Cajun French -- Full Linguistics' Circle
-
Upload
richard-binkney-phd -
Category
Education
-
view
3.224 -
download
3
description
Transcript of Cajun French -- Full Linguistics' Circle
The Full Linguistics’ Circle of French Cajun
Birth – Assimilation – Recovery
Richard Binkney, Ph.D.
Binkney 2
The Full Linguistics’ Circle of French Cajun -- Birth - Assimilation - Recovery
Two modern linguistics researchers, Carlsen and Voegelin & Voegelin), estimate that from a
peak of 20,000 languages there are approximately 6,000 – 7,000 extant languages spoken in the world
today. The Enduring Voices video presentation indicates that every 14 days another language dies on
this planet; and, it is predicted that by the year 2100 one-half of the existing languages will be dead also.
Turin reports that 476 million of the world’s illiterate people speak minority languages and live in
countries where children are for the most part not taught to read, write, and speak in their mother
tongue (62).
Many linguistics experts, including Crystal and Valdman, have placed the French Cajun language
of Louisiana on the list of endangered or dying languages. In fact, Canagarajah reports that Jerah
Johnson even predicted the precise time of the disappearance of the Cajun language as 2010! Of
course, his prediction-- made 23 years ago, has not come true. The focus of this paper is two-fold: First,
this research will examine the origin of the unique French Cajun language and will study its assimilation
by the dominant language of the United States of America. Second, this research will trace the rare
sociolinguistic triumph of what the French Cajuns in Louisiana have done to reverse the decline of their
minority language and to resist the typical trend of linguistic assimilation by the monster ‘language killer’
– American English. This research will go full circle in linguistics’ inquiry: birth, assimilation, and
recovery of the French Cajun language in modern-day Louisiana.
The Cajun language of today is a rich mixture of French, Native Indian, Haitian, Creole, and
English which is spoken primarily in the southwestern “prairie” of Louisiana. According to “The Cajun
Country” online article, the State of Louisiana’s Department of Recreation, Culture, and Tourism defines
“Cajun Country” as “lying within a triangle whose base is the Louisiana coast and whose apex is near
Alexandria in the central part of the state.” This geographical territory is called the “Cajun homeland,”
Binkney 3
which includes: Avoyelles Parish, Evangeline Parish, Lafourche Parish, Acadia Parish, Jeff Davis Parish,
Cameron Parish, and Vermillion Parish.
Linguistically, the Cajun French of today finds its origin in the Acadian language as descended
from the mixture of dialects found in the provinces or kingdoms of Anjou and Poitou during the days of
the French crown. The history of Cajun French as a culture dates back to the period of time when the
early British colonial setters were leaving England for religious reasons to come to the newly discovered
lands in America (e.g., Jamestown, 1607). Interestingly, at almost the same period of time in European
history, this group of Catholic families in the ancestral estate region also left their homeland to avoid
religious persecution. Both Daigle and Dartz report that these generationally devout French Roman
Catholics sailed west, landing eventually in the Canadian settlement of Port Royal in Acadia, currently
known as Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia. The new land in Canada was called Acadia by the French, after
the Greek word Arcadia- - the mythical land of beauty and wonderment found on the Peloponnesian
Peninsula of Greece. The Canadian new French frontier was renamed Nova Scotia (New Scotland). The
“Cajun French” online article indicates that the word ‘Cajun’ is described as being an Anglicization of
‘Cadien,’ which, in turn, is a shortened and softer pronunciation of ‘Acadien.”
