Understanding spelling conflicts in Bosnian, Croatian, Montenegrin, and Serbian: Insights from speakers' attitudes and beliefs
Description
A preprint article version.
The abstract:
This article analyzes the spelling-change conflicts in Bosnian, Croatian, Montenegrin, and Serbian. These standard languages share a long history of common sociopolitical identity and high mutual intelligibility, and the spelling standardization processes became entwined with the wars in the 1990s. This study presents results from a 2022 survey of 2000 participants in four countries (matched to country census quotas on five demographic criteria), one of the largest data sets of speakers’ attitudes and beliefs on language identity and its sociopolitical context. I argue that analyzing spelling-change conflicts can uncover the motives for spelling changes and the causes of such conflicts. I propose, based on this analysis, three principles for predicting (inter)national spelling-change conflicts, which offers a novel contribution to the state of the art in comparative standardology and sociological studies of conflicts.
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Stojanov_Understanding spelling conflicts - PREPRINT.pdf
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