FRIAS Junior Researcher Conference – Spanish as a pluricentric language? – Status, prestige and communicative value of regional (standard) varieties of Spanish
| Date | Thursday, 23rd February 2017 | 
| Location | 
veranstalter: Eva Staudinger, Anja Schütz
ansprechpartner: Eva Staudinger, Anja Schütz
email: Eva.Staudinger@romanistik.uni-freiburg.de
web: https://www.frias.uni-freiburg.de/de/veranstaltungen/nachwuchskonferenzen/frias-junior-researcher-conference-spanish-as-a-pluricentric-language-status-prestige-and-communicative-value-of-regional-standard-varieties-of-spanish
institution: HPSL
language: Englisch
location institution: Freiburg
date_raw: 23./24.2.2017
date_sort: 23.02.2017, 00:00:00 
The impact of economic and geocultural 
globalisation on language ideologies and patterns of language use in 
society has established itself as a major topic in sociolinguistics. It 
is claimed that in the context of globalisation the visibility and 
legitimacy of local speech in public discourse have increased 
(Androutsopoulos 2009). In the particular case of Spanish this has lead 
researchers to pose the question whether Spanish is a pluricentric 
language (Thompson 1992, Bierbach 2000, Oesterreicher 2000). Although 
the RAE has been reluctant in embracing the view that Latin American 
varieties of Spanish are on equal footing with the Castilian standard, 
it has now adopted a “rhetoric of acceptance of linguistic diversity and
 variation” (Villa & del Valle 2014). However, several questions 
remain open, such as how many varieties can be considered standards, who
 are the norm setting authorities, and, on a more general level, does 
the concept of universally valid linguistic standards still have 
significance in global and highly complex linguistic markets?
The aim of this conference is to 
examine uses, perceptions and ideologies of regional (standard?) 
varieties in national and transnational hispanic speech communities. 
Linguists and language practitioners are invited to reflect on uses and 
effects of regionally marked and supposedly unmarked linguistic 
resources in different domains of public language use, as well as on the
 representation of regional varieties in normative reference works.
