Valencian linguistic conflict

The Valencian linguistic conflict,[1][2][3][4][5] also known as Valencian sociolinguist conflict,[1] is a term coined by the Valencian sociolinguist Rafael Ninyoles i Monllor in his 1969 work Conflicte lingüístic valencià.[6] The term refers to the conflict, more or less explicit between the spheres of use of the Spanish and Valencian language in the Land of Valencia.[6]

During the Battle of Valencia (1978-1982) the term was used to refer to a controversy about the entity of the Valencian and its relationship with the other speechs of the Catalan language,[3][7][6] this discussion, despite being so popular in medias to arrive to superimpose other issues,[6] is considered to be secondary when compared to the true undertone of the Valencian language controversy: the institutional minorisation of the Valencian language and the preeminence of the Spanish language in the Land of Valencia.[6][4]

Coinage of the concept

The Valencian sociolinguist Rafael Ninyoles i Monllor coined the term linguistic conflict by the end of the 1960s[6] to refer to certain diglossic situations, such as the Valencian one.[4] In his late works, he described the process of the ongoing substitution of Valencian by Castilian by social elites and the resulting loss of prestige of the vernacular language.

See also

References

Bibliography

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