The use of Spanish in the linguistic landscape of a small Canadian town

María Eugenia de Luna Villalón

Abstract


In Canada the presence of one, other, or both of the official languages of the country implies the demographic presence of a particular ethnolinguistic group, either Anglophones or Francophones, in a specific region. However, Canada is also a multicultural country with a varied ethnolinguistic population where the presence or absence of a non-official language seems to reflect the strength or weakness of an ethnolinguistic group within the society (Landry & Bourhis, 1997; Huebner, 2006). With an ethnographic and sociolinguistics approach, this study shows that in Leamington, Ontario, there is a multilingual landscape and that the use of Spanish in different, but specific, domains manifests the existence of subjective ethnolinguistic vitality of a group, Mexican agricultural temporary workers, that has been institutionally discriminated and perceived as inexistent and socially invisible.

Keywords


linguistic landscapes; literacy; Canada; sociolinguistics; languages in contact



DOI: https://doi.org/10.22201/enallt.01852647p.2013.58.438

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