Arabic or Latin: Language Contact and Script Practices

This study discusses the social aspects of script reforms and the hierarchies attached to languages and scripts in contact. In Morocco, Arabic, French, and Berber/Amazigh compete for similar social domains. In recent years, intense debates took place surrounding the official adoption of Tifinagh to...

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Publicado en:Middle East - Topics & Arguments
Autor principal: Soulaimani, Dris
Formato: Artikel (Zeitschrift)
Lenguaje:inglés

Publicado: Philipps-Universität Marburg 2019
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Acceso en línea:Acceso en línea
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Sumario:This study discusses the social aspects of script reforms and the hierarchies attached to languages and scripts in contact. In Morocco, Arabic, French, and Berber/Amazigh compete for similar social domains. In recent years, intense debates took place surrounding the official adoption of Tifinagh to codify Amazigh; however less focus has been placed on the unofficial selection of the French-based Latin characters to write both Arabic and Amazigh. This study argues that, besides practicality, preference of the Latin script in Morocco is ideologically connected to the status of French as a language that indexes power, modernity and social prestige.
DOI:10.17192/meta.2019.13.8080