According to Daigle, these French Catholics wanted desperately to keep and maintain their
French language, religion, customs, and traditions. They tried to live in peace with their English-
speaking neighbors in their newly adopted homes in North America; however, religious persecution
against the Roman Catholics followed them, for the second time. According to “The Cajun French”
history, “The British repeatedly raided the Acadians: killing inhabitants, stealing their farm animals and
grain, and burning their homes, barns, and churches.” They lived in the Quebec area with this terror for
150 years. In 1755, with war impending with both France and England (the French and Indian War),
Governor Shirley became alarmed that in case of a French invasion they were likely to side with the
Binkney 4
enemy. According to the “Cajun Country” online article, British authorities “demanded that the French
Acadians renounce their Catholic faith and swear allegiance to the British Crown.” Thus, the French
Catholics were expelled [again] from their [second] homeland [by their oppressive overseers]. Dartz
maintains that “The Acadians [were] guilty of nothing but loyalty to their church, and [having] a country
that did nothing to help them…. The British Canadians forced them on ships, burnt their homes;
families were separated and sent to different parts of the world.” In the online article “By Any Means
Necessary,” Blum described the deportation and treatment of the refugees by the English colonists as
“unnecessarily cruel.” American history books accurately describe this linguistic estrangement and
forced exile as the “Grand Derangement” – the deportation of the Acadians. Many of the brave French
Catholics, looking for religious freedom, boarded boats again and sailed south, landing in the “prairie”
quadrant of southern Louisiana – a fertile region of primeval woods and swamps dominated by the
Mississippi River delta environment, culture, society, and economy.
By the Louisiana Purchase of 1803, Sexton determined that the new French colony in the
recently acquired state was “decidedly Francophone.” Subsequently, Sexton found that over the next
100 years the Americanization of Louisiana trended toward “conversion to ethnic minority status.” In
fact, Sexton concluded that a “rapid nineteenth-century decline of the public and private use of French…
suggest[ed] strong linguistic assimilation of the Louisiana French by 1900.” The abandonment of French
as the primary language of communication followed a pattern of linguistic genocide that Spolsky views
as typical of the status of political and official bans for most minority languages engulfed by a dominant
majority language.
Spolsky describes three developments that happen when a majority culture or language wants
to ban another (minority) language: The first development is the bias of the majority language’s school
system towards a non-standard or otherwise “disfavored” minority language. Spolsky says, “This kind of
Binkney 5
policy is usually associated with a (misguided) desire to improve the lot of minority students by having
them use the standard or otherwise desired variety. “ To Spolsky, replacement language, “well-meaning
though it may be, is a common method of linguicide.”
The second kind of development Spolsky sees in linguistic oppression involves the political
suppression of a minority language in public schools. This usually occurs by political mandate for using
the majority language or the governmental ban of any minority languages. The third type of language
suppression occurs in an effort at majority language maintenance. The example Spolsky gives for this
effort, in the attempt of suppressing the French speakers in Quebec, is the British subjects’ of the
Queen’s English attempt “to slow down or reverse the shift from French to English.” A repetition of this
attempt to suppress French occurs almost annually by the British or English-speaking purists in and
around Quebec.
Spolsky views the most challenging question addressing banned or restricted minority languages
to be: “Is the desire to maintain a threatened language justification for banning the source of the
threat? “ In other words, Spolsky seems to say: In regard to the British protectors of the Queen’s
English in Quebec , and the American advocates of Standard American English who rail against Cajun
French, Ebonics, and Native American languages – “are they justified in the promotion of their mother
tongue purely at the expense (i.e., demise) of the minority language? “ This paper and the evidence of
the stability and existence of the thriving Cajun French language and culture today in Louisiana totally
reject that premise.
For much of their history in France, Canada, and in Louisiana, Barnard explains that the
people we now know as the Cajun French were often ridiculed as “backward, ignorant” and
unpatriotic.” Most of that scorn was heaped on the Cajuns by Protestants who abased the devout
Frenchmen’s strong will to maintain their devout Roman Catholic faith. Living in a country that
Binkney 6
fought so desperately for its own language and independence in 1776 -- Barnard adds that it did
not help mutual cultural relations for Americans to find the French Cajuns speaking a “separate
language” and living “a life-style that emphasized isolation and separation from” the newly
emerging United States of America. The assimilation of Cajun French was reinforced by the
Louisiana Board of Education in 1916 through the Mandatory Attendance Act in which French-
speaking students were required to attend English-only public schools. Further, in 1921, the
online article “By Any Means Necessary” reports that the state constitution mandated: “The
general exercises in the public schools shall be conducted in the English language.” Thus, the
nationalistic purge for linguistic oppression of the Cajuns took the form of institutional
correction.
Native Cajun, Brent Daigle, Ph.D. is a descendant of the famous Roman Catholic priest,
Father Jules O. Daigle, who published the first Cajun – English Dictionary in 1985. Dr. Daigle
recalls the story of his Great-Great-Grandmother, LaFeur, who attended the public schools
around Elton in southern Louisiana in the 1930s. At that time, the federal government was in the
mood for Americanization and American acculturation of the minority French Cajun language.
