“Urban-Rural” Dynamics and Indigenous Urbanization: The Case of Inuit Language Use in Ottawa

peer reviewed The establishment of cities in Canada has played a pivotal role in the displacement, dispossession, and marginalization of Indigenous peoples. Yet, more than half of the Indigenous population now resides in cities, and urbanization continues to increase. This paper addresses a specific...

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Published in:Journal of Language, Identity & Education
Main Author: BUDACH, Gabriele
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://orbilu.uni.lu/handle/10993/18708
https://doi.org/10.1080/15348458.2014.939034
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author BUDACH, Gabriele
author_facet BUDACH, Gabriele
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collection University of Luxembourg: ORBilu - Open Repository and Bibliography
container_issue 4
container_start_page 236
container_title Journal of Language, Identity & Education
container_volume 13
description peer reviewed The establishment of cities in Canada has played a pivotal role in the displacement, dispossession, and marginalization of Indigenous peoples. Yet, more than half of the Indigenous population now resides in cities, and urbanization continues to increase. This paper addresses a specific aspect of Inuit mobility—namely, migration and the dynamic use of Inuit language and knowledge in the city of Ottawa. Drawing on community-based participatory research in collaboration with an Ottawa Inuit literacy centre, we investigate a range of Inuit-led educational practices that emerged from collaborative work with a group of Inuit women. Suggested activities drew on semiotic resources—including objects and language—that involved retracing the migrational trajectories of Inuit between cities and between nonurban communities, particularly those in their Arctic “homelands.” Such practices appear to cut across the “urban-rural divide,” particularly since cities were rarely mentioned, a fact that seems to signal the irrelevance of this dichotomy for urban Inuit. In this context, the exploration of artifactual literacies—more specifically, speaker interactions that unfold around culturally meaningful objects—led to the following conclusions: (1) multilingual oracy is key to complex transcontextual meaning making; (2) spatiotemporal reference is anchored both in individual experience and in connectivity with members of a newly constituted community; and (3) there is a sharing of cross-generational horizontal knowledge, which includes the abstention from any enforcement of a linguistic norm.
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spelling ftunivluxembourg:oai:orbilu.uni.lu:10993/18708 2025-05-04T14:19:43+00:00 “Urban-Rural” Dynamics and Indigenous Urbanization: The Case of Inuit Language Use in Ottawa BUDACH, Gabriele 2014 https://orbilu.uni.lu/handle/10993/18708 https://doi.org/10.1080/15348458.2014.939034 en eng https://orbilu.uni.lu/handle/10993/18708 info:hdl:10993/18708 doi:10.1080/15348458.2014.939034 wos:000341926300002 restricted access http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess Journal of Language, Identity and Education (2014) migration urban indigeneity artifactual literacies Arts & humanities Languages & linguistics Arts & sciences humaines Langues & linguistique journal article http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501 info:eu-repo/semantics/article peer reviewed 2014 ftunivluxembourg https://doi.org/10.1080/15348458.2014.939034 2025-04-04T03:52:57Z peer reviewed The establishment of cities in Canada has played a pivotal role in the displacement, dispossession, and marginalization of Indigenous peoples. Yet, more than half of the Indigenous population now resides in cities, and urbanization continues to increase. This paper addresses a specific aspect of Inuit mobility—namely, migration and the dynamic use of Inuit language and knowledge in the city of Ottawa. Drawing on community-based participatory research in collaboration with an Ottawa Inuit literacy centre, we investigate a range of Inuit-led educational practices that emerged from collaborative work with a group of Inuit women. Suggested activities drew on semiotic resources—including objects and language—that involved retracing the migrational trajectories of Inuit between cities and between nonurban communities, particularly those in their Arctic “homelands.” Such practices appear to cut across the “urban-rural divide,” particularly since cities were rarely mentioned, a fact that seems to signal the irrelevance of this dichotomy for urban Inuit. In this context, the exploration of artifactual literacies—more specifically, speaker interactions that unfold around culturally meaningful objects—led to the following conclusions: (1) multilingual oracy is key to complex transcontextual meaning making; (2) spatiotemporal reference is anchored both in individual experience and in connectivity with members of a newly constituted community; and (3) there is a sharing of cross-generational horizontal knowledge, which includes the abstention from any enforcement of a linguistic norm. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic inuit University of Luxembourg: ORBilu - Open Repository and Bibliography Arctic Canada Journal of Language, Identity & Education 13 4 236 253
spellingShingle migration
urban indigeneity
artifactual literacies
Arts & humanities
Languages & linguistics
Arts & sciences humaines
Langues & linguistique
BUDACH, Gabriele
“Urban-Rural” Dynamics and Indigenous Urbanization: The Case of Inuit Language Use in Ottawa
title “Urban-Rural” Dynamics and Indigenous Urbanization: The Case of Inuit Language Use in Ottawa
title_full “Urban-Rural” Dynamics and Indigenous Urbanization: The Case of Inuit Language Use in Ottawa
title_fullStr “Urban-Rural” Dynamics and Indigenous Urbanization: The Case of Inuit Language Use in Ottawa
title_full_unstemmed “Urban-Rural” Dynamics and Indigenous Urbanization: The Case of Inuit Language Use in Ottawa
title_short “Urban-Rural” Dynamics and Indigenous Urbanization: The Case of Inuit Language Use in Ottawa
title_sort “urban-rural” dynamics and indigenous urbanization: the case of inuit language use in ottawa
topic migration
urban indigeneity
artifactual literacies
Arts & humanities
Languages & linguistics
Arts & sciences humaines
Langues & linguistique
topic_facet migration
urban indigeneity
artifactual literacies
Arts & humanities
Languages & linguistics
Arts & sciences humaines
Langues & linguistique
url https://orbilu.uni.lu/handle/10993/18708
https://doi.org/10.1080/15348458.2014.939034