Polish Canadians and Polish immigrants in Canada: self-identity and language attitude
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Joanna Lustanski
Abstract
This article examines the ethnic identity of the Polish minority group living in Canada in the last two decades, that is, after 1989 when Poland got rid of the Communist system and Poles were allowed to freely leave the country. On the basis of the survey distributed among representatives of two generations of Poles in Canada, I examine how the participants position themselves with respect to core values of ethnicity — language, religion, and culture (Smolicz, Minority languages as core values of ethnic cultures, John Benjamins, 1992). The results of my study show that respondents themselves break the stereotypical vision of Polish identity in which language matters are central. They explicitly indicate respecting Polish traditions and customs as the most fundamental token of Polish ethnic identity, placing the value of the Polish language — identified by speaking Polish and teaching children Polish — in second and third positions. The ethnocultural orientation which they present can be accounted for in two fundamental ways: 1) the socio-historical past of the community and 2) the specific characteristics of Canada as a country of settlement.
© 2009 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, D-10785 Berlin
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- Language politics and policy in the United States: implications for the immigration debate
- Polish Canadians and Polish immigrants in Canada: self-identity and language attitude
- Languages in the Canton of Grisons
- Campus English: lexical variations in Cameroon
- Codeswitching and ethnicity: grammatical types of codeswitching in the Afrikaans speech community
- Book reviews
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Articles in the same Issue
- Multilingualism: the case for a new research focus
- Language politics and policy in the United States: implications for the immigration debate
- Polish Canadians and Polish immigrants in Canada: self-identity and language attitude
- Languages in the Canton of Grisons
- Campus English: lexical variations in Cameroon
- Codeswitching and ethnicity: grammatical types of codeswitching in the Afrikaans speech community
- Book reviews
- Is there an educational advantage to speaking Irish? An investigation of the relationship between education and ability to speak Irish