| Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Materials specified | Status | Notes | Barcode | |
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National Law School | General Stacks | 490 PIN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | HB | Available | Recommended by Dr. Gayathri Naik | 39922 |
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| 428.0076 COX - 1 Cambridge IGCSE First Language English Coursebook / | 428.0076 COX - 2 Cambridge IGCSE First Language English Coursebook / | 428.24 GOU English language for Cambridge international AS & A level: Coursebook / | 490 PIN Translation, script and orality : becoming a language of state / | 491.445 HAL A Grammar of the Bengal Language / | 491.555 JON A Grammar of the Persian Language / | 494 SJO Dravidian language and culture - (Selected Essays) / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Translation, Script and Orality: Becoming a Language of State traces debates around transcription/translation in Konkani that eventually contoured the development of the language towards nationalist or state-seeking forms. Though the book is structured around contemporary linguistic states such as Goa, Pinto argues for a focus on aspects of language that deviate from the nationalist literary norm. The present volume is structured as a long essay, interspersed with excerpts from the introductions and prefaces to transcribed/translated texts. The historically significant extracts demonstrate the shifts in perspectives with regard to transcription and translation, and reveal how what was once termed a dialect, acquired the symbolic attributes of cultural dominance necessitated by nationalist discourse.
Includes paraphases in Konkani.
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