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About The Book
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Based on research in Scotland and Nova Scotia the papers in this collection focus on a number of interconnected themes including language ideologies and affective stances about what it means to be a Gaelic speaker media discourses of Gaelic language death and revitalization the intersection of neoliberalism and minority language revitalization the theoretical frameworks of Reversing Language Shift (RLS) and communities of practice as they apply to Gaelic language revitalization efforts and issues of power and knowledge in research and representation of Gaelic communities. Essays include the authors previously published articles and book chapters spanning the period 2005-2013 as well as three previously unpublished papers. Suitable for undergraduate and graduate-level courses in linguistic anthropology sociolinguistics Celtic studies and education. Im glad that a new volume strong on Gaelic survival persistence and revitalization is now on offer with due emphasis on social setting and social factors. Congratulations [to the author] on bringing such a strong body of work out in a form where it can be appreciated as a whole. --Dr. Nancy C. Dorian Professor Emerita of Linguistics Bryn Mawr CollegeTABLE OF CONTENTSIntroduction xi Part 1: Knowledge and Representation 1 1 Sociolinguistic ethnography of Gaelic communities 3 2 Research and representation: Gaelic and Uist 43Part 2: Discourses of Death and Revitalization 59 3 Discourses of death and denigration: Ethnolinguistic differentiation and the ideology of contempt 61 4 Gaelic doomed as speakers die out? The public discourse of Gaelic language death in Scotland 95 5 Language revitalization discourses as metaculture: Gaelic in Scotland from the 18th to 20th centuries 115Part 3: Neoliberalism and Language Revitalization 149 6 Neoliberal discourses of Gaelic language revitalization: The Gaelic economy and rocketing spending 151 7 Neoliberalism and minority language planning in the Highlands of Scotland 179Part 4: Language Ideologies and Affect 197 8 Ideology affect and socialization in language shift and revitalization: The experiences of adults learning Gaelic in the Western Isles of Scotland 199 9 Ideologies and experiences of literacy in interactions between adult Gaelic learners and first-language Gaelic speakers in Scotland 245 10 Working at 9 to 5 Gaelic: Speakers context and ideologies of an emerging minority language register 267Part 5: New Speakers and Reversing Language Shift 285 11 Gaelic revitalization efforts in Nova Scotia: Reversing Language Shift (RLS) in the 21st century 287 12 Ìle ga Bruidhinn A community-based Gaelic dialect revitalization proposal 315 References 333 Index 365