The Written Language Bias (WLB) in linguistics 40 years after

Publication date: Available online 21 June 2019Source: Language SciencesAuthor(s): Per LinellAbstractIn 2005 I published a comprehensive version of my monograph The Written Language in Linguistics: Its Nature, Origins and Transformations (London: Routledge), which made some scholars in linguistics to modify their basic approaches and meta-theories of language. In the present paper I make a few remarks on the trends. In particular I emphasise a few points that I did not mean to say in my prior work. Another section of this paper is devoted to Simon Borchmann's paper in this journal issue. Borchmann raises the important point about the influence of different genres and activity types in various situation types. Are genres more important than the basic differences between speech and writing? I tend to say no, thus sticking to my original theory. Yet, I must concede the point about genres. Finally, I would emphasise that text events are embedded within activity types too. Indeed, both spoken interaction and text events occur in multimodal contexts.
Source: Language Sciences - Category: Speech-Language Pathology Source Type: research