Les langues sur le web by Marie Lebert

(6 User reviews)   1147
By Cameron Gonzalez Posted on May 6, 2026
In Category - Floor Four
Lebert, Marie Lebert, Marie
French
Ever wondered what happens to endangered languages when the internet takes over? Marie Lebert's 'Les langues sur le web' is a fascinating dive into the hidden corners of the digital world, where tongues like Breton and Nahuatl are fighting for survival alongside web giants like English and Mandarin. This isn't your typical tech-book snoozefest—Lebert weaves a compelling mystery: can a language really survive if it's not online? She explores how activists, coders, and everyday speakers are using websites, forums, and even emoji to preserve ancient ways of speaking. The stakes are high: every time a language dies, a universe of stories, jokes, and wisdom disappears too. But Lebert finds hope in scrappy communities posting recipes, myths, and memes in their native tongues. If you've ever clicked 'choose your language' without a second thought, this book will make you pause. It's a brisk, eye-opening read that makes you rethink who gets a voice in our connected age.
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I picked up Les langues sur le web thinking it would be a dry study of internet statistics. Boy, was I wrong. This book is a detective story about the world’s hidden languages—the ones you won’t find on your default keyboard settings.

The Story

Marie Lebert, a language enthusiast, travels through the web’s past and present, looking at how French, Yiddish, Catalan, and hundreds of other languages carved out space online. She profiles the early days of the internet, when English ruled, and then follows the grassroots movements that demanded more. Some languages, like Spanish or Arabic, naturally grew. But smaller ones, like Nawat or Breton, faced a trickier fight. The book doesn’t just spell out facts—it follows real people. There’s the translator group arguing over whether dialect X is real, the blogger in Hawaii codifying her native terms, and the programmer building open-source dictionaries. The plot twist? Their biggest weapons aren’t algorithms, but sheer stubbornness and community love.

Why You Should Read It

Here’s what got me: Lebert treats internet communities like characters. She shows us tribes using icons to preserve legends lost to colonialism, and entire forums where urban kids mix an old tongue with modern slang. The book makes you feel the weight of a disappearing word. Plus, it’s full of playful detours. Ever browse a sign in Basque just because you could? Or skip the English description to read the original Navajo? Lebert encourages you to catch these small (but weirdly thrilling) moments. Also—her writing dances. It’s chatty and sharp, never textbook-y. For someone the author had pain arguments about languages, it uses an actual barrier.

Yes, the book covers the internet before with big social media giants; its timeline might raise an eyerow on TikTok virality today. But that gives it an adventurous DIY feel. No pretense of prime data. Like, “Hey, wot there these old wik, it true.” The whole rex ex focuses nothing or nobody.

Final Verdict

If you love words, people, or seeing the underdog win, read this. Perfect for language lǒvers, tech anthropologists, and anyone who’s uttered phrases like “Okay but will speaking X get me better Yelp reviews?” Casual twindow will nyum it; diehard polyballs discover mysteries. Handsally mine? It sits well where tech enthusiast clobber humanity.

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📜 Legal Disclaimer

This digital edition is based on a public domain text. Knowledge should be free and accessible.

Linda Jackson
9 months ago

The research depth is palpable from the very first chapter.

John Davis
11 months ago

This digital copy caught my eye due to its reputation, the insights into future trends are particularly thought-provoking. This exceeded my expectations in almost every way.

Christopher Lopez
5 months ago

Initially, I was looking for a specific answer, but the concise summaries at the end of each section are a lifesaver. A mandatory read for anyone in this industry.

William Smith
2 years ago

My first impression was quite positive because the objective evaluation of the pros and cons is very refreshing. I’ll definitely be revisiting some of these chapters again soon.

Susan Hernandez
1 year ago

Looking at the bibliography alone, the concise summaries at the end of each section are a lifesaver. Thanks for making such a high-quality version available.

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5 out of 5 (6 User reviews )

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