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1
Indigenous Language Revitalization: Success, Sustainability, and the Future of Human Culture
In: Capstone Showcase (2022)
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2
Seeing our language: The effects of media representation on Scottish Gaelic learners
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3
Producción de materiales educativos para la enseñanza del mapuzugun : aproximación desde la experiencia y perspectivas de las y los educadores
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4
Learning P’urhepecha as a second language: Reflections from a community-based workshop
In: Living Languages • Lenguas Vivas • Línguas Vivas (2022)
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5
The responsibilities of Linguistics programs: preparing and supporting Linguistics students in collaborative, revitalization-oriented work
Demson, Deirdre. - 2022
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6
Responding to sociolinguistic change: New speakers and variationist sociolinguistics
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7
Decolonial Vitalities: Kodiak Alutiiq Language Revitalization as Cultural Reclamation
Fine, Julia Coombs. - : eScholarship, University of California, 2021
Abstract: Although Indigenous communities and outside institutions have increasingly recognized the need to document and revitalize endangered languages (Hale et al. 1992; Krauss 1992; McCarty et al. 2006; Watahomigie 1998), revitalized languages themselves remain underdocumented and understudied. Purist discourses delegitimize revitalized languages as less valid than their predecessors, implying that authentic Indigeneity is consigned to the past rather than relevant in the present (Davis 2017; Hill 2002). To counter these misconceptions, I consider Kodiak Alutiiq language revitalization in the broader context of cultural reclamation in the face of colonialism. Drawing on participant observation, ethnographic interviews, and interactional analysis conducted between 2014 and 2020, I examine linguistic practices that are sometimes disparaged as inauthentic or impure, with a primary focus on translanguaging practices such as code-switching, calquing, and literal translation. I argue that these practices are not passive, involuntary responses to colonial influences, but agentive strategies for reasserting Alutiiq epistemologies in the contemporary world while continuing cultural traditions of humor and language play. I then draw on interview and survey data to examine Alutiiq language activists’ social and emotional experiences of speaking Alutiiq in specific contexts, showing how these situated experiences benefit community well-being, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic. Finally, I illustrate how the Alutiiq language movement transmits environmental values and knowledges that are of key importance in light of the ongoing climate crisis. These results challenge purist discourses that devalue revitalized languages, offer insights into the use of translanguaging as a means of sustaining Indigenous language vitality, and demonstrate the relevance of Indigenous language revitalization to environmental and climate justice.
Keyword: Alaska Native; Alutiiq/Sugpiaq; Decolonization; Environmental justice; Language revitalization; Linguistics; Translanguaging
URL: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8gh923qn
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8
Mini Buleku: A Recorded Sibe Dictionary
Kodner, Jacob Aaron; Meng, Ronglu. - : eScholarship, University of California, 2021
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9
The activity spheres framework applied to language policy: Dispositions towards Romani revitalization in Romania
In: https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-03268416 ; 2021 (2021)
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10
50 Years of Navajo at the University of New Mexico ...
Fernandez, Manuel. - : Open Science Framework, 2021
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11
The Seneca Language and Bilingual Road Signs: A Study in the Sociology of an Indigenous Language
Taylor, Anna. - : The Ohio State University, 2021
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12
The Seneca Language and Bilingual Road Signs: A Study in the Sociology of an Indigenous Language ...
Taylor, Anna. - : Zenodo, 2021
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13
The Seneca Language and Bilingual Road Signs: A Study in the Sociology of an Indigenous Language ...
Taylor, Anna. - : Zenodo, 2021
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14
The activity spheres framework applied to language policy: Dispositions towards Romani revitalization in Romania
In: https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-03268416 ; 2021 (2021)
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15
#KeepOurLanguagesStrong: Indigenous Language Revitalization on Social Media during the Early COVID-19 Pandemic
Chew, Kari A. B.. - : University of Hawaii Press, 2021
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16
Virtual Frisian: A comparison of language use in North and West Frisian virtual communities
Belmar, Guillem; Heyen, Hauke. - : University of Hawaii Press, 2021
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17
ʻAʻaliʻi and wáhta oterontonnì:'a: Symbols of Indigenous innovation for linguistic and cultural resilience
In: WINHEC: International Journal of Indigenous Education Scholarship; No. 1 (2021): Indigenous Language Revitalization: Innovation, Reflection and Future Directions; 376-410 ; 1177-6641 ; 1177-1364 (2021)
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18
Virtual Frisian: A comparison of language use in North and West Frisian virtual communities
Belmar, Guillem; Heyen, Hauke. - : University of Hawaii Press, 2021
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19
#KeepOurLanguagesStrong: Indigenous Language Revitalization on Social Media during the Early COVID-19 Pandemic
Chew, Kari A. B.. - : University of Hawaii Press, 2021
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20
Indigenous Language Revitalization Efforts in Canada during COVID-19: Facilitating and Maintaining Connections using Digital Technologies
In: Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository (2021)
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