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Miki Makihara
(PhD Yale University, 1999; Asst Prof) Linguistic anthropology; ethnography
of speaking, discourse analysis, political economy of language, language
ideology, language contact, bilingualism, ethnicity; Polynesia, Pacific
(
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I have
been interested in the use and conception of language and how these relate
to other aspects of social life, and in particular, to social identity,
intergroup relations, and political and economic changes. My research
combines formal linguistic analysis and interpretive ethnography. I am
currently working on the “Rapa Nui Cultural and Linguistic Heritage
Project,” to explore memory, social change, and language through
oral history narratives. This NSF-NEH financed project will also build
community resources for the documentation and revitalization of the Rapa
Nui language by creating a digital archive of oral history narratives.
Selected
publications
- Makihara,
Miki, and Bambi B. Schieffelin (eds.). in press. Consequences of Contact:
Language Ideologies and Sociocultural Transformations in Pacific Societies.
Oxford University Press, 2007.
- 2005
Rapa Nui Ways of Speaking Spanish: Language Shift and Socialization
on Easter Island. Language in Society 34(5): 727–62.
- 2005
Being Rapa Nui, Speaking Spanish: Children’s Voices on Easter
Island. Anthropological Theory 5(2):117–34.
- 2004
Linguistic Syncretism and Language Ideologies: Transforming Sociolinguistic
Hierarchy on Rapa Nui (Easter Island). American Anthropologist 106(3):529–40.
- 2001
Modern Rapanui Adaptation of Spanish Elements. Oceanic Linguistics 40(2):191–222.
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