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<p>Dear all, <br>
</p>
<p>We are pleased to announce a talk by Aleksandra Miaskowska from Torun
University, who is joining us at the Slavic department on a scholarship
financed by the DPWS (Deutsch-Polnische Wissenschaftsstiftung).
Aleksandra Miaskowska is both a sociologist and a
linguist by training, and we are excited to have her here. Please let
us know if you would like to join via zoom by writing to <a href="mailto:ivan.levin@uni-jena.de" target="_blank">ivan.levin@uni-jena.de</a>!
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<div><b>Thu </b><b>12.6.2026, 14:00 (s.t.), Ernst-Abbe-Platz 8, Raum 306<br>
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<b><span id="m_-3283411825792612002ms-rterangepaste-end"></span></b><b>Aleksandra Miaskowska (Torun): </b>
</span><b>Digital Immigrants Aged 60+ in the World of Social Media:
Sociolinguistic Aspects of Communication Among Polish-speaking Older
Adults and the Language of the Internet</b><br>
<br>
This doctoral project investigates how Polish-speaking adults aged 60
and above, often referred to as digital immigrants, engage with and
adapt to language use in social media environments. Titled Digital
Immigrants Aged 60+ in the World of Social Media: Sociolinguistic
Aspects of Communication Among Older Adults and the Language of the
Internet – A Comparative Study of Facebook Users and Non-Users, the
study explores both linguistic behavior and media socialization
processes within this underrepresented age group. The project
responds to the demographic reality of Europe’s aging societies and
draws on the tradition of language socialization research. Language
socialization is understood here not only as the acquisition of
linguistic competence, but also as a lifelong process tied
to changing social roles and technological environments. In this
context, the project addresses an observation by Penelope Eckert that
age is a sociolinguistic variable and as individuals age, they often
become less receptive to systemic linguistic change.
Dominant approaches in the study of older adults’ language tend to
emphasize physiological decline and cognitive limitations. Instead, this
research explores secondary and reverse socialization processes: how
older users adapt linguistically to digital platforms,
and how their communicative behaviors reflect the norms of online
environments dominated by younger generations. The project builds two
corpora: one composed of Polish Facebook posts authored by users aged
60+, and a second consisting of offline Polish texts
written by users and non-users. Using both quantitative and qualitative
analysis, the study investigates syntactic, morphological, and
pragmatic features of these texts, while also examining broader
sociocultural implications. The findings contribute to our
understanding of how language, age, and media intersect in an era of
demographic aging and ongoing technological transformation, highlighting
the role of social media in today's communication and ongoing language
socialization process.</div>
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<p></p>
<p>Looking forward to seeing you,</p><p>Ivan Levin, Ruprecht von Waldenfels</p></div></div>