Publications

Publication details [#62484]

Emerine Hicks, Rachel. 2017. From multilingualism to bilingualism: changes in language use, language value, and social mobility among Engdewu speakers in the Solomon Islands. Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development 38 (10) : 857–870.
Publication type
Article in journal
Publication language
English
Language as a subject
Place, Publisher
Routledge

Annotation

On the island of Santa Cruz in the Solomon Islands, the Engdewu language is facing imminent language shift because of the growing use of the lingua franca Solomon Islands Pijin in the community. This paper asserts that this language shift is occurring because of changes to the social structure in Baemawz, one of the villages where Engdewu is spoken. The social structure is altering in two ways. First, because of the desire for economic advancement, people migrate off the island more often than in the past introducing them to the value of Pijin as a language for social and economic mobility. Second, intermarriage patterns are moving away from patrilocality to neolocality; husbands can now move into their wives’ village bringing with them their local language. These changes influence the values that Engdewu and Pijin have in the community and the way these languages are employed amid children and adults leading to replacive bilingualism in a historically multilingual society.