Our systems are now restored following recent technical disruption, and we’re working hard to catch up on publishing. We apologise for the inconvenience caused. Find out more

Recommended product

Popular links

Popular links


Queering Language Revitalisation

Queering Language Revitalisation

Queering Language Revitalisation

Navigating Identity and Inclusion among Queer Speakers of Minority Languages
John Walsh, University of Galway
Michael Hornsby, Adam Mickiewicz University
Eva J. Daussà, University of Amsterdam
Renée Pera-Ros, Goethe University Frankfurt
Samuel Parker, University of the West of England, Bristol
Jonathan Morris, Cardiff University
Holly R. Cashman, University of New Hampshire
January 2025
Hardback
9781009591027

    This Element aims to deepen our understanding of how the fields of multilingualism, second language acquisition and minority language revitalisation have largely overlooked the question of queer sexual identities among speakers of the languages under study. Based on case studies of four languages experiencing differing degrees of minoritisation – Irish, Breton, Catalan and Welsh – it investigates how queer people navigate belonging within the binary of speakers/non-speakers of minoritised languages while also maintaining their queer identities. Furthermore, it analyses how minoritised languages are dealing linguistically with the growing need for 'gender-fair' or 'gender-neutral' language. The marginalisation of queer subjects in these strands of linguistics can be traced to the historical dominance of the Fishmanian model of 'Reversing Language Shift' (RLS), which assumed the importance of the deeply heteronormative model of 'intergenerational transmission' of language as fundamental to language revitalisation contexts.

    Product details

    January 2025
    Hardback
    9781009591027
    86 pages
    0.262kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction: Queering minority language revitalisation Michael Hornsby and John Walsh
    • 1. Intersecting identities in minority language contexts: LGBTQ+ Speakers of Welsh Jonathan Morris and Samuel Parker
    • 2. Queering language revitalisation: How a queer arts collective navigates identity, migration, and the Irish language John Walsh
    • 3. Making Breton gender – and LGBTQIA+ – Fair: Typographical and lexical expansion to reflect diversity within the Breton-speaking community Michael Hornsby
    • 4. The battle for authority, legitimacy, and agency in the twitter fields of the Catalan gender-neutral linguistic revolution Eva J. Daussà and Renée Pera-Ros
    • 5. Discussion: Queering language revitalisation Holly Cashman
    • References.
      Contributors
    • Michael Hornsby, John Walsh, Jonathan Morris, Samuel Parker, Eva J. Daussà, Renée Pera-Ros, Holly Cashman