Barbra A. Meek, Ph.D.
Affiliations: | 2001 | University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ |
Area:
Variation in the Tohono O'odham language in relation to O'odham adaptation; language and identity, especially selfÂconstruction in narrative; discourse in classical and colonial Nahuatl; semiotics; language ideology; race and racismGoogle:
"Barbra Meek"Parents
Sign in to add mentorJane H. Hill | grad student | 2001 | University of Arizona | |
(Kaska language socialization, acquisition and shift.) |
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Publications
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Meek BA. (2022) "At risk" languages and the road to recovery: a case from the Yukon. Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development. 43: 228-242 |
Meek BA. (2014) "She can do it in English too": Acts of intimacy and boundary-making in language revitalization Language and Communication. 38: 73-82 |
Meek BA. (2011) Failing American Indian languages American Indian Culture and Research Journal. 35: 43-60 |
Meek BA. (2010) Dreaming in... English?: The complexity and unexpectedness of japanese being and becoming through language Critical Asian Studies. 42: 256-264 |
Meek BA. (2010) We are our language We Are Our Language. 1-202 |
Meek BA. (2009) Language ideology and aboriginal language revitalization in the Yukon, Canada Native American Language Ideologies. 151-171 |
Meek BA. (2007) Respecting the language of elders: Ideological shift and linguistic discontinuity in a northern Athapascan community Journal of Linguistic Anthropology. 17: 23-43 |
Meek BA, Messing J. (2007) Framing indigenous languages as secondary to matrix languages Anthropology and Education Quarterly. 38: 99-118 |