Forum angewandte Linguistik
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64
Sprachliche Zeichen im öffentlichen Raum (Linguistic Landscape - LL) tragen neben ihrer primären Bedeutung und Funktion wie Auskunft und Werbung auch sekundäre Informationen zur Sprachenhierarchie, zur Repräsentation von Minderheitensprachen, zur sprachlichen Toleranz gegenüber der Mehrsprachigkeit in diesem Raum, etc. Diese Vielschichtigkeit macht die sprachlichen Zeichen im öffentlichen Raum zu wertvollen Lernobjekten, an denen die im Berufsleben so bedeutende diskursive Lesefähigkeit der Studierenden trainiert werden kann. Der Beitrag öffnet Perspektiven auf die Möglichkeiten der Verknüpfung der LL-Analyse mit den Inhalten der traditionellen germanistischen Curricula wie auch benachbarter Fachbereiche und verweist auf bisherige Studien in diesem Bereich.
65
This chapter starts out by giving a brief overview of the main priorities of international and German studies in the area of linguistic landscape research. The contributions to this volume are then embedded in current debates and developments in the field. Finally, we outline important desiderata of linguistic landscape research that focus on German and address challenges of knowledge transfer and application as well as possible contributions to international lines of research.
65
This chapter discusses functions of the German language in the Linguistic Landscape (LL) of the Baltic states, with a focus on the Latvian capital Riga. For this end, it applies the "Spot German" approach (cf. Heimrath 2017) in the context of debates on the international role of German (cf. Ammon 2015). It argues that German is an "additional language of society" (cf. Marten 2017b), i.e. it is not a dominant language in the Baltics but can regularly be found in a variety of functions. These relate both to the historical role of German in the region (including its contemporary commodification) and to current relations between the Baltics and the German-speaking countries. These include tourism, business, or educational and political institutions, but also point to, e.g., discourses on the quality assigned to products from the German-speaking region. In this sense, the Baltic states are part of what may, in accordance with Kachru's (1985) 3-circle-model for English, be labelled as "extended circle" of German. At the same time, the chapter discusses how conclusions from Linguistic Landscape research can be used for understanding marketing both in and for the German language: On the one hand, German carries the potential of persuading customers to opt for a certain product. On the other hand, the abundance of situations where German can be "spotted" suggests that the LL may successfully be used for language-marketing purposes, as exemplified by a brochure and a poster created by the DAAD Information Centre for the Baltic states in Riga.