Remaking Kichwa: Language and Indigenous Pluralism in Amazonian Ecuador (Bloomsbury Studies in Linguistic Anthropology)
Bloomsbury Academic
ISBN13:
9781350115552
$136.77
Investigating the efforts of the Kichwa of Tena, Ecuador to reverse language shift to Spanish, this book examines the ways in which indigenous language can be revitalized and how creative bilingual forms of discourse can reshape the identities and futures of local populations. Based on deep ethnographic fieldwork among urban, periurban, and rural indigenous Kichwa communities, Michael Wroblewski explores adaptations to culture contact, language revitalization, and political mobilization through discourse. Expanding the ethnographic picture of native Amazonians and their traditional discourse practices, this book focuses attention on Kichwas' diverse engagements with rural and urban ways of living, local and global ways of speaking, and indigenous and dominant intellectual traditions. Wroblewski reveals the composite nature of indigenous ways of reflecting on their words and world through conversational interviews, oral history narratives, political speechmaking, and urban performance media, showing how discourse is a critical focal point for studying cultural adaptation. Highlighting how Kichwa assert autonomy through creative forms of self-representation, Language Revitalization and Indigenous Remaking in Amazonia moves the study of indigenous language into the globalized era and offers innovative reconsiderations of indigeneity, discourse, and identity.
- | Author: Michael Wroblewski, Jim Wilce
- | Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
- | Publication Date: February 25, 2021
- | Number of Pages: 216 pages
- | Language: English
- | Binding: Hardcover
- | ISBN-10: 135011555X
- | ISBN-13: 9781350115552
- Author:
- Michael Wroblewski, Jim Wilce
- Publisher:
- Bloomsbury Academic
- Publication Date:
- February 25, 2021
- Number of pages:
- 216 pages
- Language:
- English
- Binding:
- Hardcover
- ISBN-10:
- 135011555X
- ISBN-13:
- 9781350115552