Domain change and ethnolinguistic vitality: Evidence from the fishing lexicon of Loloan Malay
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Sosiowati, Gusti Ayu Gde
Arka, I Wayan
Aryawibawa, I Nyoman
Widiastuti, Ni Made Ayu
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University of Hawaii Press
Abstract
This paper reports a study on the vitality of the fishing lexicon in Loloan Malay.
The study was aimed at finding the nature and pattern of domain change, its intergenerational
transmission, and its significance for overall ethnolinguistic vitality.
The data were collected from a representative group of fishermen through tests
that were complemented by interviews. A simple quantitative analysis was undertaken
to discover patterns of change, and the ethnographic method was also used
to augment the analysis. This study contributes to the sociolinguistic research on
language vitality, contact-induced change, and the endangerment of minority languages.
The findings reveal a surprising paradox. Although it is still considered
to have high cultural importance, the fishing domain is critically endangered. It
is argued that the low vitality of the fishing domain does not affect the vitality of
the Loloan Malay language in general. The reason is that the linguistic ideology
that underpins the group identity of Loloan Malay at the macro-societal level is
not tied to fishing, but rather, to religion. This paper also discusses the complexity
of the variables involved in domain change, particularly the extra-linguistic
factors that contribute to the changes in the fishing domain due to modern socioeconomic
and technological progress.
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Language Documentation and Conservation
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Open Access
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Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International
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