عنوان المقالة: The Sociolinguistic Situation of Northern Bahr el Ghazal State (South Sudan): A Case Study of Aweil Town
سوسن عبد العزيز محمد ناشد | Sawsan Abdel Aziz Mohammed Nashid | 1797
نوع النشر
أطروحة دكتوراه
المؤلفون بالعربي
المؤلفون بالإنجليزي
Nashid, Sawsan Abdel Aziz Mohammed
الملخص الانجليزي
This study aims at investigating the sociolinguistic situation in Northern Bahr el Ghazal State in South Sudan focusing on Aweil Town. It is a language survey that attempts to describe language acquisition, knowledge, use and attitude through a number of indictors/ independent variables (age, sex, education, religion, parents’ profession, respondents’ residential area, family residential area, displacement, ethnic origin and place of birth). This is in order to make conclusion on the present situation as well as the future trends of sociolinguistic development in the area under study. The study being of mainly quantitative nature, it adopts the descriptive-analytical method. It essentially rests on primary data collected through four tools: a twenty-five questionnaire items were administered to 846 respondents, three focus group discussions held with 12 participants, in-depth interviews with 31 persons with different ages, jobs and ethnic backgrounds, in Aweil, Juba, Wau and Khartoum and participants observations. Descriptive statistical technique was used to make frequency tables of variables and statistical analytical techniques were also used to investigate the associations between different variables. Hence, cross tabulation was used to examine the associations between different variables and binary logistic regression model is used to estimate the effect of independent variables (collectively) on a dependent variables. The data were processed using SPSS (version 20) whereas the qualitative data were processed manually. The study came with a number of findings, the most important of which were: Dinka is the 6 most commonly acquired language as L1 and dominantly used at home, at public domains and story telling. Arabic and English are the commonly acquired languages as L2 and L3, respectively; Arabic- besides MT- is often used at home and at public domains. These findings stand as an indicator of language change, especially among young generations since some functions of the indigenous languages are carried by Arabic and English. In language attitude, the study revealed a higher preference of Arabic and English by respondents for their children, mainly for practical reasons (e.g. jobs) and status. So, the South Sudanese indigenous languages are ultimately endangered since the power-relations and the production-relations are not in their favour. In the light of the above findings, the study recommends that strong measures should be taken to enhance the status of South Sudanese languages to increase their values in the linguistic market by using them in more formal domains and in education. As areas for further studies, the study suggests conducting sociolinguistic surveys to draw a sociolinguistic profile of South Sudan in order to develop language policies representing the ethno-linguistic diversity of the country.
تاريخ النشر
04/01/2014
رقم المجلد
رقم العدد
الصفحات
411
الكلمات المفتاحية
soicioinguistic situation
رجوع