Answering the charge?

Pub Date : 2021-10-12 DOI:10.1075/msw.00020.ask
Norunn Askeland
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Abstract

From 1850 to 1980 the Norwegian state pursued a policy of Norwegianization of the Sami, where schools played an important part in the attempt to turn Sami children into Norwegian citizens. Pupils lived in boarding schools where all teaching was in Norwegian and it was forbidden to speak Sami, both in and out of the classroom. This article examines metaphors in three types of material: Norwegian textbooks; Sami literature in these textbooks; and Sami testimony literature. The aim is to find out how the Norwegian state used its power to stigmatize Sami identity through metaphors in textbooks, and how Sami writers show their resistance to Norwegianization through metaphors in Sami literary texts and Sami testimony literature. The analysis also examines whether metaphors are signalled or not, in order to see if they are open to negotiation or taken as self-evident, and if signalling can be related to genre. One central finding is that the Norwegian texts contain more condescending and less signalled metaphors than the Sami ones. Another is that signalling might be related to genre: there are more signalled metaphors in the reflective narratives of witness testimonies than in the other genres that are examined. The theoretical foundations of the analyses are discourse-based metaphor analysis in a post-colonial perspective.
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1850年至1980年,挪威政府推行萨米人的挪威化政策,学校在将萨米儿童转变为挪威公民的努力中发挥了重要作用。学生们住在寄宿学校,那里的所有教学都用挪威语,禁止在教室内外说萨米语。本文考察了三类材料中的隐喻:挪威教科书;这些教科书中的萨米文学;萨米证词文献。目的是了解挪威国家如何利用其权力通过教科书中的隐喻来污蔑萨米人的身份,以及萨米作家如何通过萨米文学文本和萨米证词文学中的隐喻表现出对挪威化的抵制。该分析还考察了隐喻是否被信号化,以了解它们是否对谈判开放或被视为不言自明,以及信号化是否与类型有关。一个核心发现是,挪威语文本比萨米语文本包含更多屈尊俯就的隐喻,信号更少。另一个原因是,信号可能与类型有关:证人证词的反思性叙述中比其他被研究的类型中有更多的信号隐喻。这些分析的理论基础是后殖民主义视角下基于话语的隐喻分析。
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