The assimilistic educational reform measures from the federal government were so severe that all
the Cajun-speaking teachers in the normal schools were fired. Newly imported English-speaking
teachers from around the United States were hired through a huge advertising campaign that
promised these new teachers a 20% pay increase. About the only requirement to get hired as a
teacher was that you were required not to be able to speak Cajun or French. Daigle says that all
of these English-speaking teachers came into the Louisiana Cajun territory solely to make the
native students learn English and to make the low class Cajuns become Americans who spoke
English only.
Binkney 7
Daigle’s grandmother remembers vividly how some of those English-speaking teachers
punished the Cajun children for speaking their native tongue. For example, at recess time, the
native speaking children naturally broke into conversation with the normal casual Cajun sing-
song. The punishment the teachers devised for those who spoke the native language was to put
rice on the wooden classroom floor and make the students kneel on the floor for long periods of
time. This punishment terrified the Cajun children into submission by speaking English only at
recess. It was common for English-speaking teachers to use ruler slaps on the palm or back of
any child who spoke Cajun in the classroom. LaFeur told her family that the indentations on her
knees from kneeling on that horrible rice-covered classroom floor were still burned into her legs
and her soul.
Ryon recalls the humiliating first-hand testimony of a native French Cajun student
experiencing the reality of linguistic assimilation who had to write these endless repetitions:
I will not speak French on school grounds.
I will not speak French on school grounds.
I will not speak French….
[Well, they are not stupid, those bastards.
After one hundred times, it begins to penetrate
In anyone’s mind.
It hurts, it brings shame;
And suddenly, it does not hurt anymore.
It is almost natural.
And we don’t speak French on the school grounds
Binkney 8
And anywhere else either.] (287).
We know this type of behavior today is called deficit correction – however, these
authoritarian methods of linguistic assimilation and emotional intimidation did not work then,
and they do not work now. Nevertheless, because of these horrible incidents that punished the
native speakers, Cajun French almost disappeared in Louisiana – and it was secretly taught only
in the home.
As language loss occurred among the French Cajuns, Barnard found other significant
linguistic and cultural changes to the French Cajuns occurred with the advent of World War II.
Thousands of Cajuns served in the American military forces around the world, where they were
exposed to many different international languages, customs, and cultures. Barnard credits the
Americanization of Cajun country to a combination of cultural, economic, and societal events:
the introduction of the television (1950s), the national interstate highway system in the United
States (1970s), and the world-wide trend toward mass communications, rampant consumerism,
the jet age, and educational improvements of the last quarter of the twentieth century. Added to
these developments, Barnard says: “the advent of rock and roll music (1950s) and other national
cultural trends …led to a sharp reduction in traditional Cajun habits” (2).
The online article “The Cajun Bayou” reported that the number of people who spoke
Cajun French declined over the last fifty years of the twentieth century. Sexton reasoned that
some of the reasons for the success of the linguistic assimilation were attributed to settlement
patterns, population density, and the maintenance of social networks and institutions that
inhibited language shift from French to English. As “The Cajun Bayou” online article
concluded, it became clear that many parents intentionally did not teach their children the Cajun
Binkney 9
language to encourage English language fluency -- in hopes that the children would have a better
life in an English-speaking nation. By the 1960s, in an interesting parallel to the civil rights
movement, regional efforts were emerging that moved the Cajuns toward a revival of their native
language and culture. In 1968, the Louisiana legislature authorized the establishment of
CODOFIL, an acronym for ‘The Council of the Development of French in Louisiana.’ The
online article “By Any Means Necessary” states that this cabinet-level department, “empowered
to do any and all things necessary to accomplish the development, utilization and preservation of
the French language as found in the state of Louisiana for the cultural, economic and tourist
benefit of the state – LA R.S. 25:651-2000.
By the last quarter of the twentieth century, according to “The Cajun Bayou” online
article, a tide of regional pride and linguistic dignity engulfed the Cajun natives who discovered
that their grandchildren were researching and trying to learn the native language, often in secret.
