Description
Voices of Immigration presents a detailed serial narrative ethnography examining language shift within immigrant populations. Through extended interviews and longitudinal observation, Agnes Weiyun He documents how immigrants and their descendants negotiate language use, identity, and belonging in their new societies.
The work combines qualitative research methods with linguistic analysis to reveal the complex, personal stories behind aggregate patterns of language change. Rather than treating language shift as a mechanical process, this study emphasizes individual agency, family dynamics, and social factors that shape linguistic choices over time.
Grounded in the Cambridge Approaches to Language Contact series, the book contributes to understanding how multilingual individuals manage competing linguistic identities. It provides valuable insights for researchers in sociolinguistics, applied linguistics, and immigration studies, offering nuanced perspectives on how language reflects and shapes the immigrant experience across generations.







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