Linguistic imperialism and language decolonisation in Africa through documentation and preservation

Resource type
Book Section
Author/contributor
Title
Linguistic imperialism and language decolonisation in Africa through documentation and preservation
Abstract
This paper addresses the politics of language use in African nations and societies. It highlights the role of power and economics in the choice of language. It discusses linguistic imperialism and language shift, and how they lead to language endangerment. The paper also discusses linguistic decolonization whereby societies resist linguistic domination and endangerment and embark on language maintenance. It touches on the methods employed in language decolonisation, namely language revitalisation, resistance, maintenance, documentation and preservation. Attention will be on lexicology, terminology and the role of radio and TV. We argue that as a society tries to redeem itself from linguistic imperialism through decolonisation, certain stronger politico-economic factors push it back into linguistic imperialism. We will find out that some of the indigenous people themselves kick against language decolonisation. The paper hinges on the theoretical base of language endangerment. Examples are taken from African and Ghanaian languages with emphasis on Akan.
Book Title
African linguistics on the prairie
Place
Berlin
Publisher
Language Science Press
Date
2018-05-23
Pages
87-104
Language
eng
ISBN
978-3-96110-036-1
Accessed
27/06/2022, 11:14
Library Catalogue
Zenodo
Citation
Agyekum, K. (2018). Linguistic imperialism and language decolonisation in Africa through documentation and preservation. In African linguistics on the prairie (pp. 87–104). Language Science Press. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1251718