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Minority language as identity factor: case study of young Russian speakers in Lviv

  • Anna Wylegała
Published/Copyright: February 4, 2010
International Journal of the Sociology of Language
From the journal Volume 2010 Issue 201

Abstract

This article presents the results of qualitative research conducted among representatives of young Russian-speaking intelligentsia in Lviv. After introducing the historical background and the current language situation of the city, it examines the role and status of the minority and majority languages in the language practices of the interviewees. Other issues addressed in this text are cultural and ethnic/national identifications, and their relationship with language practice and language identification. The results of the research illustrate that in this particular group of interviewees, there was a tendency to integrate into the majority Ukrainian culture, and in some cases, to change identification. For some, cultural identification was double and did not always correspond with an ethnic or national identification; however, another part of the group preserved both language and ethnic distinction. Also of importance was the existence of a group with a marginal identification, in this case those who felt neither Russian nor Ukrainian.


Correspondence address:

Published Online: 2010-02-04
Published in Print: 2010-January

© 2010 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/New York

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