Online Journals Home   Publisher Information   Journals Info   Subscription information 

Current Issues In Language Planning
Polity Editors: Robert B. Kaplan (University of Southern California), Richard B. Baldauf Jr. (University of Queensland) and Nkonko Kamwangamalu (Howard University)
Bob and Dick are also editors of the book series Language Policy and Planning


Volume: 2  Number: 2  Page: 259–267

Language Revitalisation and Reversal in Mozambique: The Case of Xironga in Maputo
Armando Jorge Lopes

Language revitalisation and language reversal are two important operations of language revival as a language-planning goal. This paper looks at revitalisation efforts regarding Xironga, a Bantu language spoken by 600,000 people (2.8% of the country's total population) in thesouthernregion, andespecially in Maputo City, thecapital of Mozambique. An increasing awarenessofthepotential threat to Xironga hasledto a fewrevitalisation initiatives in the past decade, thus beginning the reversal of the cross-generational shift trend from Xironga monolingualism or Xironga bilingualism (together with Portuguese, the official language) to Portuguese monolingualism. This paper equally looks at circumstances in whichXironga hasrecently begun to be usedmoreprominently, especially as a legal working language by the Maputo Municipal Council Assembly authorities. Implications for language-planning theory within a maintenance-oriented framework are also presented.

© Multilingual Matters 2001

Full text PDF


Quick search...