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12 Guinea

  • Silke Jansen
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Abstract

This chapter gives an overview of the history, development, and current status of French in Guinea, both from an external and internal point of view. Three phases can be distinguished within the history of French in Guinea: firstly, the implementation phase (nineteenth century to 1958), when French was introduced through the colonial apparatus and the educational system, secondly, the restriction phase under the First Republic (1958-1984), during which President Sékou Touré’s postcolonial language policies limited the use of French and promoted national languages in the educational sector and the media, and thirdly, the consolidation phase under the Second Republic (since 1984), that has seen the reversal of Touré’s policies and the reinvigoration of French as the only language of education. Currently, French is in expansion, progressively taking over the vernacular function traditionally performed by the three main national languages Pular, Maninka, and Susu. At the same time, French as spoken in Guinea is characterized by high variability. A national standard does not exit, and informal local norms are still in an emerging state.

Abstract

This chapter gives an overview of the history, development, and current status of French in Guinea, both from an external and internal point of view. Three phases can be distinguished within the history of French in Guinea: firstly, the implementation phase (nineteenth century to 1958), when French was introduced through the colonial apparatus and the educational system, secondly, the restriction phase under the First Republic (1958-1984), during which President Sékou Touré’s postcolonial language policies limited the use of French and promoted national languages in the educational sector and the media, and thirdly, the consolidation phase under the Second Republic (since 1984), that has seen the reversal of Touré’s policies and the reinvigoration of French as the only language of education. Currently, French is in expansion, progressively taking over the vernacular function traditionally performed by the three main national languages Pular, Maninka, and Susu. At the same time, French as spoken in Guinea is characterized by high variability. A national standard does not exit, and informal local norms are still in an emerging state.

Heruntergeladen am 3.10.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110628869-012/html
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