Hybrid practices meet nation-state language policies: Transcarpathia in the twentieth century and today
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De Gruyter Mouton
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Abstract. From the early twentieth century to the present day, Transcarpathia has
belonged to several states: the Austrian-Hungarian Monarchy, Czechoslovakia,
the Hungarian Kingdom, the Soviet Union, and finally to Ukraine. The status
of what counts as a minority and a majority language has changed each time
the state affiliation has been changed. Based on the long term research by
Csernicskó, and on the one-month fieldwork carried out by Laihonen in 2012,
our goal is to provide an autonomous critical account and discourse analysis
of the linguistic situation in Transcarpathia. We draw examples especially
from the linguistic landscape, which documents the hybrid practices difficult
to catch with other means. Different nation states have aimed to evaluate
certain languages over others. However, Transcarpathia has been too far
away from different national centers and it has therefore remained a periphery. In the everyday life of Transcarpathians, ironies around language repertoires, standardization and heteroglossia come into the fore, especially in the
current context. Such unexpected linguistic practices or “pre-nationalist” and
“non-purist” ideologies offer a change to see how certain categories, such as
language, have remained in their hybrid forms and are still clearly “in the
making”.
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In Multilingua: journal of Cross-Cultural and Interlanguage Communication. 2016. Volume 35., Issue 1. pp. 1-30.
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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States
