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Language purism and social hierarchies: Making a Romani standard in Prizren

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 August 2018

Amelia Abercrombie*
Affiliation:
University of Manchester, UK
*
Address for correspondence: Amelia Abercrombie, 47 Brook Avenue, Manchester, M19 3DQ, UKajabercrombie@gmail.com

Abstract

This article takes an ethnographic approach to language standardisation. My research focuses on Romani language use in Prizren, Kosovo, which has a tradition of multilingualism. Moving away from approaches to standardisation that focus only on linguistic processes, I look more broadly at the social processes behind language standardisation. I explore discussions, debates, and attitudes towards me as a language learner to show how a Romani standard is being produced and legitimised in Prizren. Applying theories of purism and standardisation, I examine how certain speech practices are made inferior and how social hierarchies legitimise this. I relate this more broadly to the politics of Romani language and to theories of sociolinguistics and anthropological linguistics. (Romani, Kosovo, standardisation, purism, language ideology)*

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Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2018 

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