Diglossia: A theoretical framework for the revitalisation of the Māori language. Chrisp, S. He Pukenga Kōrero, 2:35–42, 1997.
Paper abstract bibtex In this paper, I propose that diglossia is the most appropriate theoretical framework for the revital!sation of the Māori language. In doing so, I argue against the development of Maori monolingualism and the establishment of a Maori-speaking sub-population. The diglossia model involves the selection of core domains that will become Maori language domains; these domains must be places where Maori spend significant amounts of time, and can exercise substantial control. Maori people will decide what these domains are, and how often they will speak Maori in these do- mains. The decisions about the use of Maori will be influenced by four factors; motivation, knowledge, situation and critical awareness.
@article{chrisp_diglossia:_1997,
title = {Diglossia: {A} theoretical framework for the revitalisation of the {Māori} language},
volume = {2},
url = {http://www.hepukengakorero.com/index.php/HPK/article/view/74},
abstract = {In this paper, I propose that diglossia is the most appropriate theoretical framework for the revital!sation of the Māori language. In doing so, I argue against the development of Maori monolingualism and the establishment of a Maori-speaking sub-population. The diglossia model involves the selection of core domains that will become Maori language domains; these domains must be places where Maori spend significant amounts of time, and can exercise substantial control. Maori people will decide what these domains are, and how often they will speak Maori in these do- mains. The decisions about the use of Maori will be influenced by four factors; motivation, knowledge, situation and critical awareness.},
journal = {He Pukenga Kōrero},
author = {Chrisp, Steven},
year = {1997},
keywords = {Māori Language revitalisation, Māori language domains, Māori speaking sub population, Theoretical Framework, diglossia},
pages = {35--42},
}
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