TY - JOUR
T1 - New speakers of Irish
T2 - Shifting boundaries across time and space
AU - O'Rourke, Bernadette
AU - Walsh, John
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 O'Rourke, Walsh, published by De Gruyter.
PY - 2015/1/1
Y1 - 2015/1/1
N2 - While traditional Irish-speaking communities continue to decline, the number of second-language speakers outside of the Gaeltacht has increased. Of the more than one and half million speakers of Irish just over 66,000 now live in one of the officially designated Gaeltacht areas. While "new speakers" can be seen to play an important role in the future of the language, this role is sometimes undermined by discourses which idealise the notion of the traditional Gaeltacht speaker. Such discourses can be used to deny them "authenticity" as "real" or "legitimate" speakers, sometimes leading to struggles over language ownership. Concerns about linguistic purity are often voiced in both academic and public discourse, with the more hybridized forms of Irish developed amongst "new speakers" often criticised. This article looks at the extent to which such discourses are being internalised by new speakers of Irish and whether or not they are constructing an identity as a distinct social and linguistic group based on what it means to be an Irish speaker in the twenty first century.
AB - While traditional Irish-speaking communities continue to decline, the number of second-language speakers outside of the Gaeltacht has increased. Of the more than one and half million speakers of Irish just over 66,000 now live in one of the officially designated Gaeltacht areas. While "new speakers" can be seen to play an important role in the future of the language, this role is sometimes undermined by discourses which idealise the notion of the traditional Gaeltacht speaker. Such discourses can be used to deny them "authenticity" as "real" or "legitimate" speakers, sometimes leading to struggles over language ownership. Concerns about linguistic purity are often voiced in both academic and public discourse, with the more hybridized forms of Irish developed amongst "new speakers" often criticised. This article looks at the extent to which such discourses are being internalised by new speakers of Irish and whether or not they are constructing an identity as a distinct social and linguistic group based on what it means to be an Irish speaker in the twenty first century.
KW - Irish
KW - authenticity
KW - language ideologies
KW - new speakers
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84919622734
U2 - 10.1515/ijsl-2014-0032
DO - 10.1515/ijsl-2014-0032
M3 - Article
SN - 0165-2516
VL - 2015
SP - 63
EP - 83
JO - International Journal of the Sociology of Language
JF - International Journal of the Sociology of Language
IS - 231
ER -