ABSTRACT

This volume illustrates how language revival movements in Russia and elsewhere have often followed a specific pattern of literacy bias in the promotion of a minority’s heritage language, partly neglecting the social and relational aspects of orality. Using the Vepsian Renaissance as an example, this volume brings to the surface a literacy-orality dualism new to the discussion around revival movements. In addition to the more-theoretically oriented scopes, this book addresses all the actors involved in revival movements including activists, scholars and policy-makers, and opens a discussion on literacy and orality, and power and agency in the multiple relational aspects of written and oral practices. This study addresses issues common to language revival movements worldwide and will appeal to researchers of linguistic anthropology, sociolinguistics, education and language policy, and culture studies.

chapter 1|24 pages

Introduction

Revival of a Heritage Language. A Question of Literacy and Orality
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chapter 3|12 pages

Multilingual Russia

Superdiversity Meets Language Revival
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chapter 4|26 pages

Revaluation of Language

Fieldwork as a Give-and-Take Phenomenon
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chapter 5|24 pages

Metaphors of Language

Independent Entity Versus Experience of Life
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chapter 7|31 pages

Vepsän kel’ and the City

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chapter 8|31 pages

Education and the Babushka

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chapter |7 pages

Conclusion

Revitalizing a Heritage Language. Toward Multimodality and “Multispatiality”
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