Language, modernity and the politics of identity: geographical perspectives and prescriptions
Abstract
Over the last two decades geographers and linguists have begun to analyse language as a social determinant of place. While there are numerous traditional studies of regional vocabulary and linguistic geographies, few of these studies have moved towards a perspective of language as a key element of a cultural politics of resistance. This paper argues that language offers both a means of resistance and a method of cultural recovery for regions and communities facing increasing marginalisation at the end of the millennium. As a means of reviewing the role of language as a mechanism of place creation, status distinction and political resistance, this paper offers a case study of Westcock, New Brunswick, that highlights the role of language variation in the shaping of a politics of identity.