Multilingua
Volume 2015, 2015

Migrants' alternative multi-lingua franca spaces as emergent re-producers of exclusionary monolingual nation-state regimes (Article)

Dalmau M.S.*
  • a Universitat de Lleida, English and Linguistics Department, Plaça Víctor Siurana 1 Despatx 2.20, Lleida, Catalonia, 25003, Spain

Abstract

From a critical sociolinguistic perspective, this article investigates the written linguistic practices of 20 labor migrants from heterogeneous backgrounds who organized their life trajectories in an 'ethnic' call shop in a marginal neighborhood near Barcelona. This was a late capitalist institution informally providing the undocumented with survival resources off the radar from governmental authorities. By drawing on interviews and visual materials gathered over a two-year fieldwork project, I report on the amalgamations of allochthonous and autochthonous codes which function as the multi-lingua franca of these alternative shelters, which have now colonized the globalized urban landscape. I argue that these translinguistic practices speak of the ethnolinguistic identities with which migrants try to secure subsistence. I show, though, that transnational populations simultaneously map their in-group codes upon a unified floor where the use of only global Spanish is fostered. Users sanction their linguistic hybridity and self-correct into hegemonic standard norms which index 'integration' and fully-fledged citizenship statuses, delegitimizing their linguistic capitals. I conclude that the migrants' grassroots mobilization of both linguistic resistance and regimentation within a single discursive space where exclusionary sociolinguistic orders could be contested uniquely unveils the ways in which they challenge, but paradoxically re-produce, the monolingual nation-state regimes of their host society.

Author Keywords

Migration Multi-lingua francas Linguistic regimes 'ethnic' call shops Catalonia

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84990842342&doi=10.1515%2fmulti-2014-0097&partnerID=40&md5=b092a3ad811d38cc24a37724d66963be

DOI: 10.1515/multi-2014-0097
ISSN: 01678507
Original Language: English