Published Online: 2011-06-06
Published in Print: 2011-May
© 2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/New York
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Articles in the same Issue
- Introduction: defining language emancipation
- From Swedish to Finnish in the 19th century: a historical case of emancipatory language shift
- Reclaiming Sámi languages: indigenous language emancipation from East to West
- The birth of the Kven language in Norway: emancipation through state recognition
- Embracing Hungarian: top-down emancipation of an immigrant language in Finland
- Reassessing Gallo as a regional language in France: language emancipation vs. monolingual language ideology
- National languages in education in Guinea-Conakry: re-emancipation in progress?
- Coda: linguistic emancipation
- When support for language revitilization is not enough: the end of indigenous language classes at Warm Springs Elementary School
Articles in the same Issue
- Introduction: defining language emancipation
- From Swedish to Finnish in the 19th century: a historical case of emancipatory language shift
- Reclaiming Sámi languages: indigenous language emancipation from East to West
- The birth of the Kven language in Norway: emancipation through state recognition
- Embracing Hungarian: top-down emancipation of an immigrant language in Finland
- Reassessing Gallo as a regional language in France: language emancipation vs. monolingual language ideology
- National languages in education in Guinea-Conakry: re-emancipation in progress?
- Coda: linguistic emancipation
- When support for language revitilization is not enough: the end of indigenous language classes at Warm Springs Elementary School