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The language, identity and intercultural communication of the Shona living among Xhosa communities in Cape Town

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dc.contributor.advisor Mutasa, D. E.
dc.contributor.author Mambambo, John
dc.date.accessioned 2021-06-08T12:19:30Z
dc.date.available 2021-06-08T12:19:30Z
dc.date.issued 2020-11
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/27460
dc.description Bibliography: leaves 253-298 en
dc.description.abstract This study examines the language, identity and intercultural communication dynamics in the Xhosa communities of Cape Town where some immigrant Shona speakers dwell. Language is a complex and nuanced repertoire of culture and the choice of language constitutes part of an individual’s identity construction. Owing to these identity dynamics, the Shona speakers resident among the Xhosa communities find themselves entangled in the politics of belonging and identity that define the Shona-Xhosa immigrant landscape in Cape Town. The Shona speakers engaging in intercultural communication in Xhosa communities are confronted with language and cultural hurdles. Orbe’s Co-cultural Theory among others was central to the unpacking of the intricacies of culture and the Xhosa hegemony. Results show that Shona people speak Xhosa for social acceptance and to secure economic benefits. Nevertheless, this seems not to offer them profound indulgence with the Xhosa culture. Even if they comprehend the culture, their Shona cultural identity hampers their full admission into the Xhosa culture. This lack of cultural acceptance leaves the Shona speakers alienated from both Xhosa and Shona cultures. In that regard, Shona speakers among Xhosa communities in Cape Town live a fluid life in which relentless cultural change is the only constant. This transitory life promotes intercultural concession in the personal layer of self, leading to the emergence of a hybrid multicultural self-concept. The study thus contributes towards scholarship by revealing that the differences in individual linguistic circumstances in the process of intercultural negotiation appear to produce different levels of acquisition of the Xhosa culture and Xhosa by the Shona speakers. This is corroborated by the fact that Shona speakers who could not speak English learnt Xhosa faster than those who could speak English. This study argues that the maintenance of the Shona language by its speakers in Xhosa communities is as much their duty, as it is their right. Ultimately, the study posits that ethnocentrism stifles the intercultural communication process and leads to tiffs in multicultural communities en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (xvi, 305 leaves; charts, tables (mostly color)) en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Culture en
dc.subject Language and identity en
dc.subject Culture and identity en
dc.subject Social integration en
dc.subject Identity en
dc.subject Xhosa en
dc.subject Ethnocentrism en
dc.subject Cultural relativism en
dc.subject Shona en
dc.subject Xhosa communities en
dc.subject Intercultural communication en
dc.subject Interlocutors en
dc.subject Xenophobia en
dc.subject Co-cultural group en
dc.subject Communication en
dc.subject.ddc 306.440968735
dc.subject.lcsh Ethnolinguistics -- South Africa -- Cape Town en
dc.subject.lcsh Languages in contact -- South Africa -- Cape Town en
dc.subject.lcsh Intercultural communication -- South Africa -- Cape Town en
dc.subject.lcsh Linguistic minorities -- South Africa -- Cape Town en
dc.subject.lcsh Shona (African people) -- South Africa -- Cape Town en
dc.subject.lcsh Shona language -- Spoken Shona -- South Africa -- Cape Town en
dc.subject.lcsh Xhosa language -- Spoken Xhosa -- South Africa -- Cape Town en
dc.subject.lcsh Xhosa (African people) -- South Africa -- Cape Town en
dc.title The language, identity and intercultural communication of the Shona living among Xhosa communities in Cape Town en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department Linguistics and Modern Languages en
dc.description.degree D. Phil. (Languages, Linguistics and Literature) en


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