PhDThe idea that Canada consists of “two solitudes” (MacLennan, 1945), according to which the two dominant (English and French) linguistic groups live in separate worlds with little interaction or communication, has also received attention in sociolinguistic circles (e.g. Heller, 1999). This thesis examines this claim further, by comparing the content of English and French Canadian newspapers. More specifically, the thesis compares how English and French serve different purposes in three coexisting conceptualisations of national identity in Canada: Quebec national identity, English Canadian national identity, and pan-Canadian national identity. In each corresponding national identity discourse, the nation and its language(s) are imagined di...
This paper explores critical issues surrounding language rights in multicultural Canada and how lang...
In this article, the ethno-linguistic features of French Canadian and English Canadian linguistic wo...
This paper explores critical issues surrounding language rights in multicultural Canada and how lang...
Book synopsis: Language Ideologies and Canadian Media explores how French and English Canadian media...
This dissertation examines the origins and development of attitudes (in the guise of beliefs and ste...
This dissertation examines the origins and development of attitudes (in the guise of beliefs and ste...
The purpose of this article is to present how the French in Canada preserved their cultural and ling...
From a sociolinguistic perspective, this article questions notions such as identity, nation, and eli...
In this study, I establish that language textbooks are sites of discursive struggle through which na...
From a sociolinguistic perspective, this article questions notions such as identity, nation, and eli...
Although social media provide new opportunities for minority language use and communication, the ext...
This study attempts to understand the tenacity of everyday talk about language and its seemingly eff...
This minor master’s thesis discusses code-switching from English to French in The Montreal Gazette, ...
Despite a growing body of research on multilingual scholars' publication practices in several countr...
This article examines the ways in which discourses of Canadian national identity...
This paper explores critical issues surrounding language rights in multicultural Canada and how lang...
In this article, the ethno-linguistic features of French Canadian and English Canadian linguistic wo...
This paper explores critical issues surrounding language rights in multicultural Canada and how lang...
Book synopsis: Language Ideologies and Canadian Media explores how French and English Canadian media...
This dissertation examines the origins and development of attitudes (in the guise of beliefs and ste...
This dissertation examines the origins and development of attitudes (in the guise of beliefs and ste...
The purpose of this article is to present how the French in Canada preserved their cultural and ling...
From a sociolinguistic perspective, this article questions notions such as identity, nation, and eli...
In this study, I establish that language textbooks are sites of discursive struggle through which na...
From a sociolinguistic perspective, this article questions notions such as identity, nation, and eli...
Although social media provide new opportunities for minority language use and communication, the ext...
This study attempts to understand the tenacity of everyday talk about language and its seemingly eff...
This minor master’s thesis discusses code-switching from English to French in The Montreal Gazette, ...
Despite a growing body of research on multilingual scholars' publication practices in several countr...
This article examines the ways in which discourses of Canadian national identity...
This paper explores critical issues surrounding language rights in multicultural Canada and how lang...
In this article, the ethno-linguistic features of French Canadian and English Canadian linguistic wo...
This paper explores critical issues surrounding language rights in multicultural Canada and how lang...