In favour of cultural and linguistic diversity : the role of formal bilingual education and the authentic, daily use of the language in the revitalisation of irish and welsh

Abstract: Introduction Within the European continent, there are several autochthonous languages that are, or were, close to extinction, as a result of the political and cultural dominion of another language that was designed as the official one for the state: for instance, in the United Kingdom, English is the official language, and has managed to overshadow autochthonous languages such as Welsh. It is the case of languages like Catalan, Galego, Basque, Frisian, Scottish Gaelic, the various indigenous languages in Argentina, Irish, or Welsh. The last two will be the focus of the following thesis: both belong to the linguistic branch of Celtic languages, and are spoken mostly in Ireland and Wales, respectively. The indigenous languages in Argentina will also be discussed in this thesis, as they present similarities with Irish and Welsh. Having been interested in Celtic culture from a young age, I considered studying the development, difficulties faced and revival of two Celtic languages an important contribution to my chosen area of studies, Sociolinguistics, and which I believe to be important within a multicultural context as the one we are currently part of. When I speak of revival, I refer to how, in spite of being near extinction in previous centuries, from the 1980’s onwards, a process of revitalization has developed that has allowed these two languages to flourish once more. However, the status of English as a lingua franca, and the specific dominion of the British crown –both political and cultural- over the two countries where the languages are still spoken, make this revitalization more difficult. For an explanation of the status quo of these two languages at the beginning of the 21st century, Sutherland (2000) will be used as a point of reference.

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Main Author: Giménez, Carolina Alejandra
Other Authors: Callejo, María Luz
Format: Tesis de grado biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: 2021
Subjects:LENGUAS CELTAS, LENGUAS INDÍGENAS, LITERATURA COMPARADA, CULTURA CELTA, LINGÜISTICA, EDUCACION BILINGÜE, DIVERSIDAD CULTURAL,
Online Access:https://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/12494
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spelling oai:ucacris:123456789-124942022-01-04T05:03:17Z In favour of cultural and linguistic diversity : the role of formal bilingual education and the authentic, daily use of the language in the revitalisation of irish and welsh Giménez, Carolina Alejandra Callejo, María Luz Álvarez, Marina LENGUAS CELTAS LENGUAS INDÍGENAS LITERATURA COMPARADA CULTURA CELTA LINGÜISTICA EDUCACION BILINGÜE DIVERSIDAD CULTURAL Abstract: Introduction Within the European continent, there are several autochthonous languages that are, or were, close to extinction, as a result of the political and cultural dominion of another language that was designed as the official one for the state: for instance, in the United Kingdom, English is the official language, and has managed to overshadow autochthonous languages such as Welsh. It is the case of languages like Catalan, Galego, Basque, Frisian, Scottish Gaelic, the various indigenous languages in Argentina, Irish, or Welsh. The last two will be the focus of the following thesis: both belong to the linguistic branch of Celtic languages, and are spoken mostly in Ireland and Wales, respectively. The indigenous languages in Argentina will also be discussed in this thesis, as they present similarities with Irish and Welsh. Having been interested in Celtic culture from a young age, I considered studying the development, difficulties faced and revival of two Celtic languages an important contribution to my chosen area of studies, Sociolinguistics, and which I believe to be important within a multicultural context as the one we are currently part of. When I speak of revival, I refer to how, in spite of being near extinction in previous centuries, from the 1980’s onwards, a process of revitalization has developed that has allowed these two languages to flourish once more. However, the status of English as a lingua franca, and the specific dominion of the British crown –both political and cultural- over the two countries where the languages are still spoken, make this revitalization more difficult. For an explanation of the status quo of these two languages at the beginning of the 21st century, Sutherland (2000) will be used as a point of reference. 2021-10-21T12:25:32Z 2021-10-21T12:25:32Z 2021 Tesis de grado Giménez, C. A. In favour of cultural and linguistic diversity : the role of formal bilingual education and the authentic, daily use of the language in the revitalisation of irish and welsh [en línea]. Tesis de Licenciatura. Pontificia Universidad Católica Argentina. Facultad de Filosofía y Letras. Departamento de Lenguas y Literatura Inglesa, 2021. Disponible en: https://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/12494 https://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/12494 eng Acceso abierto http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ application/pdf SIGLO XXI
