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"Language, Society and Identity in early Iceland" offers a
much-needed exploration into the problem of linguistic and social
identity construction in early Iceland, and is a fascinating
account of an under examined historical-linguistic story that will
spur further research and discussion amongst researchers. Engages
with recent theoretical research on dialect formation and language
isolationMakes a significant contribution to our understanding of
dialect development, putting forward a persuasive hypothesis
accounting for the lack of dialect variation in IcelandicUses a
unique, multi-disciplinary approach that brings together material
from a wide range of fields for a comprehensive examination of the
role of language in identity constructionOpens up opportunities for
further research, especially for those concerned with language and
identity in Iceland today, where there is for the first time
sociolinguistic variation
Arctic Journal grew out of twelve months of fieldwork, living in a
remote corner of the Arctic in the most northern permanently
inhabited settlement in the world. It is a response to an alluring
polar environment and different way of life whose appeal leaves an
indelible mark on the mind, changing forever one's perspective on
the world. Written in large part during the dark period when there
is no sun at all for over three months of the year, the poem is the
product of extraordinary circumstances which allowed certain
privileged insights into what is happening hamani 'down there' in
the urbanised world of megacities and environmental destruction.
Battling bitter cold, solitude, a wall of mistrust and the winter
darkness, Arctic Journal is a chronological poem of introspection
and marks the arrival of an important poet.
This book serves as an insightful ethnographic introduction to the
language and oral traditions of the Inugguit, a sub-group of the
Inuit who live in north-west Greenland. A unique work, it
encompasses an overview of the grammar of Polar Eskimo - a language
spoken by about 770 people - as well as a description of their oral
traditions (drum-dancing and story-telling) and the most extensive
glossary of the language compiled to date. The book presents the
Polar Eskimo language in the orthography established by the author
in conjunction with the local community in Greenland, an extremely
difficult task for a language made up of such an aberrant phonology
and with no written tradition. By exploring their ways of speaking
and ways of belonging, Leonard provides an original ethnographic
interpretation of the nature of Inugguit social organization and
their world-view. Some Ethnolinguistic Notes on Polar Eskimo will
serve as an invaluable resource for linguists who specialise in the
Eskimo-Aleut group and will be of much interest to anthropologists
working in the Arctic region.
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