6533b82dfe1ef96bd1291fe2
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Investing in indigenous multilingualism in the Arctic
Sari Pietikäinensubject
Linguistics and LanguageResource (biology)Social PsychologymultilingualismrhizomeIdentity (social science)Experimental and Cognitive PsychologyContext (language use)ta6121Language and LinguisticsIndigenousdiscoursesPoliticsArcticPolitical scienceEthnographyMultilingualismmonikielisyys060201 languages & linguisticscritical ethnographyetnografiasaamen kieliCommunication05 social sciences050301 educationEnvironmental ethics06 humanities and the artsindigenous Sámi languagesArctic0602 languages and literaturealkuperäiskansat0503 educationdescription
Abstract This article explores the dynamics between language and identity categories and the boundaries produced in a changing multilingual, indigenous context in the Arctic region of Finland. In this moment of transition, indigenous multilingualism has high stakes. It can be a resource for political and economic development but also for management and regimentation, open to winners and losers. Drawing on a longitudinal critical discourse ethnography of producing language and identity categories in the Finnish Arctic, I discuss three circulating discourses relevant for the ways in which indigenous identity boundaries are made to matter, namely strategic, aspirational and affective multilingualism. I argue that the processes at work are neither simple nor linear, but must be understood as organic, interwoven, and rhizomatic.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2018-09-01 | Language and Communication |