Preview

Proceedings of the Southwest State University. Series: Linguistics and Pedagogy

Advanced search

Linguophilosophical and sociolinguistic analysis of the french words “Globalisation” and “Mondialisation” in relation to the concept of globalization

https://doi.org/10.21869/2223-151X-2024-14-2-53-61

Abstract

Purpose of research is to study the semantics of the French words “globalisation” and “mondialisation” in the socio-historical context of the phenomenon of globalisation. The origin of the phenomenon of globalization is considered and its multidimensional nature in the context of global processes is revealed.

Methods. The research uses the method of contextual, hermeneutic, historical and logical analysis of theoretical activities and practical developments on the topic. It is based on a linguophilosophical approach to the consideration of the phenomenon of globalization, taking into account the differences between human society following the path of formation of consciousness and civilization. Theoretical developments of domestic and foreign researchers in the field of philosophy, sociology, linguistics, and history are taken into account when solving the tasks set.

Results. The article presents the main stages of the emergence of the phenomenon of globalization in the course of the socio-historical development of human civilization. It is determined that the phenomenon of globalization affects many aspects: economic, political, cultural, military, environmental. The meanings of the French words "globalisation" and "mondialisation", denoting the concept of globalization, are considered, and the specific features of the processes designated by them are revealed. It is established that "Mondialization" geographically covers the designated areas, and "globalization" is a continuation of the process of "mondialization" by creating global systems in the field of production and digitalization.

Conclusion. Ultimately, it is determined that the words "globalisation" and "mondialisation", which denote the concept of globalization in French scientific thought and are often used synonymously, in practice imply different, albeit interrelated, processes. The French word "mondialisation", meaning "globalization", comes from the word "monde" - "world" and means a multidimensional process affecting various aspects of the life of societies and individuals, associated with geographical expansion. "Globalisation" does not refer to a view of the world, but to liberation from national frameworks.

About the Author

O. А. Andreeva
Southwest State University
Russian Federation

Olga A. Andreeva, Candidate of Sciences (Philosophical) Associate Professor of the Department of Foreign Languages

50 Let Oktyabrya Str. 94, Kursk 305040 



References

1. Andreeva O. A. Nature and Culture in the Philosophy of the French Enlightenment. Kursk. 2011. 163 p. (In Russ.).

2. Braudel Fernand. Material civilization, economy and capitalism fifteenth-eighteenth century, Colin. Report in Population, 2017.

3. Grataloup Christian. The world in our cups. Three centuries of breakfast, Colin. Report by François Jarraud in the Pedagogical Café, 2017.

4. Stiglitz Joseph. The Great disillusion, The Paperback (original title: Globalization and Its Disagreements). See the wikipedia page dedicated to this work, 2003.

5. Aglietta Michel and Moatti Sandra. The IMF: From the monetary order to financial disorders, Economica [Available on Gallica], 2016.

6. Lussault Michel. Hyper-places. The new geographies of globalization, Seuil, coll. "The color of ideas". Presentation of the book by the author on the occasion of a geographical café in Lyon, 2017.

7. Andreeva O. A., Rejngardt N. V. Changing the Worldview of Chinese Philology Students undergoing Language Training in Russia. Izvestiya Yugo-Zapadnogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta. Seriya: lingvistika i pedagogika = Proceedings of the Southwest State University. Series: Linguistics and Pedagogics. 2013:(1):65. (In Russ.)

8. Ghorra-Gobin Cynthia (ed.). Critical Dictionary of Globalization, Colin. Report by Marie-Noëlle Carré in Cahiers des Amériques latines, 2012.

9. Grataloup Christian. Geohistory of globalization, Armand Colin. Review of Gilles Fumey in geographical Cafes, 2007.

10. Lévy Jacques (ed.). The invention of the world: A geography of globalization, Sciences Po Press., 2008.

11. Badie Bertrand. The end of the territories, CNRS, 2014.

12. Dollfuss Olivier. Globalization, Sciences po Press, 1997.

13. Boucheron Patrick (dir.). History of the world in the fifteenth century, Fayard, 2009.

14. Appadurai Arjun. Modernity at Large. Cultural dimensions of globalization. University of Minnesota press (2015 for the French translation under the title After Colonialism: the cultural consequences of globalization), 1996.

15. Boyer Robert and Durand Jean-Pierre. After Fordism, Syros, 1993.

16. Veltz Stone. Globalization, cities and territories. The archipelago economy. PUF. Report of the 1996 edition in Foreign Policy, 2014.

17. Levitt Theodore. “The Globalization of Markets”, Harvard Business Review, May-June, 1983.

18. Sassen Saskia. The Global City: New York, London, Tokyo. Princeton university press, 2001.

19. Ghorra-Gobin Cynthia and Reghezza-Zitt Magali (eds.). Between local and global. The territories in globalization, The Manuscript, coll. Pioneer Fronts, 2016.

20. Robertson Roland. Globalization. Social Theory and Global Culture. Sage Publications, 1992.

21. Portes Alejandro. Globalization from Below: The Rise of Transnational Communities, working paper, University of Princeton, 1997. 27 p.

22. Morin E. Global Thinking. The human and his universe. Paris: Robert Laffont. 23. 2015.

23. Dictionary of Globalization. Paris, 2001. P. 210


Review

For citations:


Andreeva O.А. Linguophilosophical and sociolinguistic analysis of the french words “Globalisation” and “Mondialisation” in relation to the concept of globalization. Proceedings of the Southwest State University. Series: Linguistics and Pedagogy. 2024;14(2):53-61. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.21869/2223-151X-2024-14-2-53-61

Views: 146


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


ISSN 2223-151X (Print)