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The Limits of Legitimacy: Language Ideology and Shift in Contemporary Senegal

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The Limits of Legitimacy: Language Ideology and Shift in Contemporary Senegal
Author(s)Swigart, Leigh
AbstractCurrent sociolinguistic patterns in Dakar, Senegal, suggest that the French language shares its position as legitimate language, in the sense suggested by Bourdieu, with a mixed Wolof/French code that enjoys no official recognition. This contradiction is explored through the examination of a historic public speech delivered by Senegal’s president in 1988 and the linguistic ideologies that the various reactions to this speech represent. It will be seen that the growing use of “Urban Wolof” during the last decade in the informal economic sector, the mass media, and advertising both reflects and reinforces the emergence of a new ideology that attributes an “alternative legitimacy” to this linguistic hybrid.
IssueNo1
Pages90-130
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceJournal of Linguistic Anthropology
VolumeNo10
PubDateJune 2000
ISBN_ISSN1055-1360
Browse Path(s)Anthropology
—-Language and Society
——–Politics and Power

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