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El. knyga: Choosing a Mother Tongue: The Politics of Language and Identity in Ukraine

  • Formatas: 224 pages
  • Serija: Multilingual Matters
  • Išleidimo metai: 11-Oct-2019
  • Leidėjas: Multilingual Matters
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781788925006
  • Formatas: 224 pages
  • Serija: Multilingual Matters
  • Išleidimo metai: 11-Oct-2019
  • Leidėjas: Multilingual Matters
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781788925006

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This book presents a sociocultural linguistic analysis of discourses of conflict, as well as an examination of how linguistic identity is embodied, negotiated and realized during a time of war. It provides new insights regarding multilingualism among Ukrainians in Ukraine and in the diaspora of New Zealand, the US and Canada, and sheds light on the impact of the Russian-Ukrainian war on language attitudes among Ukrainians around the world. Crucially, it features an analysis of a new movement in Ukraine that developed during the course of the war changing your mother tongue, which embodies what it is to renegotiate linguistic identity. It will be of value to researchers, faculty, and students in the areas of linguistics, Slavic studies, history, politics, anthropology, sociology and international affairs, as well as those interested in Ukrainian affairs more generally.





This book is open access under a CC BY NC ND licence.

Recenzijos

Seals examines language and identity among Ukrainians in Ukraine and in diaspora in great depth, introducing for the first time in sociolinguistics the discourse of changing your mother tongue which occurred throughout the narratives of the Ukrainians interviewed by her from 2009 to 2015. The result is a masterful study of language and identity among Ukrainians after the Orange Revolution and during a time of war. * Andrii Danylenko, Pace University, USA * This is a compelling text set against the backdrop of the 2014-2015 war in Ukraine. Complex questions on language, imagined identities, investment, and nationhood are addressed with great skill and exemplary scholarship. Corinne Seals has made an outstanding contribution to contemporary debates on language and identity. * Bonny Norton, University of British Columbia, Canada * Corinne Seals deftly combines fine-grained discourse analysis with a transnational perspective, shedding new light on the dynamics of language and identity construction in Ukraine and its diasporas. This is a valuable book for sociolinguists and regional scholars interested in the impact of the ongoing war on national ideologies and linguistic choices. * Laada Bilaniuk, University of Washington, USA * The author has included discussions of the theoretical approaches and concepts used throughout the text [ ...] these are brought to life by the numerous excerpts from participant interviews which are included throughout, enabling the reader to gain insights into the political and linguistic journeys made by participants in Ukraine and the Ukrainian diaspora. -- Sue Edwards, Waikato Institute of Technology, Hamilton, New Zealand * TESOLANZ 29 * As the bulk of the interviews [ in the book] were conducted soon after Euromaidan and the beginning of the Russian-Ukrainian war, most of the presented excerpts discuss the impact of these developments on the interviewees identities and language ideologies. This impact has already been established in numerous survey-based studies demonstrating Ukrainian residents increased identification, after the tumultuous events of 2014, with the Ukrainian nationality and native language, as well as their stronger embrace of Ukraine as ones homeland. The valuable addition of Sealss book to these findings is its vivid demonstration of an underlying motivation of the change. -- Volodymyr Kulyk, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine * Harvard Ukrainian Studies 38, no. 12 * ...it is a pleasure to recommend this book to several audiences. Novice linguists will delight in how sociolinguistic concepts are brought to life. Students interested in discourse analysis will benefit from scholarly examples of oral-text interpretation. The narratives of these young Ukrainians offer a better understanding of the complexity of the countrys language question, and provide insights into the struggles of imagined identities in the diaspora.

Those with specific attitudes to events in Ukraine will be coaxed into critical engagement by the similarities and divergences expressed by young people some of whom will become the leaders shaping Ukraines future. -- Olenka Bilash, University of Alberta, Canada * Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2021 * Choosing a Mother Tongue is a remarkable illustration of the current meta-discursive debate concerning language ideology in Ukraine [ ...] The volume gives us an opportunity to not only better and more fully understand the linguistic and cultural specificity of the language situation in Ukraine, but also allows a glimpse of the processes of identity construction in discourse and through discourse. -- Valentyna Ushchyna, University of Pittsburgh, USA * Language in Society 49 (2020) * Seals presents a multifaceted and elegantly cohesive depiction of the linguistic situation in Ukraine and its diaspora communities. In addition, though speaking about a specific people, she presents a nuanced picture of its individual members, successfully working around the problem of essentialization that typically accompanies this type of research. -- Tracey Adams, University of Texas at Austin, USA * LINGUIST List 31.2015 * Seals' book is an empirically rich, theoretically relevant and stylistically approachable contribution. It will be of value to scholars working on language and identity in post-soviet contexts, or contexts of migration, and to those interested in language shift and language maintenance. It also has an easy to read style, which makes it relevant to advanced scholars as well as those who are new to the field. -- Lydia Catedral, City University of Hong Kong * Language and Education, 2020 *

