Multilingual Speech Communities: Language Maintenance and Shift
Multilingual Speech Communities: Language Maintenance and Shift
SPEECH COMMUNITIES
LANGUAGE MAINTENANCE AND SHIFT
OUTLINE
• Language shift in different communities
• Migrant minorities
• Non-migrant minorities
• Migrant majorities
Immigrant = threat
best understand
speaker of Maori, not fluent speaks and
Maori speakers understands
English, only
know some
Maori phrases go to Maori
pre-school
Maori people in New Zealand
=> Vocabulary
shrunk
=> Grammar
affected by English
=> Competence
erodes
=> Language death
(gradually)
Language death: when all the people
who speak a language die, the language
dies with them.
When a language dies gradually, the
process is similar to that of language
shift.
=> domains taken over one after another
=> speakers become less proficient
=> language gradually dies
Factors contributing to
language shift
Economic, social and political
factors
▪The community sees an important reason
for learning the second language:
Economic/Political reasons => bilingualism
$$$
▪ Bilingualism may or may not lead
language shift (eg. stable diglossa)
▪The community sees no reason to take
active steps to maintain their ethnic
language. (not see any advantage/not
realise danger of disappearing)
▪The social and economic goals of
individuals => speed of shift
▪ Young people: fastest shift
▪ Led by women or men depending on new
jobs and gender roles
Factors contributing to
language shift
Demographic factors
▪Resistance to language shift tends to
last longer in rural than in urban
areas.
▪ Rural: isolated from centers of political
power for longer
▪ Examples: Ukrainians in Canada who live
out of town on farms, Maori in
inaccessible rural areas
▪Size of group: bigger => lower rates
of shift
▪Intermarriage between group =>
faster shift.
▪ Unless multilingualism is normal in a
community, one language tends to
predominate in the home
Chinatown in Manhattan
Example 7
Spanish: no
opportunity to use in
her place, seem odd to Language shift to
friends of school, English completed by
refuse to use at home age 13 (no longer
speaking Spanish)
Factors contributing to
language shift
Attitudes and values
Example 8
Ione’s Family proud of Samoan culture
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HBiiad9fO-g
Sometimes a community becomes aware that its
language is in danger of disappearing and takes
deliberate steps to revitalise it.
Economic factors are likely to be important in
assessing the long-term outcomes of efforts at
language maintenance and revival.
Languages can be maintained, and even revived,
when a group values their distinct identity highly
and regards language as an important symbol of
that identity.
Pressures towards language shift occur mainly in
countries where monolingualism is regarded as
normal, and bilingualism is considered unusual.