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Background information on proposal to merge Balau with Iban
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A Sociolinguistic Survey of the Ethnolinguistic Groups Around the Intersection of the Marmelos River and the Trans-Amazon Highway
Anonby, Stan. - : SIL International, 2018
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A Tale Of Two Worlds: A Comparative Study Of Language Ecologies In Asia And The Americas
Abstract: A common notion among those working in endangered language documentation and maintenance, is that most communities speaking small, endangered languages pattern in a similar way. Having spent most of our careers studying minority and endangered languages in the Americas, we the authors, came to share this notion. For example, we believed that preserving the language in the home domain was essential for its survival (Fishman, 1991). Another pattern we saw from the Americas was that literacy could have the effect of speeding up language shift (Fishman, 2002; Luykx, 2011). In 2013, we moved to Borneo and Thailand, respectively, and began studying minority languages there. There were several ways we gained access to information about Asian languages. (1) One of the writers spent almost three years immersed in one minority community, (2) Another writer supervised linguistic theses at a Thai university, (3) We conducted language surveys, and (4) We held sociolinguistic workshops involving several tribes in various places in Asia. Our work in Asia, has brought us to the gradual realization that we are dealing with very different ecologies than those in the Americas. We have identified fourteen traits that characterize ecologies in general, and explain how they are expressed in the Americas versus Asia. They are as follows: (1) Size/prestige gap, (2) Literacy rate, (3) Literacy transference: L2 to L1, (4) Literacy domain, (5) Literacy/shift connection, (6) Elders’ criticism/shift connection, (7) Language/culture connection, (8) L2 in home/shift connection, (9) Multilingualism/shift connection, (10) Target of shift, (11) National identity, (12) Diglossia, (13) Genetic relationship L1/L2, and (14) Colonial history. Interestingly, the effects of these factors play out very differently. In the Americas, they tend to contribute to language shift. In Asia, they set the stage for language maintenance. We discuss linguistic values in the Americas, and explain how these are more favorable to language shift. Then we talk about values in Asia, and show how these are more conducive to language maintenance. In our paper we apply these fourteen traits to two groups, the Mamainde from Brazil and Sebuyau from Malaysia. These languages represent somewhat prototypical examples from each area. They also respond in opposite ways to the fourteen traits discussed in the paper. We conclude with some comments about how these traits can be useful for those engaged in language development work. References Fishman, J. A., 1991, Reversing language shift, Clevedon, UK, Multilingual Matters Ltd. Fishman, J. A. 2002. Personal communication, 6 October 2002. Luykx, Aurolyn. 2011. “Paradoxes of Quechua Language Revitalization in Bolivia: Back and Forth along the Success-Failure Continuum.” In Handbook of Language and Ethnic Identity. v. 2, The Success-Failure Continuum in Language and Ethnic Identity Efforts, edited by Joshua Fishman ; 41983.mp3 ; 41983.pdf
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10125/41983
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A Tale Of Two Worlds: A Comparative Study Of Language Ecologies In Asia And The Americas
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5
A tale of two worlds: A comparative study of language ecologies in Asia and the Americas
Anonby, Stan; Eberhard, David M.. - : University of Hawaii Press, 2016
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A Tale of Two Worlds: A comparative study of language ecologies in Asia and the Americas
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7
A tale of two worlds: A comparative study of language ecologies in Asia and the Americas
Anonby, Stan; Eberhard, David M.. - : University of Hawaii Press, 2016
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8
A report and comparative-historical look at the Cinta Larga, Suruí, Gavião and Zoró languages
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A report and comparative-historical look at the Cinta Larga, Suruí, Gavião and Zoró languages
In: Working Papers of the Linguistics Circle; Vol 23 No 1 (2013): Volume 23; 15-31 ; 1920-440X ; 1200-3344 (2013)
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10
A Historical Comparative Look at Four Mondé Languages
Anonby, Stan. - : SIL International, 2012
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11
Panará/Kreen-Akarore language survey report
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12
A survey of the languages of the Javari River Valley, Brazil
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13
Language use on the Tubarão-Latundê reserve, Rondônia, Brazil
Anonby, Stan. - 2009
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14
A report on the Irantxe and Myky
Anonby, Stan. - 2009
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15
A survey of three northern Nambiquara groups: the Mamaind, Negarot, and Latund
Anonby, Stan. - : Dallas, Tex. : SIL International, 2008
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A survey of three northern Nambiquara groups: the Mamaindê, Negarotê, and Latundê
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17
A report on the creoles of Amapa
Anonby, Stan. - : Dallas, Tex. : SIL International, 2007
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18
A report on three Arauan speech varieties (Jamadi, Jarawara, and Banawa) of the Amazon
Anonby, Stan. - : Dallas, Tex. : SIL International, 2007
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A report on the creoles of Amapá
Anonby, Stan. - 2007
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A report on three Arauan speech varieties (Jamamadi, Jarawara, and Banawá) of the Amazon
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