Daugiau informacijos

The first book to document the changing your mother tongue movement
Acknowledgments ix
1 Historical Language Ideologies and Sociopolitical Conflict in Ukraine
1(18)
A Recent Sociopolitical Language Event
2(1)
A Short Linguistic History of Modern Ukraine and Modern Ukrainian
3(3)
Linguistic Purism
6(2)
Surzhyk
8(1)
Ukrainian Language Politics
9(4)
Dialogic Language Ideologies
13(2)
Positioning in Discourse
15(1)
Outline of the Book
16(3)
2 Language and Identity After the Orange Revolution
19(22)
Post-Structuralist and Social Constructionist Views of Identity
19(3)
Narratives in Discourse
22(1)
Imagined Communities and Imagined Identities
22(2)
Imagined Identity in Ukraine and the Orange Revolution
24(4)
Language Ideologies Following the Orange Revolution
28(2)
Olesya: Language is Part of the National Consciousness
30(5)
Yana and Alyona: It Depends Where You Are
35(3)
Further Remarks
38(3)
3 Othering and Positioning During a Time of War
41(33)
Reigniting Discussions of National Identity
41(2)
The Current Study
43(3)
Naming Ideologies by Naming Events
46(2)
When Friends Become Enemies
48(9)
Ukrainians but not Ukrainians
57(2)
One Nation, One People
59(3)
Being Ukrainian is Speaking Ukrainian
62(5)
Focusing on the Individual
67(5)
Further Remarks
72(2)
4 Who's Responsible? The Politics of Language
74(23)
Metonymy and Russian Responsibility
74(5)
The Government but Not Necessarily the People
79(7)
The General Population as Responsible
86(3)
All as Responsible
89(6)
Further Remarks
95(2)
5 Renegotiating Identity and `Changing Your Mother Tongue'
97(33)
Embodied Language
98(1)
Dialogic Echoes
99(1)
A Previous History
100(11)
A Recent Event
111(10)
Views from the Diaspora
121(6)
Further Remarks
127(3)
6 Investment and Loyalty in the Ukrainian Diaspora
130(37)
Diaspora and Transnational Research
131(3)
A Model for Immigrant Identity, Investment and Integration
134(1)
Renegotiating Identity in the Diaspora
135(4)
The Host Society's Perception
139(2)
Distance from the War
141(8)
Language Ideologies and Integration
149(5)
Negotiation Between and Within Diaspora Communities
154(8)
Looking from the Outside In
162(2)
Redefining Investments in the Diaspora
164(1)
Further Remarks
165(2)
7 `It Doesn't Matter What You Speak': Challenges to Dominant Language Ideologies by Ukrainian Young Adults
167(19)
Underlying Acceptance Amid Complexity of Ideologies
168(7)
Speak What You Know
175(3)
Dispelling Myths --- Western Ukraine
178(3)
The Language I Speak Doesn't Change Who I Am
181(3)
Further Remarks
184(2)
8 Conclusion
186(6)
Discursive Themes
188(1)
Reconsidering the Local and the Global
189(1)
Changing Your Mother Tongue
190(1)
Concluding Thoughts
191(1)
Appendices 192(4)
Appendix A Transcription Conventions
192(1)
Appendix B Participants in New Zealand
192(1)
Appendix C Participants in Canada and the United States
193(1)
Appendix D Participants in Ukraine
193(1)
Appendix E Klara's Joke as Told Originally in Ukrainian and Russian
194(2)
References 196(13)
Index 209
Corinne A. Seals is Senior Lecturer at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand. She is co-editor of Heritage Language Policies Around the World (with S. Shah; 2017, Routledge) and Embracing Multilingualism Across Educational Contexts (with V. I. Olsen-Reeder; 2019, VU University Press). Her research interests include language and identity, language and politics and Ukrainian issues.