Programs in Anthropology are excited to announce a special ITS Workshop on January 29th at 12:30 to celebrate the launch of Professor Nicholas Limerick's book, Recognizing Indigenous Languages: Double Binds of State Policy and Teaching Kichwa in Ecuador.
This is a hybrid event. Please join us in-person in 281 Grace Dodge Hall or online at https://teacherscollege.zoom.us/j/99186251807.
What follows when state institutions name historically oppressed languages as official? What happens when bilingual education activists gain the right to coordinate schooling from upper-level state offices? The intercultural bilingual school system in Ecuador has been one of the most prominent examples of Indigenous education in Central and South America. Since its establishment in 1988, members of Ecuador’s pueblos and nationalities have worked from state institutions to coordinate a second national school system that includes the teaching of Indigenous languages. Based on more than two years of ethnographic research in Ecuador’s Ministry of Education, at international and national conferences, in workshops, in schools, and with families, Recognizing Indigenous Languages considers how state agents carry out linguistic and educational politics in eras of greater inclusivity and multiculturalism. This book shows how institutional advances for bilingual education and Indigenous languages have been premised on affirming the equality—and the equivalency—of the linguistic and cultural practices of members of Indigenous pueblos and nationalities with other Ecuadorians. Major responsibilities like serving as national state agents, crafting a standardized variety of Kichwa, and teaching Indigenous languages in schools provide vast authority, representation, and visibility for those languages and their speakers. However, the everyday work of directing a school system and making Kichwa a language of the state includes double binds that work against the very goals of autonomous schooling and getting people to speak and write Kichwa.
Nicholas Limerick is an Associate Professor of Anthropology and Education at Teachers College, Columbia University, where he also holds an appointment in the International & Comparative Education program. His new book can be found here.