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W Sejmie : Ślōnskiego języka nie ma, ale może być etnolekt ; In the Polish Parliamentthe Silesian language does not exist, but the Silesian ethnolect may
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Niemieckie zaniechania ; The German minority leadership's resignations from securing this monority's cultural and linguistic rights in postcommunist Poland
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Niemieckie zaniechania : dyskusyjo ; The German minority leadership's resignations from securing this monority's cultural and linguistic rights in postcommunist Polanda discussion
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Glottolog 4.4 Resources for Silesian
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: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, 2021
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Glottolog 4.4 Resources for Lower Silesian
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: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, 2021
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Silesian, Lower: a language of Poland
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: SIL International, 2018
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Codzienność komunikacyjno-językowa na obszarze historycznego Górnego Śląska ; The everyday language use in historical Upper Silesia
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Jak chronić śląszczyznę ; How to protect the Silesian language?
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Jolanta Tambor, Oberschlesien: Sprache und Identität [Upper Silesia: Language and Identity]
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The long shadow of borders : the cases of Kashubian and Silesian in Poland
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The Silesian language in the early 21st century : A speech community on the rollercoaster of politics
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Abstract:
Languages are made and unmade, as nations are. The vagaries of history and politics that create the fluctuating framework in which human groups exist, influence these groups’ thinking about their own speech. Over the course of history Upper Silesia’s Slavophones (a group who, in the modern period, were predominantly bilingual in German) were divided up at different times between Prussia, Austria (that is, the Habsburg lands), Germany, Czechoslovakia (today, the Czech Republic) and Poland, and they had to adapt to these changes. During the last two centuries, with the rise of ethnolinguistic nationalism in Central Europe, it meant either accepting a dominant ethnolinguistic national identity, complete with its specific standard language (especially in the dark period of authoritarianisms and totalitarianism between 1926 and 1989), or inventing a Silesianness, frequently buttressed by the concept of a Silesian language. Against this backdrop, the article considers the emergence of the Silesian (regional, ethnic, national?) movement during the last two decades, with the main focus on efforts to standardize Silesian and have it recognized as a language in its own right. ; Postprint ; Peer reviewed
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Keyword:
Albanian languages and literature; Baltic; Codification; Concept of a language; Ethnolinguistic nationalism; Lachian language; Language recognition; Northern Moravia; PG; PG Slavic; Prussian language; Silesian language; Upper Silesia
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10023/3281
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