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"This volume addresses the question 'What role does religion play in the maintenance, revival and/or shift, of languages?' It explores the complex and dynamic relationship between religion and the maintenance, revival and/or shift of languages in diverse multilingual multicultural contexts and sociopolitical conditions at different points in time"--
Religion and sociology --- 21*015 --- 21*015 Theologie en taal --- Theologie en taal --- Religion and society --- Religious sociology --- Society and religion --- Sociology, Religious --- Sociology and religion --- Sociology of religion --- Sociology
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Malaysia has long been a melting pot of various cultures and ethnicities, including the three largest populations, the Malay, Chinese, and Indians. Despite this, efforts to implement multilingualism, advocated by language educators and policy makers, have been marred by political and religious affiliations. Drawing on two decades of field research, this timely analysis of language variation in Malaysia is an important contribution to the understanding not only of linguistic pluralism in the country, but also of the Indian Diaspora, and of the effects of language change on urban migrant populations. The research presented here will be of interest to scholars of Southeast Asian and South Asian Studies.
Language planning -- Malaysia. --- Malaysia -- Languages. --- Austronesian, Papuan & Australian Languages & Literatures --- Planned language change --- Language planning --- Malaysia --- Languages. --- Language and languages --- Sociolinguistics --- Planning --- taal --- language --- Bengali language --- Bidayuh --- Kuching --- Malay language --- Malays (ethnic group) --- Malaysian language --- Sarawak --- Sindhis --- Tamil language
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