The making of Irish-speaking Ireland: The cultural politics of belonging, diversity and power
Date
2012Author
Warren, Simon
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Warren, S. (2012) 'The making of Irish-speaking Ireland: The cultural politics of belonging, diversity and power'. Ethnicities, 12 (3):317-334.
Abstract
This paper is about linguistic justice issues in the post-colonial context of an Irish-speaking
region in the south-west of Ireland, drawing on a study of political mobilization around the
Irish-medium education policy of the region s secondary school. I explore how the incip-
ient Irish state was involved in a nationalizing project of developing strategies to consti-
tute the Irish polity into a particular nation bound by an language of archaic belonging .
I then examine how this nationalizing project was disrupted by structural shifts in the
economic and demographic basis for the Irish-speaking communities on the Irish western
seaboard. It is in this historical context that the Irish language emerges as a necessary
nodal point around which political identity is formed. Local linguistic struggles are con-
ceived as attempts to impose particular kinds of order on a field of meaning.