institution UCA
collection DSpace
country Argentina
countrycode AR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-uca
tag biblioteca
region America del Sur
libraryname Sistema de bibliotecas de la UCA
language eng
topic LENGUAS CELTAS
LENGUAS INDÍGENAS
LITERATURA COMPARADA
CULTURA CELTA
LINGÜISTICA
EDUCACION BILINGÜE
DIVERSIDAD CULTURAL
LENGUAS CELTAS
LENGUAS INDÍGENAS
LITERATURA COMPARADA
CULTURA CELTA
LINGÜISTICA
EDUCACION BILINGÜE
DIVERSIDAD CULTURAL
spellingShingle LENGUAS CELTAS
LENGUAS INDÍGENAS
LITERATURA COMPARADA
CULTURA CELTA
LINGÜISTICA
EDUCACION BILINGÜE
DIVERSIDAD CULTURAL
LENGUAS CELTAS
LENGUAS INDÍGENAS
LITERATURA COMPARADA
CULTURA CELTA
LINGÜISTICA
EDUCACION BILINGÜE
DIVERSIDAD CULTURAL
Giménez, Carolina Alejandra
In favour of cultural and linguistic diversity : the role of formal bilingual education and the authentic, daily use of the language in the revitalisation of irish and welsh
description Abstract: Introduction Within the European continent, there are several autochthonous languages that are, or were, close to extinction, as a result of the political and cultural dominion of another language that was designed as the official one for the state: for instance, in the United Kingdom, English is the official language, and has managed to overshadow autochthonous languages such as Welsh. It is the case of languages like Catalan, Galego, Basque, Frisian, Scottish Gaelic, the various indigenous languages in Argentina, Irish, or Welsh. The last two will be the focus of the following thesis: both belong to the linguistic branch of Celtic languages, and are spoken mostly in Ireland and Wales, respectively. The indigenous languages in Argentina will also be discussed in this thesis, as they present similarities with Irish and Welsh. Having been interested in Celtic culture from a young age, I considered studying the development, difficulties faced and revival of two Celtic languages an important contribution to my chosen area of studies, Sociolinguistics, and which I believe to be important within a multicultural context as the one we are currently part of. When I speak of revival, I refer to how, in spite of being near extinction in previous centuries, from the 1980’s onwards, a process of revitalization has developed that has allowed these two languages to flourish once more. However, the status of English as a lingua franca, and the specific dominion of the British crown –both political and cultural- over the two countries where the languages are still spoken, make this revitalization more difficult. For an explanation of the status quo of these two languages at the beginning of the 21st century, Sutherland (2000) will be used as a point of reference.
author2 Callejo, María Luz
author_facet Callejo, María Luz
Giménez, Carolina Alejandra
format Tesis de grado
topic_facet LENGUAS CELTAS
LENGUAS INDÍGENAS
LITERATURA COMPARADA
CULTURA CELTA
LINGÜISTICA
EDUCACION BILINGÜE
DIVERSIDAD CULTURAL
author Giménez, Carolina Alejandra
author_sort Giménez, Carolina Alejandra
title In favour of cultural and linguistic diversity : the role of formal bilingual education and the authentic, daily use of the language in the revitalisation of irish and welsh
title_short In favour of cultural and linguistic diversity : the role of formal bilingual education and the authentic, daily use of the language in the revitalisation of irish and welsh
title_full In favour of cultural and linguistic diversity : the role of formal bilingual education and the authentic, daily use of the language in the revitalisation of irish and welsh
title_fullStr In favour of cultural and linguistic diversity : the role of formal bilingual education and the authentic, daily use of the language in the revitalisation of irish and welsh
title_full_unstemmed In favour of cultural and linguistic diversity : the role of formal bilingual education and the authentic, daily use of the language in the revitalisation of irish and welsh
title_sort in favour of cultural and linguistic diversity : the role of formal bilingual education and the authentic, daily use of the language in the revitalisation of irish and welsh
publishDate 2021
url https://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/12494
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