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Practicing Anthropology | 4 |
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Adley-SantaMaria, Bernadette | 1 |
Bigler, Gregory | 1 |
Kwatchka, Patricia | 1 |
Linn, Mary S. | 1 |
McCarty, Teresa L. | 1 |
Watahomigie, Lucille J. | 1 |
Yamamoto, Akira Y. | 1 |
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McCarty, Teresa L.; Watahomigie, Lucille J.; Yamamoto, Akira Y. – Practicing Anthropology, 1999
Indigenous languages are being displaced at an alarming rate. The ramifications of language loss to the speakers' culture and to the wider culture, and its connection to issues of repression and acculturation are discussed. Reversing language shift is the practice of social justice and requires collaboration between indigenous communities and…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indian Education, American Indian Languages, Bilingual Education Programs

Kwatchka, Patricia – Practicing Anthropology, 1999
To successfully maintain endangered Native American languages, Native communities must collectively recognize their language's vulnerability and commit to its continuity. Linguists need more experience with fieldwork and pragmatics, knowledge of various language transmission practices in cultures other than their own, an understanding of cultural…
Descriptors: Alaska Natives, American Indian Languages, American Indians, Anthropological Linguistics

Adley-SantaMaria, Bernadette – Practicing Anthropology, 1999
A White Mountain Apache (WMA) doctoral student collaborating with a non-Indian linguist on a grammar book project discusses the status of the WMA language; causes of WMA language shift; aspects of insider-outsider collaboration; implications for revitalization and maintenance of indigenous languages; and the responsibilities of individuals,…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Anthropological Linguistics, Apache, Community Involvement

Bigler, Gregory; Linn, Mary S. – Practicing Anthropology, 1999
Linguists working with endangered American Indian languages must realize that fieldwork is a cooperative venture, requiring that control be relinguished to the community. The relationship with the tribe must be negotiated, and linguists must return something concrete to the community in terms of language revival. Working in language teams that…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, American Indians, Anthropological Linguistics, Community Involvement