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Contents
- University of Arizona Press
- Chapter
- Additional Information
Contents 1 Introduction: Revealing Native American Language Ideologies 3 Margaret C. Field and Paul V. Kroskrity Part I. Language and Language Ideological Change 2 Changing Navajo Language Ideologies and Changing Language Use 31 Margaret C. Field 3 Contradictions across Space-Time and Language Ideologies in Northern Arapaho Language Shift 48 Jeffrey D. Anderson 4 ‘‘Language, Court, Constitution. It’s All Tied Up into One’’: The (Meta)pragmatics of Tradition in a Hopi Tribal Court Hearing 77 Justin B. Richland 5 English Is the Dead Language: Native Perspectives on Bilingualism 99 Jule Gómez de García, Melissa Axelrod, and Jordan Lachler 6 Visibility, Authenticity, and Insiderness in Cherokee Language Ideologies 123 Margaret Bender viii contents Part II. Language Revitalization as a Site for (Re)New(ing) Language Ideologies 7 Language Ideology and Aboriginal Language Revitalization in the Yukon, Canada 151 Barbra A. Meek 8 ‘‘You Keep Not Listening with Your Ears!’’ Language Ideologies, Language Socialization, and Paiute Identity 172 Pamela A. Bunte 9 Embodying the Reversal of Language Shift: Agency, Incorporation, and Language Ideological Change in the Western Mono Community of Central California 190 Paul V. Kroskrity Part III. Linguistic Description, Language Activism, and Reflexive Concerns 10 Shaming the Shift Generation: Intersecting Ideologies of Family and Linguistic Revitalization in Guatemala 213 Jennifer F. Reynolds 11 Language Revitalization and the Manipulation of Language Ideologies: A Shoshoni Case Study 238 Christopher Loether 12 Contingencies of Emergence: Planning Maliseet Language Ideologies 255 Bernard C. Perley 13 Which Way Is the Kiowa Way? Orthography Choices, Ideologies, and Language Renewal 271 Amber A. Neely and Gus Palmer, Jr. Notes 299 References 313 About the Contributors 345 Index 351 [35.175.174.36] Project MUSE (2024-03-28 23:59 GMT) Native American Language Ideologies ...