Language shift and language (re)vitalisation: the roles played by women and men in Northern Fenno-Scandia
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24660Date
2021-12-31Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
The research question of the present paper is the following: to what
degree (if any) is gender relevant as an explanatory factor in, firstly, the process of
assimilation and later, the process of (re)vitalisation of indigenous and minority
languages in northern Fenno-Scandia (the North Calotte)? The assimilation of
the ethnic groups in question was a process initiated and lead by the authorities
in the three different countries. Finland, Sweden and Norway. Nevertheless,
members of the indigenous and minority groups also took part in practicing,
though, not necessarily promoting, the official assimilation politics, for different
reasons. (Re)vitalisation, on the other hand, was initially – and still is – mostly a
process stemming from the minority groups themselves, though the authorities to
a certain extent have embraced it. The paper thus addresses the question of
whether gender played a role in the two different processes, assimilation and
(re)vitalisation, and if that was the case, how and why.
Publisher
de GruyterCitation
Bull, Huss, Lindgren. Language shift and language (re)vitalisation: the roles played by women and men in Northern Fenno-Scandia. Multilingua - Journal of Cross-cultural and Interlanguage Communiciation. 2021(12):1-27Metadata
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