Search results for "Brutalization"

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Sociolinguistic Resilience Among Young Academics. A Quantitative Analysis in Germany and France

2021

International audience; Already Friedrich Schiller was convinced that language mirrors a nation. If this is the case, then the often deplored ‘brutalization of language’, which has almost become a buzzword in the wake of the refugee crisis in Germany that started in 2015, points to a serious social crisis by raising questions of (national) identity and self-understanding. Based on newly introduced sociolinguistic resilience concept in line with the concept of group focus enmity (GFE) combining the dimensions of co-adaptation and co-evolution of linguistic signs, this article presents preliminary empirical evidence of a ‘classroom’ survey conducted among students in four university towns in …

hate speechmedia_common.quotation_subject0211 other engineering and technologiesIdentity (social science)050109 social psychology02 engineering and technologyPublic domain[SHS]Humanities and Social SciencesGermanGermany0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSociology[SHS.LANGUE]Humanities and Social Sciences/LinguisticsEmpirical evidencemedia_common[SHS.SOCIO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Sociologysociolinguistic resilience4. Education05 social sciences021107 urban & regional planningGender studiesRaising (linguistics)language.human_languageQuantitative analysis (finance)group focus enmitylanguageBrutalizationFrancePsychological resilience
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