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Berber language ideologies, maintenance, and contraction: Gendered variation in the indigenous margins of Morocco [An article from: Language and Communication]

Author K.E. Hoffman
Publisher Elsevier
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Book Details
Author(s)K.E. Hoffman
PublisherElsevier
ISBN / ASINB000RR8R10
ISBN-13978B000RR8R15
AvailabilityAvailable for download now
Sales Rank10,796,203
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

This digital document is a journal article from Language and Communication, published by Elsevier in 2006. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Description:
Language contraction is shaped by the unequal distribution of power and resources, both between the language community and the dominant society, and within the contracting language community itself. Gender is connected to other social divisions and inequalities, rendering it central to processes of maintenance and loss. For indigenous groups struggling for recognition and rights, public acknowledgement of intra-group fractures may be political suicide, but for scholars it is crucial, albeit absent from the outpouring of attention to endangered languages. Linguistic ideologies about place, gender, and social change naturalize, reinforce, and mediate subjectivities, ethnolinguistic repertoires, national identities, and collective moralities. Two groups of Tashelhit Berber speakers of southwestern Morocco - Anti-Atlas mountain dwellers and Sous Valley plains dwellers - contrast in regard to their patterns of language maintenance and contraction, but in both, women are central in ways that engage their dissimilar relationships to Arabic speakers and to their own conceptions of rurality.