Transnational practices and language maintenance: Spanish and Zapoteco in California |
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Authors: | P. Zitlali Morales |
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Affiliation: | Department of Curriculum and Instruction, College of Education, University of Illinois at Chicago, 1040 West Harrison Street, MC 147, Chicago, IL 60607, USA |
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Abstract: | The theoretical framework of transnationalism has become more prominent within migration studies, examining how (im)migrants maintain connections with communities in their homeland (Sánchez, P. 2007a. “Cultural Authenticity and Transnational Latina Youth: Constructing a Meta-narrative Across Borders.” Linguistics and Education 18: 258–282). Children's identities are also affected by maintaining ties to their parents’ homeland through language. In California, a group of (im)migrants from Mexico, of Zapotec-speaking backgrounds, were among the families who wanted their children to maintain their Spanish language by enrolling in a dual immersion school. Although California has exhibited anti-immigrant rhetoric and legislated against bilingual education, some programs supporting heritage language maintenance continue to exist. This article presents interview data from 10 students who attended this school and their parents. Students maintained transnational and intergenerational ties to their families and communities in both Mexico and southern California through the maintenance of Spanish, but a subset of students who spoke Zapoteco as a heritage language also valued this language and used it as social capital. |
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Keywords: | transnational identity interviews dual immersion bilingual education indigenous language |
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