Literature DB >> 35937416

"At risk" languages and the road to recovery: a case from the Yukon.

Barbra A Meek1.   

Abstract

This article traces the various ways that "languages at risk" in the Yukon Territory, Canada, are imagined and managed across a range of "stakeholders." Predicated on a history of oppression and the management of risk in the U.S. and Canada, aboriginal language endangerment has arisen from insecurities about communicative diversity. Conversely language revitalization has arisen from insecurities about the loss of diversity. As this article demonstrates, ideologies of loss and the insecurities entailed therein resonate differently across different speakers, language activists, and institutions, resulting in different perceptions of loss, different experiences of risk, and different approaches to recovery. Moving from policy and the institutionalization of aboriginal languages to people's reflections and concerns about their own welfare, this article argues that insecurities about language are ultimately insecurities about other vulnerabilities, including the shifting political-moral terrain of the nation-state and First Nations.

Entities:  

Keywords:  First Nations; language revitalization; reparations; residential schooling

Year:  2022        PMID: 35937416      PMCID: PMC9355067          DOI: 10.1080/01434632.2022.2050381

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Multiling Multicult Dev        ISSN: 0143-4632


  5 in total

1.  Traditionalism and its relationship to disease risk and protective behaviors of women living on the Hopi reservation.

Authors:  Kathryn Coe; Agnes Attakai; Mary Papenfuss; Anna Giuliano; Lorencita Martin; Leon Nuvayestewa
Journal:  Health Care Women Int       Date:  2004-05

2.  Traditional practices, traditional spirituality, and alcohol cessation among American Indians.

Authors:  Rosalie A Torres Stone; Les B Whitbeck; Xiaojin Chen; Kurt Johnson; Debbie M Olson
Journal:  J Stud Alcohol       Date:  2006-03

3.  Redressing First Nations historical trauma: theorizing mechanisms for indigenous culture as mental health treatment.

Authors:  Joseph P Gone
Journal:  Transcult Psychiatry       Date:  2013-05-28

4.  Discrimination, historical loss and enculturation: culturally specific risk and resiliency factors for alcohol abuse among American Indians.

Authors:  B Les Whitbeck; Xiaojin Chen; Dan R Hoyt; Gary W Adams
Journal:  J Stud Alcohol       Date:  2004-07

5.  Cultural continuity, traditional Indigenous language, and diabetes in Alberta First Nations: a mixed methods study.

Authors:  Richard T Oster; Angela Grier; Rick Lightning; Maria J Mayan; Ellen L Toth
Journal:  Int J Equity Health       Date:  2014-10-19
  5 in total

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