Especially since 1956, when Tunisia gained its independence from French occupiers, the language problems of this tiny North African country have come to the forefront. In Tunisia, as in other parts of the Maghreb, such as Algeria and Morocco, the existence of various forms of the indigenous tongue (Arabic, and in some areas, Berber) has been complicated by the presence of foreign languages, namely French. Linguistic issues, in turn, cannot be separated from culture, the milieu in which language finds its meaning. On the eve of independence, Tunisia had to grapple with the question of its cultural identity as well. As a whole Tunisian society had to decide how to preserve vestiges from its past while incorporating foreign elements</p
The death of one Tunisian man by self-immolation in 2010 created uprisings in 18 other Arab countrie...
During the French Protectorate of 1912 to 1956, French became an additional ‘L’ language in Morocco,...
This article is devoted to some problems of the Tunisian lexicon from the point of view of contact b...
This Article outlines the politics of language policies in Tunisia in relation with the issue of Tun...
This study presents the policy of Arabization in Tunisia as an example of language planning which ha...
When France made Tunisia a protectorate in 1881, they introduced language policies that established ...
This article appeared in a Canadian journal devoted to Francophone language policy, in its special i...
This paper presents linguistic data gathered from members of the former Italian community in Tunisia...
The present research into the linguistic situation in the most multilingual region of the world, the...
The language is the key instrument by which we assimilate the culture of our country. As culture is ...
Global migration patterns increasingly challenge the historical relationships between Western powers...
By stressing both the general characteristics and the complexity of those situations in which biling...
Tunisia is an Arab country located in North Africa, situated between Algeria and Libya. Because of i...
This volume covers the language situation in Algeria, Côte d’Ivoire, Nigeria and Tunisia, explaining...
In this chapter we will examine the role and status of the French language in the Maghreb today, beg...
The death of one Tunisian man by self-immolation in 2010 created uprisings in 18 other Arab countrie...
During the French Protectorate of 1912 to 1956, French became an additional ‘L’ language in Morocco,...
This article is devoted to some problems of the Tunisian lexicon from the point of view of contact b...
This Article outlines the politics of language policies in Tunisia in relation with the issue of Tun...
This study presents the policy of Arabization in Tunisia as an example of language planning which ha...
When France made Tunisia a protectorate in 1881, they introduced language policies that established ...
This article appeared in a Canadian journal devoted to Francophone language policy, in its special i...
This paper presents linguistic data gathered from members of the former Italian community in Tunisia...
The present research into the linguistic situation in the most multilingual region of the world, the...
The language is the key instrument by which we assimilate the culture of our country. As culture is ...
Global migration patterns increasingly challenge the historical relationships between Western powers...
By stressing both the general characteristics and the complexity of those situations in which biling...
Tunisia is an Arab country located in North Africa, situated between Algeria and Libya. Because of i...
This volume covers the language situation in Algeria, Côte d’Ivoire, Nigeria and Tunisia, explaining...
In this chapter we will examine the role and status of the French language in the Maghreb today, beg...
The death of one Tunisian man by self-immolation in 2010 created uprisings in 18 other Arab countrie...
During the French Protectorate of 1912 to 1956, French became an additional ‘L’ language in Morocco,...
This article is devoted to some problems of the Tunisian lexicon from the point of view of contact b...