Published October 1, 2012 | Version v1
Journal article Open

TOWARD AN IDENTITY STRESS : Language and religious affiliations of an immigrant adolescent in Norway

Authors/Creators

  • 1. Plidam, Inalco

Description

This paper explores the usefulness of different languages in determining and shaping the notions of identity of a second-generation immigrant adolescent in Norway. This research is part of a doctoral study based on the sociolinguistic ethnographic method of inquiry on an Indian immigrant family. The verbal repertoire of the Norwegian informant includes many languages and each of the languages contributes to different meanings in the construction of the informant's identity. The informant's language practices are influenced by the language ideologies of his parents, who endeavor to maintain the culture and languages of their country of origin. One of the core issues for the family members is the perseverance of their religion and hence a religious identity is manifested in the narratives of the informant. Besides, a lack of adequate language competencies in parental languages and a desire to maintain the culture of origin in the family premises, the young adolescent shows signs of identity stress.

Files

Haque2012.pdf

Files (322.6 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:75854a5bd44b0bff2187995bf4c2d671
322.6 kB Preview Download