This paper describes recent efforts to develop and promote a standardized Mixe orthography that can serve as the vehicle of a unified, modern Mixe polity. It then analyzes the guiding assumptions and ideological commitments that have informed these efforts. Ironically, this drive for a single unified spelling system has focused negative attention on precisely those features that distinguish one variety of Mixe from another. Moreover, failure to reach any consensus has frustrated the efforts of Mixe writers and teachers and made it possible for Spanish to gain a greater foothold in Mixe schools. One of the most rancorous debates has involved a certain scandalous diphthong that happens to be an innovation but one that diverges from Spanish phonology. The role of this sound in the sound system of Totontepecano Mixe and its function as an exponent of certain key grammatical distinctions that need to be graphically represented in some fashion has become less of an issue than the indexical linkages between ö and different discourses about the nature of Mixe identity - from whence it comes and how it might continue to remain distinctive.
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2022. Letters of Conversion: Meta‐Alphabetic Discourse and Linguistic Participation in Colonial Highland Guatemala. Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 32:1 ► pp. 28 ff.
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2018. Kichwa or Quichua? Competing Alphabets, Political Histories, and Complicated Reading in Indigenous Languages. Comparative Education Review 62:1 ► pp. 103 ff.
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2014. The annual Day of the Dead song contest: musical‐linguistic ideology and practice, piratability, and the challenge of scale. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 20:2 ► pp. 293 ff.
Watanabe, Noriko
2007. Politics of Japanese Naming Practice: Language Policy and Character Use. Current Issues in Language Planning 8:3 ► pp. 344 ff.
[no author supplied]
2013. Introduction. In Singing for the Dead, ► pp. 1 ff.
[no author supplied]
2013. References. In Singing for the Dead, ► pp. 277 ff.
[no author supplied]
2013. Singing for the Spirits. In Singing for the Dead, ► pp. 105 ff.
[no author supplied]
2013. Revival in the “Land of the Magic Mushroom”. In Singing for the Dead, ► pp. 75 ff.
[no author supplied]
2013. From Revolution to Renaissance. In Singing for the Dead, ► pp. 30 ff.
[no author supplied]
2013. Meeting at the Family Crypt. In Singing for the Dead, ► pp. 174 ff.
[no author supplied]
2013. Scenes from a Nativist Reformation. In Singing for the Dead, ► pp. 141 ff.
[no author supplied]
2013. Notes. In Singing for the Dead, ► pp. 251 ff.
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2013. Conclusion. In Singing for the Dead, ► pp. 236 ff.
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2013. Seeing Double. In Singing for the Dead, ► pp. 197 ff.
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Any errors therein should be reported to them.