Language ecology, language endangerment, and relict languages: Case studies from Adamawa (Cameroon-Nigeria)
As a contribution to the more general discussion on causes of language endangerment and death, we describe the language ecologies of four related languages (Bà Mambila [mzk]/[mcu], Sombә (Somyev or Kila) [kgt], Oumyari Wawa [www], Njanga (Kwanja) [knp]) of the Cameroon-Nigeria borderland to reach an...
Main Authors: | , , , , |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
De Gruyter
2021-06-01
|
Series: | Open Linguistics |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1515/opli-2021-0011 |
id |
doaj-2ef53f2441ca438e9484192b86815f03 |
---|---|
record_format |
Article |
spelling |
doaj-2ef53f2441ca438e9484192b86815f032021-10-03T07:42:41ZengDe GruyterOpen Linguistics2300-99692021-06-017124430010.1515/opli-2021-0011Language ecology, language endangerment, and relict languages: Case studies from Adamawa (Cameroon-Nigeria)Connell Bruce0Zeitlyn David1Griffiths Sascha2Hayward Laura3Martin Marieke4Linguistics and Language Studies Programme, Glendon College, York University, Toronto, CanadaInstitute of Social and Cultural Anthropology, Oxford, United KingdomOtelio Ltd, Coventry, United KingdomIpsos MORI, London, United KingdomBBC Pronunciation Unit, London, United KingdomAs a contribution to the more general discussion on causes of language endangerment and death, we describe the language ecologies of four related languages (Bà Mambila [mzk]/[mcu], Sombә (Somyev or Kila) [kgt], Oumyari Wawa [www], Njanga (Kwanja) [knp]) of the Cameroon-Nigeria borderland to reach an understanding of the factors and circumstances that have brought two of these languages, Sombә and Njanga, to the brink of extinction; a third, Oumyari, is unstable/eroded, while Bà Mambila is stable. Other related languages of the area, also endangered and in one case extinct, fit into our discussion, though with less focus. We argue that an understanding of the language ecology of a region (or of a given language) leads to an understanding of the vitality of a language. Language ecology seen as a multilayered phenomenon can help explain why the four languages of our case studies have different degrees of vitality. This has implications for how language change is conceptualised: we see multilingualism and change (sometimes including extinction) as normative.https://doi.org/10.1515/opli-2021-0011mambiloid languageslinguistic evolutionlanguage shift |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Connell Bruce Zeitlyn David Griffiths Sascha Hayward Laura Martin Marieke |
spellingShingle |
Connell Bruce Zeitlyn David Griffiths Sascha Hayward Laura Martin Marieke Language ecology, language endangerment, and relict languages: Case studies from Adamawa (Cameroon-Nigeria) Open Linguistics mambiloid languages linguistic evolution language shift |
author_facet |
Connell Bruce Zeitlyn David Griffiths Sascha Hayward Laura Martin Marieke |
author_sort |
Connell Bruce |
title |
Language ecology, language endangerment, and relict languages: Case studies from Adamawa (Cameroon-Nigeria) |
title_short |
Language ecology, language endangerment, and relict languages: Case studies from Adamawa (Cameroon-Nigeria) |
title_full |
Language ecology, language endangerment, and relict languages: Case studies from Adamawa (Cameroon-Nigeria) |
title_fullStr |
Language ecology, language endangerment, and relict languages: Case studies from Adamawa (Cameroon-Nigeria) |
title_full_unstemmed |
Language ecology, language endangerment, and relict languages: Case studies from Adamawa (Cameroon-Nigeria) |
title_sort |
language ecology, language endangerment, and relict languages: case studies from adamawa (cameroon-nigeria) |
publisher |
De Gruyter |
series |
Open Linguistics |
issn |
2300-9969 |
publishDate |
2021-06-01 |
description |
As a contribution to the more general discussion on causes of language endangerment and death, we describe the language ecologies of four related languages (Bà Mambila [mzk]/[mcu], Sombә (Somyev or Kila) [kgt], Oumyari Wawa [www], Njanga (Kwanja) [knp]) of the Cameroon-Nigeria borderland to reach an understanding of the factors and circumstances that have brought two of these languages, Sombә and Njanga, to the brink of extinction; a third, Oumyari, is unstable/eroded, while Bà Mambila is stable. Other related languages of the area, also endangered and in one case extinct, fit into our discussion, though with less focus. We argue that an understanding of the language ecology of a region (or of a given language) leads to an understanding of the vitality of a language. Language ecology seen as a multilayered phenomenon can help explain why the four languages of our case studies have different degrees of vitality. This has implications for how language change is conceptualised: we see multilingualism and change (sometimes including extinction) as normative. |
topic |
mambiloid languages linguistic evolution language shift |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1515/opli-2021-0011 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT connellbruce languageecologylanguageendangermentandrelictlanguagescasestudiesfromadamawacameroonnigeria AT zeitlyndavid languageecologylanguageendangermentandrelictlanguagescasestudiesfromadamawacameroonnigeria AT griffithssascha languageecologylanguageendangermentandrelictlanguagescasestudiesfromadamawacameroonnigeria AT haywardlaura languageecologylanguageendangermentandrelictlanguagescasestudiesfromadamawacameroonnigeria AT martinmarieke languageecologylanguageendangermentandrelictlanguagescasestudiesfromadamawacameroonnigeria |
_version_ |
1716845871129165824 |