Cultures Observations Database

Publication
Observer/Author Aneta Pavlenko
Publication Type Book
Title The Bilingual Mind
Subtitle And What it Tells Us about Language and Thought
Language England
ISSN
Publication Date
Publication Year 2014
Book
ISBN Number
Publisher Name Cambridge
Place of Publication
Journal/Paper
Journal/Paper
Issue No
Web
Web Address
Other
Type of Media
Additional Info
Notes on Publication
Notes On Publication My training took place in two academic surroundings, Russian- and English-speaking, and while I write in English, I draw on the Russian academic tradition of interweaving research with fiction and poetry. If languages influence the way we think, do bilinguals think differently in their respective languages? And if languages do not affect thought, why do bilinguals often perceive such influence? For many years these questions remained unanswered because the research on language and thought had focused solely on the monolingual mind. Bilinguals were either excluded from this research as 'unusual' or 'messy' subjects, or treated as representative speakers of their first languages. Only recently did bi- and multilinguals become research participants in their own right. Pavlenko considers the socio-political circumstances that led to the monolingual status quo and shows how the invisibility of bilingual participants compromised the validity and reliability of findings in the study of language and cognition. She then shifts attention to the bilingual turn in the field and examines its contributions to the understanding of the human mind.