Southern Ute Grassroots Language Revitalization

dc.contributor.author Oberly, Stacey
dc.contributor.author White, Dedra
dc.contributor.author Millich, Arlene
dc.contributor.author Cloud, Mary Inez
dc.contributor.author Seibel, Lillian
dc.contributor.author Ivey, Crystal
dc.contributor.author Cloud, Lorelei
dc.date.accessioned 2015-12-10T02:39:39Z
dc.date.available 2015-12-10T02:39:39Z
dc.date.issued 2015-12
dc.description.abstract Southern Ute is a severely endangered Uto-Aztecan language spoken in southwestern Colorado by forty speakers out of a tribe of around 1,400. In 2011, a small group of adult tribal members with a strong desire to learn Ute as a second language began a collaborative, community-based, grassroots language revitalization and repatriation project on the Southern Ute reservation. This case study provides insight into language endangerment and revitalization, language ideologies, linguistic identity, revitalization pedagogy, and language as power. During this project the group encountered challenges typical of endangered language revitalization such as lack of teaching material, the contradictory role of writing in gaining fluency in an endangered language, the transition of a speaker to a teacher, and differing views of effective language learning methods. A total of eighty-nine community members ranging in age from two to eighty-seven years participated in this project. The diversity of students created a pedagogical situation in which the range of objectives, learning styles, and interest levels required adaptation and flexibility. We discuss possible solutions to these challenges. We also provide insight into the tenacity of heritage language learners who continue to fight for linguistic self-determination and justice, even when faced with opposition from their tribal government and community.
dc.description.sponsorship National Foreign Language Resource Center
dc.format.extent 20 pages
dc.identifier.citation Oberly, Stacey, Dedra White, Arlene Millich, Mary Inez Cloud, Lillian Seibel, Crystal Ivey & Lorelei Cloud. 2015. Southern Ute Grassroots Language Revitalization. Language Documentation & Conservation 9. 324-343.
dc.identifier.issn 1934-5275
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10125/24646
dc.language.iso eng
dc.publisher University of Hawaii Press
dc.rights Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International
dc.subject grassroots language revitalization
dc.subject collaborative language activism
dc.subject Endangered languages
dc.subject endangered language pedagogy
dc.subject Ute
dc.subject Uto-Aztecan languages
dc.subject Southern Numic
dc.title Southern Ute Grassroots Language Revitalization
dc.type Article
dc.type.dcmi Text
prism.endingpage 343
prism.publicationname Language Documentation & Conservation
prism.startingpage 324
prism.volume 9
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