lexicons. It also examines linguistic styles in different genres and contexts and for different audiences.
Contributors:
- Muhammad Abdel Haleem, University of London, England
- Mona Farrag Attwa, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO
- Michael G. Carter, University of Oslo, Norway
- Mona Kamel Hassan, The American University in Cairo, Egypt
- Margaret Larkin, University of California, Berkeley, CA
- Gunvor Mejdell, University of Oslo, Norway
- Mustafa Mughazy, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI
- Karin Christina Ryding, Georgetown University, Washington, DC
- Waheed Samy, The American University in Cairo, Egypt; University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI
- Devin J. Stewart, Emory University, Atlanta, GA
- Willem Stoetzer, Leiden University, Netherlands
- Zeinab A. Taha, The American University in Cairo, Egypt
- Hanady Tawwakol, The American University in Cairo, Egypt
- Kees Versteegh, Radboud University, Nijmegen, Netherlands
- Lisa J. White, The American University in Cairo, Egypt
- Manfred Woidich, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands
- Shahira Yacout, The American University in Cairo, Egypt
- Munther Younes, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY
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