Assessing the ethnolinguistic vitality of minority languages in Northern Sweden

Northern Sweden is a traditionally multilingual region. In addition to Swedish, several indigenous Saami languages, Finnish, and a local variety of Finnish called Meänkieli are spoken in the area. Even quite recently some of the villages have been monolingual in a minority language while others have...

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Main Author: Arola, Laura
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10125/5081
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description Northern Sweden is a traditionally multilingual region. In addition to Swedish, several indigenous Saami languages, Finnish, and a local variety of Finnish called Meänkieli are spoken in the area. Even quite recently some of the villages have been monolingual in a minority language while others have been bi- and even trilingual. Nowadays, however, a rapid language shift to Swedish is remarkably changing the sociolinguistic situation. During the last two or three decades there have been attempts to revitalize the minority languages. One result of this is that Meänkieli has gained the official status of a language, and a literary standard is being currently created for it. However, the local population’s opinions are divided on whether Meänkieli should be considered a language of its own or a dialect of Finnish. The Saami languages of the region are in an uneven situation: the status of North Saami, the largest Saami language, is relatively good and it also gets support from the Norwegian side of Saami land. Lule Saami, on the other hand, has only a few hundred speakers and very few young speakers. My ongoing Ph.D. research focuses on bi- and multilingualism among young people in Northern Sweden. The aim is to find out to what extent the minority languages are still known by young speakers, how they are learned and in which domains they are used, how do the speakers themselves report their knowledge of languages, and what kind of language attitudes and linguistic identities there are in the region. Questions centering on these themes are used to assess the ethnolinguistic vitality of minority languages among young speakers. The gathering of data takes place in fall 2008 through a web-based questionnaire, which will be filled out by all high school students in the five northernmost municipalities of Sweden. From this data it will be possible to study the language attitudes of both the minority-language speakers themselves as well as the dominant Swedish-speaking population. In my presentation I will examine the historical background of the linguistic situation in Northern Sweden, and discuss the future and ethnoliguistic vitality of minority languages in the region in light of data gathered through the questionnaire. I will also report my experiences on using web-based questionnaire, and discuss how the chosen set of questions has worked in the assessment of ethnolinguistic vitality. 5081.mp3
author2 Arola, Laura
author Arola, Laura
spellingShingle Arola, Laura
Assessing the ethnolinguistic vitality of minority languages in Northern Sweden
author_facet Arola, Laura
author_sort Arola, Laura
title Assessing the ethnolinguistic vitality of minority languages in Northern Sweden
title_short Assessing the ethnolinguistic vitality of minority languages in Northern Sweden
title_full Assessing the ethnolinguistic vitality of minority languages in Northern Sweden
title_fullStr Assessing the ethnolinguistic vitality of minority languages in Northern Sweden
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the ethnolinguistic vitality of minority languages in Northern Sweden
title_sort assessing the ethnolinguistic vitality of minority languages in northern sweden
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10125/5081
genre meänkieli
Northern Sweden
saami
genre_facet meänkieli
Northern Sweden
saami
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10125/5081
Arola, Laura, Arola, Laura; 2009-03-12; Northern Sweden is a traditionally multilingual region. In addition to Swedish, several indigenous Saami languages, Finnish, and a local variety of Finnish called Meänkieli are spoken in the area. Even quite recently some of the villages have been monolingual in a minority language while others have been bi- and even trilingual. Nowadays, however, a rapid language shift to Swedish is remarkably changing the sociolinguistic situation. During the last two or three decades there have been attempts to revitalize the minority languages. One result of this is that Meänkieli has gained the official status of a language, and a literary standard is being currently created for it. However, the local population’s opinions are divided on whether Meänkieli should be considered a language of its own or a dialect of Finnish. The Saami languages of the region are in an uneven situation: the status of North Saami, the largest Saami language, is relatively good and it also gets support from the Norwegian side of Saami land. Lule Saami, on the other hand, has only a few hundred speakers and very few young speakers. My ongoing Ph.D. research focuses on bi- and multilingualism among young people in Northern Sweden. The aim is to find out to what extent the minority languages are still known by young speakers, how they are learned and in which domains they are used, how do the speakers themselves report their knowledge of languages, and what kind of language attitudes and linguistic identities there are in the region. Questions centering on these themes are used to assess the ethnolinguistic vitality of minority languages among young speakers. The gathering of data takes place in fall 2008 through a web-based questionnaire, which will be filled out by all high school students in the five northernmost municipalities of Sweden. From this data it will be possible to study the language attitudes of both the minority-language speakers themselves as well as the dominant Swedish-speaking population. In my presentation I will examine the historical background of the linguistic situation in Northern Sweden, and discuss the future and ethnoliguistic vitality of minority languages in the region in light of data gathered through the questionnaire. I will also report my experiences on using web-based questionnaire, and discuss how the chosen set of questions has worked in the assessment of ethnolinguistic vitality.; Kaipuleohone University of Hawai'i Digital Language Archive;http://hdl.handle.net/10125/5081.