In a marvelous sociolinguistics reversal, the French Cajuns in southern Louisiana valiantly
resurrected the pride in their native Cajun tongue and initiated efforts to save the endangered
French Cajun culture. In 1998, the online article “By Any Means Necessary” found that there
were twenty-five immersion schools in eight of the Acadian parishes where students learned and
used their native Cajun French in “at least half of their classes.” Later, CODOFIL initiated
scholarships to Louisiana teachers to study French abroad.
This “Louisianification” of the “Cajun Country” continued as the entire state became the
beneficiary of the linguistic and cultural resurgence of French Cajun. Teacher recruitment
programs to find French-speaking teachers led to the requirement of students to study French as
a second language for at least five years in all public schools. In addition, the “By Any Means
Binkney 10
Necessary” online article confirms that adult literacy classes have been made available at no cost
to the native Cajuns.
Currently, one of the popular ways to promote second language acquisition occurs as
many children are first introduced to the native tongue through Cajun music lyrics. Also, there is
a trend to use Cajun language websites to learn the dialect, advertise the culture, and promote
regional tourism. The “Cajun Bayou” online article says that culinary words and terms of
endearment such as “cher” (dear) [pronounced “shah” or “sheh”] and “none” (uncle) are still
heard among otherwise English-speaking Cajuns. In a valiant effort to fight further language
loss, Marchand presents the passionate embodiment of Cajun linguistic pride as expressed by a
sign posted on the wall inside a native Cajun’s music and accordion shop in Eunice, Alabama:
So you tell me that you can’t speak French even though you have lived in a
French speaking area all your life. You say that you have never learned because no one
every showed you. Yet somehow you managed to become a normal, stereotype clone of
Anywhere, U.S.A., even though no one showed you that either. BULL____” I’ll tell you
why you can’t speak French. It’s because as you were growing up, you were too busy
pursuing mundane trivia making fun of those who did speak French that you could never
find time to recognize the beauty of your heritage. You turned your back on a hot bowl
of gumbo in favor of a cold, tasteless American hot dog. Now that Cajun culture attracts
worldwide attention you have decided to be Cajun also. That’s fine but don’t make a
second mistake and try to take credit away from the people who kept the torch lit when
Cajun was a dirty word. I pledge myself not to let that happen (392-392).
Binkney 11
According to the “Profile of Selected Social Characteristics” online website of the United
States Census of 2000, a total of 725,197 (or 16.2%) of the residents in Louisiana claim to speak
some form of French at home today. Even with this encouraging increase of the Cajun
population in Louisiana, it is important to note that CODOFIL’s primary interest is to preserve
Cajun French. Many Cajun speakers today can understand French, according to the online
website “By Any Means Necessary,” but Cajun is “almost incomprehensible to standard French
speakers.” This linguistics fact is complicated further with the recognition that Cajun remains
basically an oral language and few, if any, efforts have been made to put Cajun into a written
language. According to Ryon, four linguists and two community members are working currently
on a comprehensive dictionary of Cajun French. With this emphasis on the revival of the values
and traditions of Cajun French, there is the hope that, one day, someone of Cajun descent will
finally put the wonderfully expressive words and the spirit of the people and their culture into a
written language.
The last sixty years have dramatically affected the French Cajuns in their homeland of
southern Louisiana. The strong Francophone community has endured enormous hardship to
become the life blood of the entire state now, with the famous Cajun language, music, food,
culture, and spirit that is recognized and appreciated world-wide. Linguistically, their
community has been miraculously transformed from a once endangered minority language to
become an example today of the rare linguistics’ feat of revival of the French Cajun native
language and culture. Over the past 400+ years of three homeland relocations, the forces of
assimilation and language loss have shaped and reshaped the mosaic of the Cajun language and
life which has come the full linguistics’ circle – birth, assimilation, and recovery. The French
Cajun language has survived and endures today because the parents and the children hold a
Binkney 12
strong connection to their native language, culture, and traditions, and they insist upon it being a
part of their future.
In reflection on this research, it is important to consider what linguists and ESOL
teachers can do to help prevent assimilation and/or language loss like that experienced by the
French Cajuns. To that end, I offer the following suggestions:
1. Publicizing findings of research that show that bilingualism is harmful neither to a
society nor to an individual.
2. Supporting additive language teaching and opposing replacive language teaching.
3. Continuing to express respect for the value of all languages as records of their cultures
and methods of maintaining group identify.
