1st Edition

Bilingualism The Sociopragmatic-Psycholinguistic Interface

By Joel Walters Copyright 2005
    336 Pages
    by Routledge

    336 Pages
    by Routledge

    In the past 30 years, the study of bilingualism processing has been conducted independently by two fields, psycholinguistics and sociolinguistics. This volume merges these two fields, addressing one of the tough problems dividing researchers in bilingualism, conceptually as well as methodologically. Joel Walters proposes a new approach to bilingualism processing--the Sociopragmatic-Psycholinguistic (SPPL) Model--which presents language as a social phenomenon. The author accomplishes this by identifying and organizing evidence from a wide range of linguistic disciplines, merging sociopragmatics, discourse analysis, and ethnography with social cognition, psycholinguistics, and neuroscience. By extension, the author offers convincing explanations of how related fields can profit from a comprehensive bilingual processing model. As a result, Joel Walters delivers a well-organized, comprehensive model that is thought through at every level.

    This book appeals to graduate students, scholars in the fields of linguistics, bilingualism, second language acquisition, psycholinguistics, and sociolinguistics. It is useful to researchers for its comprehensiveness and methodological acumen and may be appropriate as a supplementary textbook for graduate-level courses in bilingualism or for seminars on similar topics.

    Contents: Preface. Bilingual Phenomena. Ten Perspectives on Bilingualism. A Functional Architecture of Bilingualism. Four Processing Mechanisms in Bilingual Production. Accounting for Bilingual Phenomena With the SPPL Processing Model. Acquisition, Attrition, and Language Disorders in Bilingualism.

    Biography

    Joel Walters

    "The book highlights the dynamic nature of bilingualism. It attempts to synthesize a range of theoretical approaches and models, hence encouraging further research that challenges the status quo. It encourages the reader to think of bilingualism and bilingualism research in a new and critical frame of mind."
    Li Wei
    University of Newcastle Upon Tyne