Affiliation:
1. University College London
Abstract
Abstract
In this article, I look at linguistic studies of communist propaganda produced by oppositional scholars in the
last two decades of state socialism in Poland. I argue that Polish discourse of linguistics in 1970–1989 was a vehicle for the
promotion of liberalism in the People’s Republic of Poland and an important area of political contestation. I demonstrate that
Polish linguistic studies of communist propaganda should not be assumed to be “objective” or politically disengaged. Ideas about
language detectable in these studies, especially “referentialism”, promote liberal democracy by consistently implying values
characteristic of liberalism as a political ideology. In this way, Polish linguists engaged in a form of anti-communist resistance
and formulated language policy proposals for the language of liberal democracy. I argue that language ideologies are sometimes
systematically related to political ideologies by promoting specific political values or points of view.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Sociology and Political Science,History