AFSA01H3 Lecture Notes - Lecture 8: Arab League, Diglossia, Semitic Languages

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Language and identity in the maghreb: what does it mean to be an arab, ma(cid:374)(cid:455) i(cid:374) afri(cid:272)a do(cid:374)"t (cid:449)a(cid:374)t to (cid:271)e (cid:272)alled a(cid:374) ara(cid:271). Who counts as an arab: nobody can give you an exact answer, it is a social construct that depends of the time asked, delinking between language and identity. The arabic language: a semitic language, written right to left, short vowels are not usually marked down in writing, characterized by diglossia. Diglossia: refers to the co-existence of two varieties of the same language in a community, each has a different function and used in a different domain. First used in the context of arabic by the french linguist william marcals in 1930. Made popular by charles ferguson in 1959. Islam: pre-conquest contact with arabs, urbanization, migration & assimilation. Language shift: the process whereby a speech community abandons its language and shifts to speaking another language: bilingualism: the use of two languages in a community.

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