Author:
Büscher Karen,D'hondt Sigurd,Meeuwis Michael
Abstract
AbstractThis article describes discursive processes by which inhabitants of the Congolese border town Goma attribute new indexical values to Lingala, a language exogenous to the area of which most Goma inhabitants only possess limited knowledge. This creative reconfiguration of indexicalities results in the emergence of three “indexicalities of the second order”: the indexing of (i) being a true Congolese, (ii) toughness (based on Lingala's association with the military), and (iii) urban sophistication (based on its association with the capital Kinshasa). While the last two second-order reinterpretations are also widespread in other parts of the Congolese territory, the first one, resulting in the emergence of a Lingala as an “indexical icon” of a corresponding “language community,” deeply reflects local circumstances and concerns, in particular the sociopolitical volatility of the Rwandan-Congolese borderland that renders publicly affirming one's status as an “autochthonous” Congolese pivotal for assuring a livelihood and at times even personal security. (Lingala, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Goma, orders of indexicality, language community, autochthony, Kiswahili)*
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Sociology and Political Science,Language and Linguistics
Reference58 articles.
1. Vlassenroot Koen , & Karen Büscher (2009). Urban development and identity processes in Goma (Crisis States Research Papers, Working Paper 61). London: Crisis States Research Centre.
2. “The smuggling of La Francophonie”: Francophone Africans in Anglophone Cape Town (South Africa)
3. The Emergence of Lingala in Bukavu, Zaïre
4. Etat des langues et langues de l'Etat au Zaïre;Ngalasso;Politique Africaine,1986
Cited by
35 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献