Ɂehdzo Got’ı̨nę Gots’ę́ Nákedı
Sahtú Renewable Resources Board

Catalogue

Indigenous Linguistics and Land Claims: The Semiotic Projection of Athabaskan Directionals in Elijah Smith's Radio Work.

Author: Patrick Moore and Daniel Tlen
Publication Year: 2007

The authors discuss a 1985 Southern Tutchone radio broadcast wherein co-performers used deitic spatial terms, placing a listener in relationship to the landscape being discussed, and “spatially evoking the history of the entire region.” (282). The authors contend that the linguistic features of radio performances such as these are linked to social uses and perceptions of place, including land claims and Indigenous rights to land.

Screen Shot 2018 05 01 at 12.33.41 AM

Access this Resource: 

Moore, Patrick and Daniel Tlen. “Indigenous Linguistics and Land Claims: The Semiotic Projection of Athabaskan Directionals in Elijah Smith's Radio Work.” Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 17, no. 2 (December 2007): 266-286.

 

Additional Info

  • Publication Type: Journal Article
  • In Publication: Journal of Linguistic Anthropology
  • Keywords: Language|Land Use|Governance|Radio and Television
Last modified on Monday, 30 April 2018 19:36