TY - JOUR
T1 - ¿Quién tiene derecho a opinar sobre política lingüística en Perú? Un análisis crítico del discurso
AU - Lovón-Cueva, Marco Antonio
AU - Quispe-Lacma, Alexandra Paola
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Universidad de Antioquia.
PY - 2020/9/1
Y1 - 2020/9/1
N2 - In 2007, the project of the "Law that regulates the use, preservation, development, recovery, promotion and diffusion of the native languages of Peru" generated a series of debates and verbal confrontations inside and outside the parliament; among them, the verbal meeting of the ex-congressmen Martha Hildebrandt, opponent of the project, and Maria Sumire, defender of the approval, stood out. Hildebrandt, a linguist by profession, and Sumire, a lawyer by profession and recognized as an indigenous person, gave speeches on self-defense and exclusion. The objective of this article is to analyze the speeches of these congresswomen, which determined the political decision of who had the right to give an opinion on language policy in Peru. The discourses are studied from the critical analysis of the discourse, with a focus on the lexical and discursive strategies employed by the congresswomen in their statements, because through these their ways of thinking are revealed. The results suggest that, in both cases, although in one more than in the other, hierarchical power relations and discriminatory social practices are reproduced.
AB - In 2007, the project of the "Law that regulates the use, preservation, development, recovery, promotion and diffusion of the native languages of Peru" generated a series of debates and verbal confrontations inside and outside the parliament; among them, the verbal meeting of the ex-congressmen Martha Hildebrandt, opponent of the project, and Maria Sumire, defender of the approval, stood out. Hildebrandt, a linguist by profession, and Sumire, a lawyer by profession and recognized as an indigenous person, gave speeches on self-defense and exclusion. The objective of this article is to analyze the speeches of these congresswomen, which determined the political decision of who had the right to give an opinion on language policy in Peru. The discourses are studied from the critical analysis of the discourse, with a focus on the lexical and discursive strategies employed by the congresswomen in their statements, because through these their ways of thinking are revealed. The results suggest that, in both cases, although in one more than in the other, hierarchical power relations and discriminatory social practices are reproduced.
KW - Critical discourse analysis
KW - Discursive strategies
KW - Language policy
KW - Lexical strategies
KW - Linguistic discrimination
KW - Quechua
KW - Spanish
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85092062117
U2 - 10.17533/udea.ikala.v25n03a12
DO - 10.17533/udea.ikala.v25n03a12
M3 - Artículo
AN - SCOPUS:85092062117
SN - 0123-3432
VL - 25
SP - 733
EP - 751
JO - Ikala
JF - Ikala
IS - 3
ER -