Author

Created on

Last Updated On

Language

Yakut

Resource Type

Website

Linguistics

Linguistics
Language Has a Spirit: Sakha (Yakut) Language Ideologies and Aesthetics of Sustenance
An article in the journal Arctic Anthropology. Abstract: "Since the end of the Soviet period, usage of the Sakha (Yakut) language has become once again more widespread in its usage in both the public and private spheres in the Republic of Sakha-Yakutia. Language ideologies that circulated in the Soviet era focused on the rodnoi iazyk (Russian: native language); this paper examines the contact and interplay of these ideologies with indigenous Sakha beliefs about the nature of language and the reciprocal relationship between a speaker and their language(s), which involves mutual sustenance and protection. The concept of agency in language is discussed, in light of both the belief in the agentive powers possessed by the tyl ichichite (Sakha: spirit of language), and in terms of how bilingual Sakha-Russian speakers make choices about their communicative practices in terms of style and register, which has repercussions for the sustainability of the Sakha language as a whole."
URL
http://aa.uwpress.org/content/53/1/95.short
Was this article helpful?
0
0
No votes have been submitted yet.
0
No votes have been submitted yet.

Recommended Resources

Drawing of people sitting around a campfire and standing in a group, in colorful organic style. Text reads "Endangered Languages: A Fact Sheet"

Outreach and Awareness

Outreach and Awareness

Language Diversity and Language Endangerment

Language Diversity and Language Endangerment
Endangered Languages: A Fact Sheet

Submitted by

ELP

Published on: