Article published In: Ideologías lingüísticas y el español en contexto histórico
Edited by José del Valle and Elvira Narvaja de Arnoux
[Spanish in Context 7:1] 2010
► pp. 25–45
Language policy and the drawing of social boundaries
Public and private schools in territorial Tucson
Published online: 8 April 2010
https://doi.org/10.1075/sic.7.1.02dub
https://doi.org/10.1075/sic.7.1.02dub
Educational institutions developed in Tucson, Arizona in the last quarter of the nineteenth century, during a critical time in cultural and political shifts of power between Anglo and Mexican elites in Southwestern United States. My qualitative analysis reconstructs language policies in the incipient educational system in Territorial Tucson. This article examines official and unofficial language policies in both public and private schools in Tucson that reflected this accommodation of power and the negotiation of a new racial hierarchy in the context of westward expansion. I argue that the private schools Mexican elites founded in this period maintained bilingual instruction and promoted biliteracy as a means of racially and linguistically distancing themselves from Anglos, Indians and Mexicans from lower socioeconomic classes in public schools.
Keywords: language policy, linguistic ideologies, race, Arizona, education
Cited by (4)
Cited by four other publications
McMartin, Charles
Chávez-Moreno, Laura C.
Chávez-Moreno, Laura C.
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