Written language shift among Norwegian youth

In Norvvay there are tvvo vvritten Norwegian languages, Bokmâl and Nynorsk. Of these tvvo written languages Bokmâl is being used by the majority of the people, and Bokmâl has the highest prestige in the society. This article is about the shift of written language from Nynorsk to Bokmâl among young p...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kamil Ozerk, Jon Todal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Kura Publishing 2013-07-01
Series:International Electronic Journal of Elementary Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://iejee.com/index.php/IEJEE/article/view/27/21
_version_ 1828024496355803136
author Kamil Ozerk
Jon Todal
author_facet Kamil Ozerk
Jon Todal
author_sort Kamil Ozerk
collection DOAJ
description In Norvvay there are tvvo vvritten Norwegian languages, Bokmâl and Nynorsk. Of these tvvo written languages Bokmâl is being used by the majority of the people, and Bokmâl has the highest prestige in the society. This article is about the shift of written language from Nynorsk to Bokmâl among young people in a traditional Nynorsk district in the country. Drawing on empirical data we conclude that many adolescents are experiencing written language shift. We discuss various reasons for this phenomenon in the linguistic landscape of Norway. İn our discussions we emphasize the importance of the school with regard to language maintenance and language revitalization. We cali for a new language policy in the educational system that can prevent language shift. Having several dialects and two officially written forms of Norwegian in the country, creates a special linguistic landscape in Norway. Despite the fact that the Norwegian language situation is in several vvays unique, it's done very little research on hovv the existing policy vvorks in practice. Our research reveals that the existing language policy and practice in the school system is not povverful enough to prevent language shift and language decay among the youngsters. The school system functions like a fabric for language shift.
first_indexed 2024-04-10T12:45:26Z
format Article
id doaj.art-8590dea8eaad455085e22adcfa7e6775
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1307-9298
1307-9298
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-10T12:45:26Z
publishDate 2013-07-01
publisher Kura Publishing
record_format Article
series International Electronic Journal of Elementary Education
spelling doaj.art-8590dea8eaad455085e22adcfa7e67752023-02-15T16:14:05ZengKura PublishingInternational Electronic Journal of Elementary Education1307-92981307-92982013-07-0153285300Written language shift among Norwegian youthKamil Ozerk0Jon Todal1University of Oslo & Sami University CollegeSami University CollegeIn Norvvay there are tvvo vvritten Norwegian languages, Bokmâl and Nynorsk. Of these tvvo written languages Bokmâl is being used by the majority of the people, and Bokmâl has the highest prestige in the society. This article is about the shift of written language from Nynorsk to Bokmâl among young people in a traditional Nynorsk district in the country. Drawing on empirical data we conclude that many adolescents are experiencing written language shift. We discuss various reasons for this phenomenon in the linguistic landscape of Norway. İn our discussions we emphasize the importance of the school with regard to language maintenance and language revitalization. We cali for a new language policy in the educational system that can prevent language shift. Having several dialects and two officially written forms of Norwegian in the country, creates a special linguistic landscape in Norway. Despite the fact that the Norwegian language situation is in several vvays unique, it's done very little research on hovv the existing policy vvorks in practice. Our research reveals that the existing language policy and practice in the school system is not povverful enough to prevent language shift and language decay among the youngsters. The school system functions like a fabric for language shift.https://iejee.com/index.php/IEJEE/article/view/27/21Language PlanningLanguage ShiftLanguageLangauge RevitalizationBilingualismBiliterate
spellingShingle Kamil Ozerk
Jon Todal
Written language shift among Norwegian youth
International Electronic Journal of Elementary Education
Language Planning
Language Shift
Language
Langauge Revitalization
Bilingualism
Biliterate
title Written language shift among Norwegian youth
title_full Written language shift among Norwegian youth
title_fullStr Written language shift among Norwegian youth
title_full_unstemmed Written language shift among Norwegian youth
title_short Written language shift among Norwegian youth
title_sort written language shift among norwegian youth
topic Language Planning
Language Shift
Language
Langauge Revitalization
Bilingualism
Biliterate
url https://iejee.com/index.php/IEJEE/article/view/27/21
work_keys_str_mv AT kamilozerk writtenlanguageshiftamongnorwegianyouth
AT jontodal writtenlanguageshiftamongnorwegianyouth