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[Commlist] CFP: Journal of Language and Discrimination - special issue on language-based marginalization
Tue May 07 14:04:34 GMT 2024
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The Journal of Language and Discrimination invites researchers working
on language and marginalization to submit an article for its thematic
issue to be published in 2026.
Thematic issue
Marginalization is a pervasive phenomenon in contemporary societies,
characterized by the social exclusion and sidelining of certain
individuals or groups, depriving them of equal access to resources,
opportunities and fundamental rights (UN, 2014). This complex process
can result from a variety of factors such as race, ethnicity, class,
gender, sexual orientation and language. Language is certainly an
indicator of marginalization, but it also plays a crucial role in the
processes of marginalization. In fact, we use language to consciously
and unconsciously perpetuate marginalization, as well as to resist it.
Marginality and marginalization are interdisciplinary concepts in social
sciences. Park (1928: 881) was the first to introduce the notion of
marginality in sociology. He coined the term “marginal man”, which was
later developed by him and Stonequist (1937). Both were more interested
in the marginalized individual and its characteristics than the
processes of marginalization. Their theory was later expanded by
Goldberg (1941), who wrote about the “marginal culture”. Since then,
marginality has been viewed by a number of scholars as a problem, a
challenge or a threat for society (Mowat 2015), while others take
interest in its contribution to society, its dynamism and its vitality
(Bottrell 2007; Bright 2011, Lumsden 1984, Mc Laughlin 2001, Stankovitch
2020).
The concept of marginalization that we want to adopt in this special
issue is understood as a process that responds to a dual logic,
following the Bakhtinian notion of dialogism, which emphasizes the
continuous acts of communication between the self and the other in a
ceaseless attempt to position oneself (Bakhtin 1981, Bos 2008). On the
one hand, it is inscribed in power and status relationships and may
therefore involve both inclusion and exclusion on the part of dominant
and dominated individuals, those within the norm or in the margins. On
the other hand, it presupposes active cooperation between these two
groups. The position of the marginalized is recognized in the dominant
discourse, where it is even functional; marginalization is a constant
dialogue between the one who marginalizes and the marginalized (Bourdieu
1992, Bos 2008). It is not a question of studying the margin as such but
of understanding how it is constitutive of the center, how both are
constructed, defined, and evolve, and how this dialogue is central to
our understanding of reality (Bailly 1994; Barel 1982; Bourdieu 1992;
Bos 2008; Rocher 1971; Wacquant 2008).
That being said, marginalization has not been theorized in
sociolinguistics. The concept is generally used as part of the umbrella
term discrimination. It is to fill this gap that this special issue is
dedicated to the in-depth exploration of the relationship between
language and marginalization. Through several analytical axes, we aim to
explore the various ways in which language can be a factor in
marginalization, a tool in marginalization processes, and at the same
time, a subversive force capable of challenging oppressive norms and
defying power structures.
For this issue, we invite submissions that address language-based
marginalization from a variety of perspectives, including, but not
limited to, the following topics:
- How language choice affects marginalized people
- The use of language in the processes of marginalization
- Linguistic strategies and resistance to marginalization
- Language policy as a tool for marginalization
- Marginalized languages, marginalized people
- Language ideologies and marginalization
- Deconstructing biases around marginalization
- Marginalizing language practices - Identity-based strategies to resist
language-based marginalization
- Contesting marginalization
Articles may come from sociolinguistics, applied linguistics, linguistic
anthropology, education, sociology, communication and media studies, or
any other related discipline.
Submission information
The timeline is as follows:
- Abstract submission: June 1, 2024
- Notification and invitation to submit an article: June 14, 2024
- Final deadline for submission of article: September 15, 2024
- Peer review, notifications, and revisions: From October 2024 to April 2025
- Estimated publication time of issue: 2026
Please visit the Journal of Language and Discrimination website for
author guidelines: https://journal.equinoxpub.com/JLD/about/submissions.
Note that there are no article processing charges; no payment from the
authors will be required.
Questions about this issue can be addressed to Marie-Eve Bouchard:
(me.bouchard /at/ ubc.ca)
Guest editors Marie-Eve Bouchard and Annabelle Glas, The University of
British Columbia, Canada.
References
Bailly, A.-S. (1995). La marginalité, une approche historique et
épistémologique. Anales de Geografia de la Universidad Complutense, 15:
109-117.
Barel, Y. (1982). La marginalité sociale. Paris: Presses Universitaires
de France.
Bakthin, M. (1981) The Dialogic Imagination: Four Essays by M. M.
Bakthin (Ed. By Michael Holquist). Austin: The University of Texas Press.
Bos, J. (2008). Les types de marginalisation dans leur relation
constitutive au discours. L'Homme & la Société, 167-168-169: 177-201.
Bottrell, D. (2007). Resistance, resilience and social identities:
Reframing ‘problem youth’ and the problem of schooling. Journal of Youth
Studies, 10(5): 597–616.
Bourdieu, P. (1992). Language and Symbolic Power. Oxford: Polity Press.
Bright, N. G. (2011). ‘Non-servile virtuosi’ in insubordinate spaces:
School disaffection, refusal and resistance in a former English
coalfield. European Educational Research Journal, 10(4): 502–515.
Goldberg, M. (1941). A qualification of the marginal man theory.
American Sociological Review, 6(1): 52-58.
Lumsden, D. (1984). Community Mental Health in Action. Toronto: Canadian
Mental Health Association.
McLaughlin, N. (2001). Optimal marginality. The Sociological Quarterly,
42(2): 271-288.
Mowat, J. G. (2015). Towards a new conceptualisation of marginalisation.
European Educational Research Journal, 14(5): 454-476.
Park, R. E. (1928). Human migration and the marginal man. American
Journal of Sociology, 33(6): 881-893.
Rocher, G. (1971). La marginalité sociale. Un réservoir de contestation.
In C. Ryan (Ed.), Le Québec qui se fait, 41-47. Montreal: Les Éditions
Hurtubise.
Stankovich, A. (2020). Intermarginalité et plurimarginalité : les
actions revendicatrices des groupes marginaux, un moteur de changement
favorable à l'inclusion. MA Thesis. Rimouski: Université du Québec à
Rimouski.
Stonequist, Everett V. (1937/1961) The marginal man: A study in
personality and culture conflict. New York: Russell & Russell.
United Nations (UN). (2014). Marginalized groups: UN human rights expert
calls for an end to relegation. Available online:
https://www.ohchr.org/en/press-releases/2014/06/marginalized-groups-un-human-rights-expert-calls-end-relegation
Wacquant, L. (2008). Urban Outcast: A Comparative Sociology of Advanced
Marginality. Cambridge: Polity.
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