
The Nahuatl Language Is One Of Mexico's Official National Languages, And As The Language Of The Aztecs, It Holds A Special Place In The Nations National Imagination. But It Is Also The Language Of Many Indigenous Micro-nations Scattered Throughout The Country, And Even Across The Borders Into The Us. So What Happens When The Mexican State That Has Long Worked To Eradicate Indigenous Languages Decides To Support And Revitalize Indigenous Languages, And Does This Help Or Damage The Ability Of Indigenous Communities To Keep Their Languages Alive? Based On Long-term Ethnography, This Book Is About How The Nahuatl Language Plays A Role In The Political Life Of Different Kinds Of Communities - From The Mexican Nation, To Indigenous Towns And Regions, And To The Mexican Diaspora In The Us. It Is Also About How Politics Play A Role In The Life Of A Language. It Argues That To Understand Why Some Indigenous Languages Become Endangered And Disappear While Others Remain Vital Community Languages, We Must Understand The Political Relations Between The Speech Communities And The National Community, And The Way That The Language Is Integrated Into The Fabric Of Indigenous Community Life. Engaging With Indigenous Scholarship On Political Sovereignty Of Indigenous Peoples It Introduces The Concept Of Semiotic Sovereignty To Analyse The Semiotic Relations Between Indigenous Political Communities And Nation State Politics. It Argues That For Indigenous Communities It Is Of Crucial Importance To Control Its Own Semiotic Resources, Prominently Including Language-- Provided By Publisher.
This book investigates the complex relationship between state-sponsored language revitalization programs and the actual survival of Indigenous languages within Mexico. Magnus Pharao Hansen, an expert in linguistic anthropology, utilizes long-term ethnographic research to examine how Nahuatl functions as a political tool across diverse communities. He argues that the survival of endangered languages depends less on state policy and more on the ability of Indigenous groups to maintain semiotic sovereignty—the power to control their own linguistic and cultural representations against the backdrop of national politics.
What You Will Find
Scholars in the field of linguistic anthropology recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of language politics and Indigenous rights. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which provides a rigorous examination of how political structures influence linguistic vitality.
Page Count:
328
Publication Date:
2024-08-09
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0197746160
ISBN-13:
9780197746165
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