This article looks at the historicisation of the native speaker and ideologies of authenticity and anonymity in Europe's language revitalisation movements. It focuses specifically on the case of Irish in the Republic of Ireland and examines how the native speaker ideology and the opposing ideological constructs of authenticity and anonymity filter down to the belief systems and are discursively produced by social actors on the ground. For this I draw on data from ongoing fieldwork in the Republic of Ireland, drawing on interviews with a group of Irish language enthusiasts located outside the officially designated Irish-speaking Gaeltacht
A considerable number of Irish Catholics in West Belfast, originally native English speakers, have s...
This Dissertation aims to explore Gaelic identity and its relationship with the Irish language in co...
A considerable number of Irish Catholics in West Belfast, originally native English speakers, have s...
This article looks at the historicisation of the native speaker and ideologies of authenticity and a...
Drawing on the framework of authenticity and anonymity, this article explores the Irish State’s mobi...
While traditional Irish-speaking communities continue to decline, the number of second-language spea...
This article will argue that language revival movements, particularly those founded in the ethno-nat...
This volume is the first full-length publication to systematically unpack and analyze the linguistic...
Almost 2 million people in the North and South of Ireland identify as Irish speakers and an estimate...
Copyright © 2014 ISSR Journals. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Common...
The Irish language is a minority language undergoing the attenuation and accelerated change commonly...
The poststructuralist turn has been widely acknowledged in contemporary applied and sociolinguistics...
New speakers refer to people who use a language regularly but are not traditional native speakers...
extreme language shift: authenticity without traditional native speakers Abstract: This article draw...
This article reviews the Irish experience of plurilingual aspiration from three perspectives. It fir...
A considerable number of Irish Catholics in West Belfast, originally native English speakers, have s...
This Dissertation aims to explore Gaelic identity and its relationship with the Irish language in co...
A considerable number of Irish Catholics in West Belfast, originally native English speakers, have s...
This article looks at the historicisation of the native speaker and ideologies of authenticity and a...
Drawing on the framework of authenticity and anonymity, this article explores the Irish State’s mobi...
While traditional Irish-speaking communities continue to decline, the number of second-language spea...
This article will argue that language revival movements, particularly those founded in the ethno-nat...
This volume is the first full-length publication to systematically unpack and analyze the linguistic...
Almost 2 million people in the North and South of Ireland identify as Irish speakers and an estimate...
Copyright © 2014 ISSR Journals. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Common...
The Irish language is a minority language undergoing the attenuation and accelerated change commonly...
The poststructuralist turn has been widely acknowledged in contemporary applied and sociolinguistics...
New speakers refer to people who use a language regularly but are not traditional native speakers...
extreme language shift: authenticity without traditional native speakers Abstract: This article draw...
This article reviews the Irish experience of plurilingual aspiration from three perspectives. It fir...
A considerable number of Irish Catholics in West Belfast, originally native English speakers, have s...
This Dissertation aims to explore Gaelic identity and its relationship with the Irish language in co...
A considerable number of Irish Catholics in West Belfast, originally native English speakers, have s...