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Bilingual Women

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Bilingual Women

DOI link for Bilingual Women

Bilingual Women book

Anthropological Approaches to Second-Language Use

Bilingual Women

DOI link for Bilingual Women

Bilingual Women book

Anthropological Approaches to Second-Language Use
Edited ByPauline Burton, Ketaki Kushari Dyson, Shirley Ardener
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 1994
eBook Published 20 August 2020
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003135111
Pages 210
eBook ISBN 9781003135111
Subjects Social Sciences
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Burton, P., Dyson, K.K., & Ardener, S. (Eds.). (1994). Bilingual Women: Anthropological Approaches to Second-Language Use (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003135111

ABSTRACT

This book studies women's language use in bilingual or multi-lingual cultural situations. The authors - social anthropologists, language teachers, and interpreters cover a wide variety of geographical and linguistic situations, from the death of Gaelic in the Outer Hebrides, to the use of Spanish by Quechua and Aymara women in the Andes. Certain common themes emerge: dominant and sub-dominant languages, women's use of them; ambivalent attitudes towards women as translators, interpreters and writers in English as a second language; and the critical role of women in the survival (or death) of minority languages such as Gaelic and Breton.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter 1|29 pages

Women and Second-Language Use: An Introduction

ByPauline Burton

chapter 2|14 pages

Open Castilian, Closed Aymara? Bilingual Women in the Yungas of La Paz (Bolivia)

ByAlison Spedding

chapter 3|21 pages

The Presence and Absence of Speech in the Communication of Gender

ByPenelope Harvey

chapter 4|15 pages

Casual Chat and Ethnic Identity: Women’s Second-Language Use among Buryats in the USSR 1

ByCaroline Humphrey

chapter 5|5 pages

Women and Second-Language Knowledge in Rural Soviet Georgia 1 : An Outline

ByNina Chinchaladze, Tamara Dragadze

chapter 6|26 pages

Women and Linguistic Innovation in Brittany

ByMaryon McDonald

chapter 7|17 pages

The ‘Death’ of East Sutherland Gaelic: Death by Women?

ByEvi Constantinidou

chapter 8|21 pages

French: No One’s Language, Therefore Everyone’s Language: Convent Speech in Lower Zaïre

ByJoan F. Burke

chapter 9|18 pages

Language and Diaspora: The Use of Portuguese, English and Konkani by Catholic Goan Women

ByStella Mascarenhas-Keyes

chapter 10|3 pages

A Note on My Experiences as a Student, a Teacher and an Interpreter of English in China

ByLiu Hong

chapter 11|16 pages

Forging a Bilingual Identity: A Writer’s Testimony

ByKetaki Kushari Dyson

chapter 12|7 pages

Engendering Language Difference

ByElizabeth Tonkin
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