A’ingae (Cofán)
2019; Cambridge University Press; Volume: 50; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1017/s0025100319000082
ISSN1475-3502
AutoresChiara Repetti-Ludlow, Haoru Zhang, Hugo Lucitante, Scott AnderBois, Chelsea Sanker,
Tópico(s)Linguistic Variation and Morphology
ResumoA’ingae (also known as Cofán or Kofán) is a language isolate spoken by approximately 1,500 people in 13 communities in Ecuador and Colombia (Figure 1). Traditionally, the A’i (speakers of A’ingae) lived in the Andean foothills, but over the past century they have migrated down the Aguarico and San Miguel rivers, founding communities at Dureno and Zábalo, where the language is most widely spoken. This migration was spurred in large part by extensive oil contamination; an issue of great concern to the Foundation for the Survival of the Cofán People (FSC) and the community at large (Cepek 2012: 103; 2018: 1–15). Another concern in the Cofán community is the decreasing use of A’ingae, which, according to Ethnologue (Simons & Fennig 2017), is ‘endangered’ in Ecuador and ‘severely endangered’ in Colombia as a growing emphasis on Spanish disincentivizes the younger generation from learning A’ingae.
Referência(s)