ID | 146032 |
Title Proper | Linguistic innovations and foreign policy of China |
Language | ENG |
Author | ZAVYALOVA, Olga |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Linguistic policy, which includes not only a domestic, but also a foreign component, was revived in China after a long interval only at the beginning of this century. Since 2004, the official Chinese language Putonghua (based on the Beijing dialect of Mandarin) and traditional Chinese culture have been popularized all over the world as soft power. In 2013, a new stage began of using linguistics to solve tasks of foreign policy. It was prompted by the emergence of Xi Jinping's One Belt, One Road strategy and envisaged the active study of the languages of countries surrounding China, along with the cross-border languages of the PRC peoples.
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`In' analytical Note | Far Eastern Affairs Vol. 44, No.1; 2016: p.133-137 |
Journal Source | Far Eastern Affairs Vol: 44 No 1 |
Key Words | Xinjiang ; Great Silk Road ; The PRC Linguistic Policy ; Languages of Surrounding Countries ; Languages of the PRC Nationals ; Cross-Border Languages |