Book chapter written by DPDF 2010 After Secularization: New Approaches to Religion and Modernity Fellow James Robertson, featured in The Vernaculars of Communism: Language, Ideology and Power in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, edited by Petre Petrov and Lara Ryazanova-Clarke: 

 

The political revolutions which established state socialism in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe were accompanied by revolutions in the word, as the communist project implied not only remaking the world but also renaming it. As new institutions, social roles, rituals and behaviours emerged, so did language practices that designated, articulated and performed these phenomena. This book examines the use of communist language in the Stalinist and post-Stalinist periods. It goes beyond characterising this linguistic variety as crude “newspeak”, showing how official language was much more complex – the medium through which important political-ideological messages were elaborated, transmitted and also contested, revealing contradictions, discursive cleavages and performative variations. The book examines the subject comparatively across a range of East European countries besides the Soviet Union, and draws on perspectives from a range of scholarly disciplines – sociolinguistics, anthropology, literary and cultural studies, historiography, and translation studies.

Publication Details

Title
Speaking Titoism: Student Opposition and the Socialist Language Regime of Yugoslavia
Authors
Robertson, James MacEwan
Publisher
Routledge
Publish Date
December 2014
ISBN
9781317647485
Citation
Robertson, James MacEwan, Speaking Titoism: Student Opposition and the Socialist Language Regime of Yugoslavia (Routledge, December 2014).
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