The Age of Social Democracy by Francis Sejersted;Madeleine B. Adams;
Author:Francis Sejersted;Madeleine B. Adams;
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Published: 2021-05-15T00:00:00+00:00
AN UNSUCCESSFUL INTEGRATION DRIVE
In Norway â[t]he school became the foremost laboratory for a Pan-Norwegian language as an instrument of national integration,â writes Slagstad.31 This laboratory experiment was unsuccessful, however. The struggle over language became one of the most bitter of the entire Social Democratic period in Norway, a reminder of how important language is as a mark of identity.
During Norwayâs Danish period, up to 1814, the Norwegian written language became Danish, and this continued into the twentieth century. With Henrik Ibsen in the lead, most of the writers from Norwayâs golden age wrote in Danish. But from the mid-nineteenth century a struggle arose to create a Norwegian written language that was an alternative to Danish. This mother-tongue movement was part of the radical democratic popular movement at the end of the nineteenth century. It led to the development of two official languages in Norway, landsmÃ¥l and riksmÃ¥l (respectively, the language of the countryside and of the realm, later referred to as nynorsk [new Norwegian] and bokmÃ¥l [book language]). In this early phase the struggle over language was about which of the two forms of language represented the nation. Indeed the actual differences were so slight that people on both sides of the language divide could relatively easily understand one another. This offered the possibility of amalgamation into a common languageâPan-Norwegian. Following the war, the language dispute was over the legitimacy of Pan-Norwegian.
The language of the countryside had its basis in the dialects of what were called the countercultural regions on Norwayâs west coast, or Vestlandet. These were areas in which the labor movement had had difficulty obtaining a foothold. Social Democrats had not been particularly engaged in the language issue. Nevertheless, they took up a powerful initiative in favor of Pan-Norwegian. The man behind this drive was one of the foremost integration ideologues in the labor movement, history professor Halvdan Koht. Koht originally belonged to the Liberal, or Venstre, Party, but early on he joined the labor movement and was a central figure in preparing the ideological basis for the development of the Labor Party into a unifying national party that was able to build on the inheritance of the radical Venstre. A Pan-Norwegian language was for him a natural step in the direction of national integration.
Pan-Norwegian was to be founded on âthe basis of the peopleâs tongue,â as was the common saying. This implied combining common forms from both of the official languages with features taken from the eastern Norwegian âfolk tongue.â The political aim was thus an administrated amalgamation of the two official languages. Pan-Norwegian policy began with the radical orthography reform of 1938 and was continued after 1945 through the active promotion of language norms at school.
The reaction was powerful. It found organized expression through the âParentsâ Reaction against Pan-Norwegianâ in 1952, organized by the users of riksmÃ¥l, the literary, Danish-influenced language. A petition campaign was organized, and the names of 400,000 opponents of Pan-Norwegian were collected. This long and bitter struggle came to an end in
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
| Anthropology | Archaeology |
| Philosophy | Politics & Government |
| Social Sciences | Sociology |
| Women's Studies |
The Secret History by Donna Tartt(19357)
The Social Justice Warrior Handbook by Lisa De Pasquale(12258)
Thirteen Reasons Why by Jay Asher(9044)
This Is How You Lose Her by Junot Diaz(6992)
Weapons of Math Destruction by Cathy O'Neil(6392)
Zero to One by Peter Thiel(5893)
Beartown by Fredrik Backman(5872)
The Myth of the Strong Leader by Archie Brown(5574)
The Fire Next Time by James Baldwin(5538)
How Democracies Die by Steven Levitsky & Daniel Ziblatt(5292)
Promise Me, Dad by Joe Biden(5205)
Stone's Rules by Roger Stone(5149)
A Higher Loyalty: Truth, Lies, and Leadership by James Comey(5031)
100 Deadly Skills by Clint Emerson(4988)
Rise and Kill First by Ronen Bergman(4860)
Secrecy World by Jake Bernstein(4821)
The David Icke Guide to the Global Conspiracy (and how to end it) by David Icke(4790)
The Doomsday Machine by Daniel Ellsberg(4579)
The Farm by Tom Rob Smith(4572)