On Non-Academic Conceptions of "correct" Turkish in Media: Descriptive and Prescriptive Approaches and Beyond
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Date
2012
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Ahmet Yesevi University
Open Access Color
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Abstract
As a popular subject, the use of Turkish in media has become the subject of numerous critical articles and books. Most of these studies are written by people with various professional backgrounds such as journalism, teaching, announcing, etc. and due to the lack of a linguistic perspective and methodological and theoretical basis, they may include some misconceptions. These publications, also being recommended for elementary and high school students, include highly subjective and disputable judgements, and sometimes they may lead the way for other unfruitful disputes which eventually end up in a vicious cycle. In this study, a database composed of twelve books about the improper use of Turkish published within the last decade is studied in an attempt to reveal methodological and theoretical misconceptions. My aim is to approach this type of literature critically, which may eventually contribute to the linguistic consciousness and language planning processes and also suggest new fields of inquiry for the sociolinguists.
Description
Keywords
Descriptivism, Language of the media, Language planning, Non-academic conceptions of language, Prescriptivism, Sociolinguistics, Turkish
Fields of Science
Citation
WoS Q
Q3
Scopus Q
Q4
Source
Bilig
Volume
64
Issue
Start Page
151
End Page
174
