Multilingual locals and textual circulation before colonialism

Main author: Orsini, Francesca
Other authors: Marzagora, Sara
Laachir, Karima
Format: Journal Article           
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id eprints-26093
recordtype eprints
institution SOAS, University of London
collection SOAS Research Online
language English
language_search English
description Against the nationalist production of monolingual literary histories, this introduction to the special section “Multilingual Locals” urges literary and intellectual historians to “place languages back into dialogue.” Colonialism did not always affect, let alone silence, cultural actors, but it did introduce a language ideology that associated one language to one community, and vice versa. Comparing the precolonial and the colonial period entails looking at multilingual systems, whose internal hierarchies and regional/transnational power dynamics evolved in time, but without reducing the plurality of languages involved. The essay suggests different ways in which we can place languages back into dialogue. One is looking at multilingual traces within a given text; another approach moves beyond the text to explore how multilingual canons and curricula were embodied in individuals or coexisted within the same social space. A third approach is an analysis of circuits and circulation. Finally, multilingualism can be turned into the plural as a study of comparative multilingualisms. Through these and other approaches, we can trace how colonial languages reorganized multilingual language systems but were far from replacing them, contrary to the stated objectives of monolingual nationalist ideologies.
format Journal Article
author Orsini, Francesca
author_facet Orsini, Francesca
Marzagora, Sara
Laachir, Karima
authorStr Orsini, Francesca
author_letter Orsini, Francesca
author2 Marzagora, Sara
Laachir, Karima
author2Str Marzagora, Sara
Laachir, Karima
title Multilingual locals and textual circulation before colonialism
publisher Duke University Press
publishDate 2019
url https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/26093/