Youth Culture, Language Endangerment and Linguistic Survivance

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A01=Leisy Wyman
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Alaska
Author_Leisy Wyman
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Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=CFDM
Category=JNF
changing language ideologies
community language use
complex linguistic ecologies
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Educational Policies
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eroding heritage language learning resources
Family Language Socialization
gendered subsistence practices
Indigenous Youth Language
language brokering
language endangerment
Language Shift
language use
Language_English
linguistic ecologies
Linguistic Ecology
linguistic survivance
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Price_€100 and above
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Qanruyutait
sociolinguistic transformation
softlaunch
translanguaging
Yup'ik
Yup'ik Linguistic Ecologies
Yup’ik Linguistic Ecologies

Product details

  • ISBN 9781847697400
  • Weight: 520g
  • Dimensions: 148 x 210mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Jul 2012
  • Publisher: Channel View Publications Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Detailing a decade of life and language use in a remote Alaskan Yup'ik community, Youth Culture, Language Endangerment and Linguistic Survivance provides rare insight into young people's language brokering and Indigenous people's contemporary linguistic ecologies. This book examines how two consecutive groups of youth in a Yup'ik village negotiated eroding heritage language learning resources, changing language ideologies, and gendered subsistence practices while transforming community language use over time. Wyman shows how villagers used specific Yup'ik forms, genres, and discourse practices to foster learning in and out of school, underscoring the stakes of language endangerment. At the same time, by demonstrating how the youth and adults in the study used multiple languages, literacies and translanguaging to sustain a unique subarctic way of life, Wyman illuminates Indigenous peoples’ wide-ranging forms of linguistic survivance in an interconnected world.

Leisy Thornton Wyman has worked for over 20 years with Yup’ik communities in Alaska, and is an associate professor in the Language, Reading and Culture (LRC) program at the University of Arizona. Her scholarly works include a theme issue on Indigenous Youth and Bilingualism for the Journal of Language, Identity and Education (McCarty & Wyman, 2009), a forthcoming book on North American Indigenous youth language (Wyman et al, in progress), and a volume of Yup’ik elders' narratives, (Fredson et al., 1998). Her research appears in multiple edited volumes, the International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, Journal of American Indian Education, and World Studies in Education.

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