Language, race, and identity in Pedro Henriquez Urena's Dominican oeuvre: A study on language ideologies.

Item

Title
Language, race, and identity in Pedro Henriquez Urena's Dominican oeuvre: A study on language ideologies.
Identifier
AAI3325450
identifier
3325450
Creator
Valdez, Juan R.
Contributor
Adviser: Jose del Valle
Date
2008
Language
English
Publisher
City University of New York.
Subject
Language, Linguistics | Hispanic American Studies | Anthropology, Cultural
Abstract
In this dissertation, I have advanced an analysis of the complex interaction between the apparently ideologically neutral vision of Dominican Spanish produced by Pedro Henriquez Urena and contemporary discourses of national identity in which race was a central theme. This type of contextualization (inspired by the school of critical linguistic historiography and language ideological research discussed in chapter two) is necessary if we are to fully understand the meaning and implications of the linguistic component of the great Dominican intellectual's oeuvre. As he engaged in the study of Spanish in Dominican Republic, he unquestionably made a major contribution to Dominican historiography and Spanish America's linguistic history. However, it is crucial to understand that, in the process, he also engaged in the erasure of certain aspects of that reality and in the production of an iconic representation of Dominican Spanish consistent with what the dominant intellectual tradition viewed as the most important component of its national culture: Hispanicness.
Type
dissertation
Source
PQT Legacy CUNY.xlsx
degree
Ph.D.
Item sets
CUNY Legacy ETDs