民族性、垄断性封闭、不断变化的语言暗示和反抗性:历史化

Charles Okeke Okoko, K. Oforji, Cosmas Ikechukwu Ahamefule, Benson Mgbowaji Romokere
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摘要

尼日利亚聚集在一起的少数民族使用的语言出现了垄断性封闭。这些关闭是政治、语言、社会宗教和定居模式。关于定居模式,来自特定种族群体的尼日利亚人倾向于聚集在城市中心的特定区域居住。例如,在冰岛的豪萨区(Ama Awusa)或加里基区;尼日利亚北部的Sabon Gari(东尼日利亚人,特别是伊博人居住在卡诺的地方);尼日利亚中部地带的芒奇人(来自蒂夫兰或蒂夫);约鲁巴兰的Omumini ajaokuta(指的是伊博人,可以不喝水而吃石头的人);和Ndi ofe manu,伊博人指约鲁巴人。同样每天都有垄断性的闭语,比如伊博青年说的“I bi Warri pikin”(我是瓦里青年)和“Ima kwa ndi anyi bu”(你知道我们是谁吗)。个人和团体用他们的语言制造障碍和垄断关闭,通过对感知的,真实的或想象的边缘化的声音暗示,当多数主义和少数主义的概念被尼日利亚的政治精英夸大时,这种现象变得普遍。最糟糕的情况出现在比夫拉-尼日利亚内战之后,当时在伊博、华萨/富拉尼和约鲁巴人占多数的保护伞下,伊博人一直是尼日利亚的多数群体,但由于南南和南南东部所有少数群体的联合,伊博人被淹没为少数群体。从那以后,伊博人大声疾呼要被边缘化。该文件的结论是,尼日利亚政治和社会经济形势中的事件是出于种族和政治动机;并且临床上以语言和他们的使用者为基础。这篇论文是用第一手资料写成的,而第二手资料则起到辅助和补充的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Ethnicity, Monopolistic Closure, Shifting Inuendoes of Language and Restiveness: A Historicization
Languages spoken by the agglomerating ethnic groups in Nigeria instanced monopolistic closures. These closures were political, linguistic, socio-religious and settlement patterns. Regarding settlement patterns, Nigerians from particular ethnic groups tended to aggregate to live in defined patches of urban centres. For instance, are the Hausa quarters (Ama Awusa) or the Gariki in Igboland; Sabon Gari (where peoples from Eastern Nigeria or, particularly, the Igbo lived in Kano) in Northern Nigeria; the Munchi (from Tivland or the Tiv) in the Middle Belt of Nigeria; the Omumini ajaokuta (those who could eat stone without drinking water, referring to the Igbo) in Yorubaland; and Ndi ofe manu, referring to the Yoruba by the Igbo. There were equally day-to-day spoken monopolistic closures, such as “I bi Warri pikin” (I am a Warri youth) and “Ima kwa ndi anyi bu” (Do you know who we are by Igbo youths). Individuals and groups used their spoken languages to create barriers and monopolistic closures through voiced innuendoes against perceived, real or imagined marginalization, which became rife when the majoritarian and minoritarian concepts were blown out of proportion by Nigeria’s political elite. A worst-case closure manifested after the Biafra-Nigeria Civil War, when the Igbo, a hitherto majority group in the then Nigerian tripod of the Igbo, Huasa/Fulani and Yoruba majoritarian(s) umbrella became drowned into a minority through a gang-up of all the minority groups in the South-south and the South-south east. Ever since, the Igbo cried out to be marginalized. The paper concluded that the events in the political and socio-economic landscape of Nigeria were ethnically and politically motivated; and clinically underpinned by languages and their speakers. The paper was written with primary sources while secondary sources served subsidiary and complementary purposes.
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