This handbook addresses the interrelatedness of nationalism, identity, language, linguistics, and multilingualism in an African context. It covers multilingualism, language and identity, language endangerment, language shift, language maintenance, language contact, diglossia, language decline, language death, language vitality, and much more in, linguistically, one of the richest regions on earth. The variety of alphabets and oral traditions immersed in folklore, made more linguistically complex through issues of inter-borders, and the long history of foreign intrusions and colonialism, has meant a collision of identities and linguistic peculiarities. This book considers these facets in relation to language endangerment in numerous geographies within the African continent. It confronts these questions under the rubric of multilingualism, linguistic geography, and a panoply of other sub-studies. By investigating a multitude of topics around the themes of multilingualism, identity, and language endangerment in Africa, this volume brings together these dimensions to showcase interdisciplinary research in studies of African languages and linguistics. Relevant to applied linguists, socio-linguists, cultural linguistics, language teachers, anthropologists, and scholars in African cultural studies more broadly, this is a vital, urgent text challenging language, and identity, endangerment.
Alireza Korangy (coord.), Evgeniya Gutova (coord.)
págs. 1-2
págs. 3-22
Documenting and sustaining multilingualism in the face of crisis: Language endangerment and destabilized language ecologies in two cameroonian contexts
págs. 23-51
págs. 53-90
Two Case Studies of Language Endangerment and Maintenance in Côte d’Ivoire
Yao Maxime Dido, Julianne Kapner, Katherine R. Russell, Hannah Sande
págs. 91-127
págs. 131-152
Language Vitality as the Outcome of Language Contact: A Case of Cigogo in Central Tanzania
págs. 153-170
págs. 171-206
págs. 209-231
págs. 233-259
págs. 345-364
Colonial Epistemologies and the Rhetoric of Africa’s Multilingualism: Toward Epistemic Justice Through Cybernetics?
págs. 365-392
págs. 393-422
págs. 425-440
Multilingualism, Identity, and Language Endangerment in Southern Chad: The Case of the Middle Chari Area
págs. 441-477
Swahili and its Influence on Identities of Speakers of Ethnic Community Languages in Tanzania: Examples from Ngoni and Sukuma
págs. 479-500
págs. 501-537
págs. 541-574
From Masquerades to Modern Crises: The Resilience of the Igbo Ọ̀jà Surrogate Language
págs. 575-602
Expressing Placement and Removal Events: A Look at Multilingual Casamance, Senegal
págs. 605-634
Edoid: Tone in Affirmative and Negative Declarative Clauses
Ronald Schaffer, Francis O. Egbokhare
págs. 635-677
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