ABSTRACT

Bridging the fields of youth studies and language planning and policy, this book takes a close, nuanced look at Indigenous youth bi/multilingualism across diverse cultural and linguistic settings, drawing out comparisons, contrasts, and important implications for language planning and policy and for projects designed to curtail language loss. Indigenous and non-Indigenous scholars with longstanding ties to language planning efforts in diverse Indigenous communities examine language policy and planning as de facto and de jure – as covert and overt, bottom-up and top-down. This approach illuminates crosscutting themes of language identity and ideology, cultural conflict, and linguistic human rights as youth negotiate these issues within rapidly changing sociolinguistic contexts. A distinctive feature of the book is its chapters and commentaries by Indigenous scholars writing about their own communities.

This landmark volume stands alone in offering a look at diverse Indigenous youth in multiple endangered language communities, new theoretical, empirical, and methodological insights, and lessons for intergenerational language planning in dynamic sociocultural contexts.

chapter |25 pages

Beyond Endangerment

Indigenous Youth and Multilingualism

chapter |22 pages

Genealogies of Language Loss and Recovery

Native Youth Language Practices and Cultural Continuance 1

chapter |22 pages

Just Keep Expanding Outwards

Embodied Space as Cultural Critique in the Life and Work of a Navajo Hip Hop Artist

chapter |20 pages

“Being” Hopi by “Living” Hopi

Redefining and Reasserting Cultural and Linguistic Identity: Emergent Hopi Youth Ideologies

chapter |19 pages

“I Didn't Know You Knew Mexicano!”

Shifting Ideologies, Identities, and Ambivalence among Former Youth in Tlaxcala, Mexico

chapter |19 pages

Igniting a Youth Language Movement

Inuit Youth as Agents of Circumpolar Language Planning

chapter |19 pages

Efforts of the Ree-Volution

Revitalizing Arikara Language in an Endangered Language Context

chapter |14 pages

Commentary

A Hawaiian Revitalization Perspective on Indigenous Youth and Bilingualism

chapter |6 pages

Commentary

Indigenous Youth Bilingualism from a Yup'ik Perspective

chapter |8 pages

Commentary

En/countering Indigenous Bi/Multilingualism