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Zusatztext This first volume contributes a great deal to getting out of the impasse in which some authors argue the WE paradigm has been locked in recent years, between form and function on the one hand, and social and historical approaches on the other. Informationen zum Autor Alexander Onysko is Professor of English Linguistics at the University of Klagenfurt, Austria. Vorwort Written by an international team of leading experts, this book presents the key issues of importance in contemporary world Englishes and points the way towards future research directions. Zusammenfassung This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open Access programme and is available on www.bloomsburycollections.com. It is funded by the University of Klagenfurt, Austria. Discussing key issues of current relevance and setting the tone for future research in world Englishes, this book provides new perspectives on the diverse realities of Englishes around the world. Written by an international team of established and renowned scholars, it is the inaugural volume in the new series Bloomsbury Advances in World Englishes , dedicated to advancing research in the field. Chapters discuss important topics in contemporary world Englishes research, including de-colonial approaches, emerging varieties in post-protectorates and international uses as communicative events to highlight the globalizing aspect of English as a semiotic code. The book also expands on cultural conceptualizations to investigate the connections between Englishes and localized cultural knowledge and ongoing changes and attitudes towards local forms in multilingual settings. Closing with an examination of how world Englishes and the use of English as a lingua franca could influence the future teaching of Englishes, Research Developments in World Englishes presents a detailed picture of contemporary research approaches and points the way towards exciting future directions. Inhaltsverzeichnis List of Figures List of Tables List of Contributors Acknowledgments 1. Where are WEs Heading to? An Introduction to the Inaugural Volume of Bloomsbury Advances in World Englishes, Alexander Onysko (University of Klagenfurt, Austria) 2. Decolonizing (World) Englishes, Mario Saraceni (University of Portsmouth, UK) and Camille Jacob (University of Portsmouth, UK) 3. “The Communicative Event” in International English(es) as Social Practice: Adducing a Tricodal/Trimodal Theory of the Linguistic Structuring of Social Meaning, Allan James (University of Klagenfurt, Austria) 4. Extending the Scope of World Englishes: Interactions across Englishes in Post-Protectorates and at the Grassroots, Christiane Meierkord (University of Bochum, Germany) 5. Contact, Asia, and the Rethinking of Englishes in Multilingual Ecologies, Lisa Lim ( Curtin University, Australia) and Umberto Ansaldo ( Curtin University, Australia) 6. Multilingualism and the Role of English in the United Arab Emirates, with views from Singapore and Hong Kong, Peter Siemund (University of Hamburg, Germany), Ahmad Al-Issa (University of Sharjah, United Arab Emirates), Sharareh Rahbari (University of Hamburg, Germany) and Jakob R. E. Leimgruber (University of Basel, Switzerland) 7. The History of English Language Attitudes within the Multilingual Ecology of South Africa , Susan Coetzee-Van Rooy (North West University, South Africa) and Bertus Van Rooy (University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands) 8. Transnational Dialect Contact and Language Variation and Change in World Englishes, Rebecca Lurie Starr (National University of Singapore, Singapore) 9. “I Don’t Get It”: Researching the Cultural Lexicon of Global Englishes , David Crystal (University of Bangor, UK) 10. Colonial Cultural Conceptualizations and World Englishes