Description

Book Synopsis

Together with changes in the nature of modernity, globalisation is restructuring society. The sovereignty of the nation-state is undermined, the structuring of identity is realigned and a sense of individualism (which involves a freedom of choice re institutional alignments) prevails. English emerges as the global lingua franca. At the heart of these developments is the knowledge economy within which work is organised according to principles quite different from those of the Taylorism that prevailed in the industrial economy. Language and culture play a crucial role in the elaboration of the shared meaning that is crucial for learning within team working. The book argues that creativity is enhanced by the use of multilingualism within working practices. It concludes with an overview of how our understanding of language is also changing.



Trade Review

This is another important and highly contemporary contribution by Glyn Williams. Noted for his considerable originality and independence of viewpoint, the book is remarkably interdisciplinary, with understandings from economics, sociology, philosophy, business and sociolinguistics. It attacks issues of major current importance: the future knowledge-based economy, globalisation, and the use of technology for information exchange. The book contains critical appreciation and historical analysis but is also a very modern and highly constructive approach to the knowledge economy, and to the future of language. This is Williams’ best book from several decades of publishing.

* Colin Baker, University of Bangor, Wales *

Williams’s latest book offers a thoughtful, original and often provocative interpretation of the mutual relationships between the linguistic, the political, the social and the economic. The line of argument weaves together notions that are all too often considered in isolation, and this book can be recommended to advanced students and specialists of language policy and the politics of language who seek access to the big picture, along with wide-ranging scholarship and genuine intellectual engagement.

* François Grin, University of Geneva, Switzerland *

In this book, Williams sets out to provide an account of the role played by culture and language in the workplace practices and labour relations of the knowledge economy. Weaving together themes from industrial sociology, management studies, philosophy of science, linguistics and social theory, he builds an argument focused on parallel changes in the social, economic and academic domains: from a modernity centred on the nation-state to a reflexive modemity centred on selfcreated identity; from an industrial Taylorist economy to a flexible knowledge economy; and from humanist, rationalist theoretical interpretations of human agency to a decentred post-structuralist model of social practice. There can be no doubt that Williams lays down a worthy and ambitious project, especially since engagement with language use in organisational settings remains relatively marginal within discourse-analytic research.

* AIon Lischinsky, Umea Universitet, Sweden in Lang Policy (2011) 10:111-113 *

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Change and the Knowledge Economy

Chapter 2 Language as an Object

Chapter 3 Human Capital

Chapter 4 Regional Innovation Systems

Chapter 5 Communities of Practice

Chapter 6 Language and the Subject

Chapter 7 The Cultural Economy

Chapter 8 Social Theory and Language

The Knowledge Economy, Language and Culture

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    A Paperback / softback by Glyn Williams

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      View other formats and editions of The Knowledge Economy, Language and Culture by Glyn Williams

      Publisher: Channel View Publications Ltd
      Publication Date: 24/03/2010
      ISBN13: 9781847692504, 978-1847692504
      ISBN10: 1847692508

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Together with changes in the nature of modernity, globalisation is restructuring society. The sovereignty of the nation-state is undermined, the structuring of identity is realigned and a sense of individualism (which involves a freedom of choice re institutional alignments) prevails. English emerges as the global lingua franca. At the heart of these developments is the knowledge economy within which work is organised according to principles quite different from those of the Taylorism that prevailed in the industrial economy. Language and culture play a crucial role in the elaboration of the shared meaning that is crucial for learning within team working. The book argues that creativity is enhanced by the use of multilingualism within working practices. It concludes with an overview of how our understanding of language is also changing.



      Trade Review

      This is another important and highly contemporary contribution by Glyn Williams. Noted for his considerable originality and independence of viewpoint, the book is remarkably interdisciplinary, with understandings from economics, sociology, philosophy, business and sociolinguistics. It attacks issues of major current importance: the future knowledge-based economy, globalisation, and the use of technology for information exchange. The book contains critical appreciation and historical analysis but is also a very modern and highly constructive approach to the knowledge economy, and to the future of language. This is Williams’ best book from several decades of publishing.

      * Colin Baker, University of Bangor, Wales *

      Williams’s latest book offers a thoughtful, original and often provocative interpretation of the mutual relationships between the linguistic, the political, the social and the economic. The line of argument weaves together notions that are all too often considered in isolation, and this book can be recommended to advanced students and specialists of language policy and the politics of language who seek access to the big picture, along with wide-ranging scholarship and genuine intellectual engagement.

      * François Grin, University of Geneva, Switzerland *

      In this book, Williams sets out to provide an account of the role played by culture and language in the workplace practices and labour relations of the knowledge economy. Weaving together themes from industrial sociology, management studies, philosophy of science, linguistics and social theory, he builds an argument focused on parallel changes in the social, economic and academic domains: from a modernity centred on the nation-state to a reflexive modemity centred on selfcreated identity; from an industrial Taylorist economy to a flexible knowledge economy; and from humanist, rationalist theoretical interpretations of human agency to a decentred post-structuralist model of social practice. There can be no doubt that Williams lays down a worthy and ambitious project, especially since engagement with language use in organisational settings remains relatively marginal within discourse-analytic research.

      * AIon Lischinsky, Umea Universitet, Sweden in Lang Policy (2011) 10:111-113 *

      Table of Contents

      Chapter 1 Change and the Knowledge Economy

      Chapter 2 Language as an Object

      Chapter 3 Human Capital

      Chapter 4 Regional Innovation Systems

      Chapter 5 Communities of Practice

      Chapter 6 Language and the Subject

      Chapter 7 The Cultural Economy

      Chapter 8 Social Theory and Language

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