4. Supporting a double set of linguistic rights – the right to learn the standard language, and
the right to maintain the home or community or ethnic language. (Items 1 – 4 are
suggested by Spolsky).
5. ESOL teachers must admit that we all have linguistics biases and we must seek an
understanding of what they are, where they come from, and how we can overcome the
prejudices they might create.
6. ESOL teachers must come to value and appreciate every means of cultural expression in
their lives and classrooms.
7. ESOL teachers must understand the relationship between what ELLs intend to say and
the effect it might have on their listeners both, as perceived, in reality and through
interpretation.
8. ESOL teachers must strengthen, not degrade, ELL learners with multicultural
opportunities to find success academically, socially, economically, and culturally.
Binkney 13
Works Cited
Bernard, Shane K. “The Cajuns: Americanization of a People.” Jackson, MS: University Press
of Mississippi, 2003.
“By Any Means Necessary.” Tourism, Economics, and the Preservation of Language. Web.
18 September 2009. <http://www.culturalsurvival.org/ourpublications/csq/
Article/by-any-means-necessary.htm>.
Binkney 14
“The Cajun Bayou.” Web. 09 September 2009. <http://freewebs.com/thecajunbayou
/howtospeakcajun.htm>.
“The Cajun Country.” Web. 19 September 2009. <http://www.economicexpert.com/a/
Cajun:Country.html>.
“The Cajun French.” Web. 15 September 2009. <http://www.absoluteastronomy.com
/topics/Cajun_French>.
Canagarajah, Suresh, ed. “Reclaiming the Local in Language Policy and Practice.” Web.
>http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o$se=gg/sc&d=104851691>.
Carlsen, Charles. “World: UN’s Mother Language Day Focuses on Conserving World’s Linguistic
Heritage.” Web. 20 September 2009. > http://74.125.113.132/search?q=cache:
PLTNXVDj6twJ>.
Crystal, David. Language Death. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2000.
Dartez, Whitney and Flavic. “The Cajuns and Some of the Many Misconceptions About Them.”
Web. 10 September 2009. <http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/
~dartez/CAJUN.HTM>.
Daigle, B. A. Personal interview. September 05, 2009.
Dubois, Sylkvie and Sibylle Noetzel. “Intergenerational Pattern of Interference and Internally-Motivated
Changes in Cajun French.” Web. 18 September 2009.
<http://journals.cambridge.org/action
/display/Abstract?fromPage=online&aid=318719>.
Emoff, Ron. “A Cajun Poetics of Loss and Longing.” Ethnomusicology. 42, 2 (Spring 1998): 283-301.
“Enduring Voices – Disappearing Languages – Documenting the Planets Endangered Languages.”
Web. 22 August 2009. <http://www.nationalgeographic.com/mission/enduring
voices>.
Marchand, Philip. “Ghost Empire: How the French Almost Conquered North America.” Toronto,
Ontario: McClelland and Stewart Publishers, 2005.
Binkney 15
“Profile of Selected Social Characteristics 2000.” Quick Tables – Ancestry – U. S. Census . Web. 20
September 2009. <http://www.factfinder.census.gov/servlet/QTTable?_bm=y&-
geo_id=0400US22&-qr_name>.
Ryon, Dominique. “Cajun French, Sociolinguistic Knowledge, and Language Loss in Louisiana.”
Journal of Language, Identify, and Education, I (4). (2002): 279-293.
Sexton, Rocky L. “Cajun French Language Management and Shift: A Southwest Louisiana Case Study
to 1970.” Journal of American Ethnic History. 19 (4). (Summer 2000): 90.
Spolsky, Bernard. “Summary of Banned Languages Discussion, Language, and Law.” Web. 05
September 2009. <http://linguistlist.org/issues/2/2-230.html.
Turin, Mark. “Living Languages and Troubles Tongues: Linguistic Diversity and Endangerment
in the Himalayas.” Web. 09 September 2009. <http://www.digitalhimalaya.com/
projectteam/turin/downloads/Jetwork_languages.pdf>.
Valdman, Albert, ed. French and Creole in Louisiana. New York: Plenum Press, 1997.
Voegelin, C. F. and F. M. Voegelin. “Language in Society.” Oxford: Cambridge University
Press, 1977.