Article published In: Journal of Language and Sexuality
Vol. 8:1 (2019) ► pp.53–81
National identity and belonging among gay ‘new speakers’ of Irish
Published online: 7 March 2019
https://doi.org/10.1075/jls.18008.wal
https://doi.org/10.1075/jls.18008.wal
Abstract
‘New speakers’ refer to people who use a language regularly but are not traditional ‘native’ speakers of that
language. Although this discussion has been going on for some time in other sub-disciplines of linguistics, it is more recent in
research about European minoritised languages. A feature of discourse around such languages relates to their perceived suitability
for diverse urban settings removed from their historical rural heartlands. Irish is an example of a minoritised language which was
long associated with conservative rural communities, a reified Catholic discourse of national identity and language ideologies
based on nativism. Such an approach not only marginalised urban new speakers of Irish but also exhibited hostility to LGBTQ
citizens who did not befit its particular version of Irishness. In this paper, a framework of Critical Sociolinguistics is used to
analyse identity positions and ideologies expressed by urban new speakers of Irish who identify as gay and/or queer.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Context of Irish language and Irish national identity
- 2.1The minoritisation of Irish
- 2.2The Irish language, queerness and national identity
- 3.Theoretical framework
- 3.1Critical Sociolinguistics
- 3.2Queer Linguistics
- 4.Methodology and analysis
- 5.Sexual, linguistic and national identity among gay new speakers of Irish
- 5.1Tensions around historical ideologies of national identity
- 5.2Hierarchies of Irish-speaking and gay identities
- 6.Discussion
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
- Transcription conventions
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