Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10311/1969
Title: Are dialects markers of ethnic identity? The case of Setswana dialects and ethnic groups
Authors: Bagwasi, Mompoloki Mmangaka
Keywords: Dialect
identity
ethnicity
Setswana
Botswana
translanguaging
levelling
Issue Date: 2019
Publisher: University of Botswana, www.ub.bw
Citation: Bagwasi, M. M. (2019) Are dialects markers of ethnic identity? The case of Setswana dialects and ethnic groups. Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus, Vol. 56, pp. 65-77
Abstract: Many studies on dialects present language in neat, organised groupings that highlight similar language habits and linguistic features of people who belong to the same social, linguistic or regional group. In that way, social and regional groups are identified by the dialects that they speak, and vice versa. However, given the fluid and mobile nature of languages, dialects, and people, it is time that this relationship between language and identity was reviewed, and its complexity exemplified. The fluidity and dynamism of language makes it difficult to attach any linguistic features to any group of people or location. Using examples from Botswana, this paper argues that the relationship between Setswana dialects and Botswana ethnic and regional groups is non-representational and non-exclusive. Thus, the paper makes a distinction between Setswana ethnic groups and Setswana dialects, and challenges current perceptions of Setswana dialects which are based on ethnicity. The argument of the paper is based on historical claims, and translanguaging and levelling theories.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10311/1969
ISSN: 1726-541X (print)
2224-3380 (online)
Appears in Collections:Research articles (Dept of English)

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