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Handbook of Language and Ethnic Identity

Handbook of Language and Ethnic Identity. Ch 21: The Slavic World By Miroslav Hroch. Linguistic: West: Poles, Czechs, Slovaks, Sorbs East: Russians, Ukrainians, Belarusians South: Slovenes, Croats, Serbs, Macedonians, Bulgarians. Religious:

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Handbook of Language and Ethnic Identity

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  1. Handbook of Language and Ethnic Identity Ch 21: The Slavic World By Miroslav Hroch

  2. Linguistic: West: Poles, Czechs, Slovaks, Sorbs East: Russians, Ukrainians, Belarusians South: Slovenes, Croats, Serbs, Macedonians, Bulgarians Religious: Catholic/Protestant: West Slavs + Ruthenians (Greek Catholics), Croats, Slovenes Orthodox: East Slavs + Serbs, Bulgarians, Macedonians Muslim: (some) Bosnians Divisions among Slavs

  3. Neighbors among the Slavs • Balts: Lithuanians, Latvians • Finno-Ugric: Hungarians, Estonians • Romance: Romanians • Albanians

  4. Pre-nationalist empires • The Slavs inhabited three multiethnic empires with three administrative languages: • Tsarist Russia (Russian) • Ottoman (Turkish) • Habsburg (German) • Except for the Russians • All Slavs had a national revival • Slavic languages codified early 19th c • Slavs were primarily low status, lacking political power

  5. Czechs • Czech language was used as a literary/administrative language 14th-16th c • Late 17th c Czech was replaced by German in public sphere, upper classes Germanized • Early 19th c Dobrovský writes grammar of Czech “for posterity”; Jungmann demands rights for Czech language; Czechs come to understand themselves as a nation in mid-19th c

  6. Slovaks • Upper classes were mainly Magyarized or Germanized • Since 16th c Czech was used as literary language • Ethnic identity divided between Magyar (1000 yrs in that kingdom), Czech (Protestants), Slovak (Catholics) • 1840s Ludovit Stur creates literary Slovak, but it does not gain real status until Czechoslovakia is established in 1918

  7. Sorbs • A small group (approx 40-100K) in the eastern part of Germany, differentiated into two linguistic varieties • Upper Sorbian (larger, closer to Czech) • Lower Sorbian (smaller closer to Polish) • Agitated for recognition in 19th c, did have some protections under East Germany (DDR), but all speakers are now bilingual and language is threatened

  8. Croatians • Kingdom was joined to Hungary (Latin), Dalmatian part also used Italian • 16th-17th c first literary publications in Croatian • Most Croats speak a dialect shared with Serbian; 1850 agreement on common “Serbo-Croatian” written in two scripts • 20thc rejection of Serbian dominance, since 1980s independent Croatian state and language overemphasizing differences from Serbian

  9. Serbs • Orthodox Church – an essential component of identity • Ottoman empire late 14th-19thc, followed by independent Serbia • Vuk Karadzic led movement for “Greater Serbia” stressing linguistic identity

  10. Slovenes • 1840s a group of SSl dialects in the Alps formed the basis for a literary language • Previously weak ethnic identity based on local valleys, strong tendency toward assimilation • Late 19thc national mobilization; part of Yugoslavia in most of 20thc; now separate state

  11. Bulgarians • 9thc conversion to Orthodoxy and use of Old (Church) Slavonic, followed by Greek assimilation under Ottoman Empire • 1860s formation of literary language mostly based on E dialects; 1878 Bulgarian nation/state emerges • Continuing struggles over what/who is/isn’t Bulgarian (in Greece, Macedonia, Serbia)

  12. Macedonians • Macedonian nationalism begins with establishment of Bulgarian state • Macedonians: we are independent • Bulgarians: no, they are West Bulgarians • Greeks: no, Macedonia is part of Greece • Serbs: no, they are Bulgarized Serbs • Macedonian literary lang est in 20thc, a republic of Yugoslavia and now an independent state

  13. Poles • Medieval Poland-Lithuana used Polish & Latin • Polish nationalism emerges when Poland is divided by conquerors (Prussia, Russia, Austria), under assimilation pressures (Germanification, Russification) • Cultural support from wealthy Polish diaspora in W Europe

  14. Ukrainians • After dissolution of Poland-Lithuania, Ukrainian territory divided among Habsburg and Russian empires • Russians regard them as “Little Russians”, but Austrians allowed “Ruthens” to develop their culture • Ukraine is big, literary language based on central dialects • After 1917, most of Ukraine was in USSR, subject to Russification, remainder in Poland was later seized by USSR, patriots were persecuted

  15. Russians • Literary/administrative language since middle ages, Russian state since 15thc • Since late 19thc (under tsar and continued in USSR) Russification of non-Russian ethnic groups in the multiethnic empire

  16. Summary Three Empires: • Habsburg: Germanification until 1860s, some improvements thereafter • Ottoman: Identity keyed to religion, not language • Russian: Persecution of non-Russians: Ukrainian & Belarusian considered dialects, Polish persecuted for political reasons, but slavophiles supported other W and S Slavs

  17. Summary, cont’d. • Czechs & Poles had literary languages since middle ages • Others had to codify literary language based on one or more dialects • National movements “purified” languages, distinguished them from ruling state or old church languages • Strong identity of language with social status and strong identification of ethnicity and language

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