410 Linguistik
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Wenn wir an Sprache denken, dann meist an Grammatiken, Rechtschreibung und Lexika. Sprache scheint demnach in der Form von Regeln und Wissen zu existieren. Dieser Band, der aus der Jahrestagung des IDS 2015 hervorgegangen ist, vertritt eine andere Vorstellung von Sprache: Sprache ist Werkzeug und Lebensform im sozialen und leiblichen Kontext. Sprechen und Schreiben bestehen aus routinisierten Praktiken, die an konkrete körperliche, sequenzielle, mediale und materielle Kontexte gebunden sind und bestimmten Zwecken dienen. Der Bezug auf Objekte und mediale Oberflächen und die leibliche Verfasstheit der Akteure und ihre Situiertheit im Raum sind unhintergehbare Bestimmungsstücke der Verwendung von Sprache. Sprache ist eingelassen in zwischenmenschliche Interaktionen, die sie selbst prägt, aus denen sie ihre Bedeutung bezieht und innerhalb derer sie sich wandelt und neue Verwendungen und Ausprägungen gewinnt.
Die in diesem Band versammelten Beiträge zeigen Anwendungen und Nutzen des Praktikenkonzepts in unterschiedlichen Feldern der Linguistik, wie der interaktionalen Linguistik, der Sozio-, Text- und Medienlinguistik, der synchronen und historischen Pragmatik und der Literalitätsforschung. Dabei rücken über die Perspektive der Praktiken auch die Schnittstellen der Linguistik zu ihren sozialwissenschaftlichen Nachbarwissenschaften, insbesondere zu Soziologie und Medienwissenschaft, in den Fokus.
Investigations of the relationship between language and German colonialism are mainly based on historical sources. The article aims to develop a systematic foundation of source studies as a methodological background for these investigations. This is exemplified by sources reflecting the particular situation of the former German colonies in the South Pacific. Firstly, the article addresses terminological problems, in particular the relation between "documents", "sources", and "data". Secondly, a detailed typology of historical sources is presented and related to object-, meta-, and extralinguistic aspects of language contact. Finally, the article informs about how and where to look for historical sources.
Diplomatie mit Diplomen
(1989)
This paper describes a new research initiative addressing the issue of sustainability of linguistic resources. This initiative is a cooperation between three linguistic collaborative research centres in Germany, which comprise more than 40 individual research projects altogether. These projects are involved in creating manifold language resources, especially corpora, tailored to their particular needs. The aim of the project described here is to ensure an effective and sustainable access of these data by third-party researchers beyond the termination of these projects. This goal involves a number of measures, such as the definition of a common data format to completely capture the heterogeneous information encoded in the individual corpora, the development of user-friendly and sustainably usable tools for processing (e.g. querying) the data, and the specification of common inventories of metadata and terminology. Moreover, the project aims at formulating general rules of best practice for creating, accessing, and archiving linguistic resources.
This paper describes a new research initiative addressing the issue of sustainability of linguistic resources. The initiative is a cooperation between three collaborative research centres in Germany – the SFB 441 “Linguistic Data Structures” in Tübingen, the SFB 538 “Multilingualism” in Hamburg, and the SFB 632 “Information Structure” in Potsdam/Berlin. The aim of the project is to develop methods for sustainable archiving of the diverse bodies of linguistic data used at the three sites. In the first half of the paper, the data handling solutions developed so far at the three centres are briefly introduced. This is followed by an assessment of their commonalities and differences and of what these entail for the work of the new joint initiative. The second part then sketches seven areas of open questions with respect to sustainable data handling and gives a more detailed account of two of them – integration of linguistic terminologies and development of best practice guidelines.