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spelling ftolac:oai:scholarspace.manoa.hawaii.edu:10125/5081 2023-05-15T17:10:38+02:00 Assessing the ethnolinguistic vitality of minority languages in Northern Sweden Arola, Laura Arola, Laura 2009-03-14 http://hdl.handle.net/10125/5081 eng English eng http://hdl.handle.net/10125/5081 Arola, Laura, Arola, Laura; 2009-03-12; Northern Sweden is a traditionally multilingual region. In addition to Swedish, several indigenous Saami languages, Finnish, and a local variety of Finnish called Meänkieli are spoken in the area. Even quite recently some of the villages have been monolingual in a minority language while others have been bi- and even trilingual. Nowadays, however, a rapid language shift to Swedish is remarkably changing the sociolinguistic situation. During the last two or three decades there have been attempts to revitalize the minority languages. One result of this is that Meänkieli has gained the official status of a language, and a literary standard is being currently created for it. However, the local population’s opinions are divided on whether Meänkieli should be considered a language of its own or a dialect of Finnish. The Saami languages of the region are in an uneven situation: the status of North Saami, the largest Saami language, is relatively good and it also gets support from the Norwegian side of Saami land. Lule Saami, on the other hand, has only a few hundred speakers and very few young speakers. My ongoing Ph.D. research focuses on bi- and multilingualism among young people in Northern Sweden. The aim is to find out to what extent the minority languages are still known by young speakers, how they are learned and in which domains they are used, how do the speakers themselves report their knowledge of languages, and what kind of language attitudes and linguistic identities there are in the region. Questions centering on these themes are used to assess the ethnolinguistic vitality of minority languages among young speakers. The gathering of data takes place in fall 2008 through a web-based questionnaire, which will be filled out by all high school students in the five northernmost municipalities of Sweden. From this data it will be possible to study the language attitudes of both the minority-language speakers themselves as well as the dominant Swedish-speaking population. In my presentation I will examine the historical background of the linguistic situation in Northern Sweden, and discuss the future and ethnoliguistic vitality of minority languages in the region in light of data gathered through the questionnaire. I will also report my experiences on using web-based questionnaire, and discuss how the chosen set of questions has worked in the assessment of ethnolinguistic vitality.; Kaipuleohone University of Hawai'i Digital Language Archive;http://hdl.handle.net/10125/5081. Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported CC-BY-NC-SA 2009 ftolac 2020-05-27T15:20:50Z Northern Sweden is a traditionally multilingual region. In addition to Swedish, several indigenous Saami languages, Finnish, and a local variety of Finnish called Meänkieli are spoken in the area. Even quite recently some of the villages have been monolingual in a minority language while others have been bi- and even trilingual. Nowadays, however, a rapid language shift to Swedish is remarkably changing the sociolinguistic situation. During the last two or three decades there have been attempts to revitalize the minority languages. One result of this is that Meänkieli has gained the official status of a language, and a literary standard is being currently created for it. However, the local population’s opinions are divided on whether Meänkieli should be considered a language of its own or a dialect of Finnish. The Saami languages of the region are in an uneven situation: the status of North Saami, the largest Saami language, is relatively good and it also gets support from the Norwegian side of Saami land. Lule Saami, on the other hand, has only a few hundred speakers and very few young speakers. My ongoing Ph.D. research focuses on bi- and multilingualism among young people in Northern Sweden. The aim is to find out to what extent the minority languages are still known by young speakers, how they are learned and in which domains they are used, how do the speakers themselves report their knowledge of languages, and what kind of language attitudes and linguistic identities there are in the region. Questions centering on these themes are used to assess the ethnolinguistic vitality of minority languages among young speakers. The gathering of data takes place in fall 2008 through a web-based questionnaire, which will be filled out by all high school students in the five northernmost municipalities of Sweden. From this data it will be possible to study the language attitudes of both the minority-language speakers themselves as well as the dominant Swedish-speaking population. In my presentation I will examine the historical background of the linguistic situation in Northern Sweden, and discuss the future and ethnoliguistic vitality of minority languages in the region in light of data gathered through the questionnaire. I will also report my experiences on using web-based questionnaire, and discuss how the chosen set of questions has worked in the assessment of ethnolinguistic vitality. 5081.mp3 Other/Unknown Material meänkieli Northern Sweden saami OLAC: Open Language Archives Community