Language Ideology, Policy and Planning in Peru
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Serafín M. Coronel-Molina
About this book
This book explores the role that the High Academy of the Quechua Language plays in language policy and planning, and revitalization efforts for Quechua in the Andean region. This book would appeal to researchers of the Quechua language, and those studying Indigenous language policy and planning, maintenance and revitalization.
Author / Editor information
Serafín M. Coronel-Molina is Associate Professor at Indiana University Bloomington, USA. He has worked in the field for over 25 years, and his research interests include indigenous languages, language maintenance and shift and policies and politics of language.
Serafín M. Coronel-Molina is Associate Professor at Indiana University Bloomington, USA. He is a sociolinguist and educational linguist, who has worked in the field for over 25 years, and his research interests include language ideologies, language policy and planning, and language revitalization.
Reviews
The author has created a comprehensive resource on language ideology, policy and planning in Peru that will serve as a model for how to carry out basic research on a language academy. This volume offers a substantive and critical assessment of HAQL, which merits consultation by any sociolinguist interested in carrying out research on the study of language academies and the appropriate procedures to follow in the maintenance and revitalization of endangered languages. Coronel-Molina has produced an outstanding resource for language planning, language policy, and practice.
Claudia Schuhbeck and Salvador Galindo Rogero:
With this research, Mr. Coronel-Molina seeks to provide enough information to help policy makers and educators work towards an efficient language policy planning for Andean governments. This study would be helpful in the development of corpus planning and acquisition planning, as well for the maintenance and revitalisation of the language he seeks to achieve.
Teresa L. McCarty, George F. Kneller Chair in Education and Anthropology, University of California, Los Angeles, USA:
Engagingly written and meticulously researched, this rich, instructive ethnography takes readers directly into language planning and policy (LPP) as a complex and deeply ideological sociocultural process. Peeling back layers of history, linguistic practice, and power, Professor Coronel-Molina confronts directly the challenges inherent in status, corpus, and acquisition planning for a minoritized language. A major contribution to LPP research and practice, and to the field of applied linguistics.
Nancy H. Hornberger, University of Pennsylvania, USA:
Coronel-Molina's insider perspective as Quechua speaker-teacher-scholar, his careful ethnographic work and penetrating analysis combine here for a unique in-depth look at Cuzco’s historic and sometimes controversial High Academy of the Quechua Language. Highlighting challenges and tensions in ideologies and practices of its founders, members, and programs to the present day, he offers valuable implications not just for Quechua standardization, revitalization and teaching, but for the corpus, status and acquisition planning work of language academies wherever they are found.
Rosaleen Howard, Newcastle University, UK:
This book is a timely and welcome contribution to sociology of language studies. Focusing on Peru, the author explores the relationship between language academies, as ideologically charged institutions, and language policy and planning. His engaging ethnographic study of the inner workings of the Quechua Language Academy of Cuzco turns a spotlight on the complex historical, political and cultural underpinnings of language ideologies in the southern Andes.
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Rodolfo Cerrón-Palomino Requires Authentication Unlicensed Licensed |
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Part 1: Setting The Scene
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Part 2: High Academy of the Quechua Language: Foundations
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Part 3: Inventing Tawantinsuyu and Qhapaq Simi: Ideologies of the HAQL
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Part 4: Empowering Inca Quechua: Language Planning à la HAQL
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Part 5: Spreading the Language of the Apus: Acquisition Planning and Revitalization Struggles
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Appendix 2: Publications Associated with the HAQL Related to Status, Corpus and Acquisition Planning
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