Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:783Hits:19976302Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID168778
Title ProperTowards a multilingual literary history
Other Title Informationlessons from a conflict environment
LanguageENG
AuthorDE SILVA, ANNEMARI
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article presents methodologies towards a multilingual literary history of Sri Lanka in the twentieth century by examining multilingual encounters or cultures through places, people, and institutions. Massey's concept of plural space underpins the study and gives rise to various strategies to build a multilingual literary history. The guiding research questions are: How do we construct multilingual literary histories in the context of language-based conflict? What can conflict environments teach us about approaches to multilingual literary histories and spheres? In addition to discovering future directions for intra-national comparative literary studies and documenting multilingual cultures and sites, I also focus on the changing geography of multilingualism in the twentieth century. As ideological separation of language spheres turned to real-world segregation through a series of policy shifts and institutional changes, we see that the pursuit of multilingual research takes us from organic, or naturally occurring, sites of multilingualism to orchestrated, or purposefully created, sites. Orchestrated sites work to counterbalance the decreasing opportunity for organic multilingual encounters in the context of ethnolinguistic conflict.
`In' analytical NoteModern Asian Studies Vol. 53, No.6; Nov 2019: p.1816-1848
Journal SourceModern Asian Studies 2019-12 53, 6
Key WordsConflict Environment ;  Multilingual Literary Histor