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This book builds on recent research exploring the intersection
between language and social justice, using the multilingual context
of Hawai'i as a case study. The author offers a discourse-centered
approach, providing analyses of actual instances of language use,
and argues that the wide range of languages in Hawai'i - Hawaiian,
Pidgin, Japanese, Chinese, Tagalog, Ilocano, Marshallese, and
Chuukese, as well as the phenomenon of language mixing - all have a
significant contribution to make to society. The book also draws on
language acquisition research demonstrating positive long-term
effects of exposure to multiple languages, and makes the case for
educational approaches that foster multilingual abilities among the
young members of society. This book will be relevant for academics
interested in the intersection of language and social justice and
languages in Hawai'i, but it should also be of interest to
undergraduate and especially graduate students in sociolinguistics,
language revitalization and language documentation, discourse
analysis, applied linguistics, and pragmatics.
Employing an approach informed by language ecology and linguistic
ethnography, Exploring Multilingual Hawai'i examines situated
language usage and underlying ideological beliefs to explore and
understand Hawai'i's multilingualism. This book begins with a
description of the ideologies that developed as a result of contact
with the West and then offers analyses that concentrate
specifically on the roles of Hawaiian, Pidgin, Japanese, and the
languages of Micronesia, and also the occurrence of language mixing
in Hawaiian society. Scott Saft's discussion and analysis
underscore how continued exploration of language usage in Hawai'i
can contribute to our general understanding of multilingualism as a
dynamic phenomenon.
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