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<meta content="As part of its culture a community will have an identity or &quot;property of being one and the same&quot; (Brennan 1988:7). Identity implies survival and because survival in an unchanged form is not possible it is normal to accept a degree of continuity as a sufficient defining characteristic of a community. A community can for example change its language and still see itself as the same community as many immigrant communities have done. The extinction of a language therefore does not necessarily involve the extinction of a culture or a community (Edwards 1985). Communities can survive a change of language or even several (Brenzinger 1992) but they can also succumb (Day 1985).  Continued functioning requires a concept of future if a community is not to fall into disunity and ultimately extinction (Borkenau 1981). The chances of the physical, political, economic and social survival and future development of a community may be considered to be increased by a change of language, which will have major consequences for that community and will be indicated in the state of health of that community. 

At community level there is a state of physical health as possessed by the preponderant number of individuals and manifested in life expectancy, infant mortality, suicide, depression, substance addiction and other epidemiological indicators.  The presence of significant mental problems has been described as psychopathology or the inability to behave in ways that foster the wellbeing of the individual and ultimately of society (Coon 1986:483).  Some of the forms that psychopathological conditions may take concern self-attitude, self-actualisation of potential, the unity of the personality, perceptions of reality, control of the environment and problem solving (Jahoda 1960:32-33). When a large proportion of the members of a community are experiencing these kinds of problems, collective anxiety neuroses can spread by contagion (Kiev, 1973: 418). Though it is possible to speak of a dichotomy of a &quot;well&quot; or a &quot;sick&quot; society, it is more usual to conceptualise a spectrum of health and disease or, as Antonovsky proposes in relation to the question &quot;how come this group has such a relatively low proportion of people who have broken down?&quot; (1980: 56), a continuum of health ease/disease. When a community engages in aggression, cruelty, destructiveness (including self-destruction), genocide and autogenocide and offensive (as distinct from defensive) war, it is possible to see these aggressive behaviours as collectively pathological. 

Depression is a condition of disease which may prevail in a community. In depression there is a sense of inadequacy, despondency, pessimism, sadness and a decrease in activity and reactivity (Reber 1995: 197), which if severe enough can put survival in question. Does language play a role here?  The ensemble of factors including language which appear to be essential for community survival have been collectively called &quot;ethno-linguistic vitality&quot; (Giles, Bourhis and Taylor 1977).  Although it is fundamental in Oriental medicine (as Chi or Qi) (Lewith, 1982), energy is not a concept in widespread use in Western medicine. Both approaches do however, recognise a fundamental link between physical and mental health and disease. A theory of health maintenance and enhancement or salutogenesis  asserts that the key casual factor is a sense of coherence  or &quot;. . global orientation that expresses the extent to which one has a pervasive, enduring though dynamic feeling of confidence that one's internal and external environments are predictable and that there is a high probability that things will work out as well as can be reasonably expected&quot; (Antonovsky 1980:123). The sense of coherence concept is, moreover, valid at the group level, be it family, class, neighbourhood, region or country (Antonovsky 1987: 171), with the proviso that there must first be a sense of group consciousness or subjectively identifiable collectivity (Antonovsky, 1987: 175).  An individual or group with a highly developed sense of coherence will have a high level of generalised resistance resources which are identified as rationality, flexibility and farsightedness (Antonovsky, 1979:112-113), and it is possible to see language as fundamental to the maintenance of that sense.

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<meta content="Adams, Gerry (1986), The Politics of Irish Freedom. Dingle, Brandon.

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Antonovsky, Aaron (1980), Health Stress and Coping. San Fransisco, London, Jossey-Bass.

---------------- (1987), Unravelling the Mystery of Health. How People Manage Stress and Stay Well. San and London, Jossey-Bass.

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Borkenau, Franz (1981), End and Beginning. On the Generations of Cultures and the Origins  of the West. (ed by Richard Lowenthal). New York, Columbia University Press.

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Breathnock, Diarmaid, (1989), Irish and the Other Lesser Used Languages of Europe,  Contact. Bulletin of the European Bureau for Lesser-Used Languages  6,1(Spring).

Brennan, Andrew (1988), Conditions of Identity. A Study in Identity and Survival. Oxford,  Oxford University Press.

Brenzinger, Matthias, (ed.) (1992), Language Death.  Factual and Theoretical Explorations  with Special Reference to East Africa. (Contributions to the Sociology of Language  64).  Berlin, New York, Mouton de Gruyter.

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Day, Richard R. (1985) The Ultimate Inequality: Linguistic Genocide, in Wolfson, Nessa and  Joan Manes, (Eds), Language of Inequality. (Contributions to the Sociology of  Language 36).  Berlin, New York, Amsterdam,Mouton, 163-181.

Dorian, Nancy C. (1981), Language Death. The Life Cycle of a Scottish Gaelic Dialect.  Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press.

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----------------- (1981), The Sociology of Yiddish: A Foreword in Joshua A Fishman (ed) Never Say Die! A Thousand Years of Yiddish in Jewish Life and Letters. The Hague, Paris,  New York, Mouton, 1097.

------------------ (1985), The Lively Life of a &quot;Dead&quot; Language (or Everyone Knows that  Yiddish Died Long Ago) in Wolfson, Nessa and Joan Manes (eds) Language of  Inequality. (Contributions to the Sociology of Language 36). Berlin, New York,  Amsterdam, Mouton, 207-222.

Giles, Howard, Richard Bourhis and D Taylor (1977), Towards a Theory of Language in  Ethnic Group Relations in H. Giles (ed), Language, Ethnicity and Intergroup Relations. London: Academic Press.

Grimes, Barbara F., ed. (1992) Ethnologue, Languages of the World  (12th ed). Dallas:  Summer Institute of Linguistics.

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------------------ (1991), &quot;The Psychiatrist and War.&quot; Psychiatric Bulletin. (Royal College of  Psychiatrists , 15, 203-204.

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Weinreich, Max (1981), The Reality of Jewishness versus the Ghetto Myth: The  Sociolinguistic Roots of Yiddish in Joshua A Fishman (ed) Never Say Die! A Thousand Years of Yiddish in Jewish Life and Letters. The Hague, Paris,  New York, Mouton, 103-118.

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Weekend Australian (1988) February 6-7.
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<meta content="As part of its culture a community will have an identity or &quot;property of being one and the same&quot; (Brennan 1988:7). Identity implies survival and because survival in an unchanged form is not possible it is normal to accept a degree of continuity as a sufficient defining characteristic of a community. A community can for example change its language and still see itself as the same community as many immigrant communities have done. The extinction of a language therefore does not necessarily involve the extinction of a culture or a community (Edwards 1985). Communities can survive a change of language or even several (Brenzinger 1992) but they can also succumb (Day 1985).  Continued functioning requires a concept of future if a community is not to fall into disunity and ultimately extinction (Borkenau 1981). The chances of the physical, political, economic and social survival and future development of a community may be considered to be increased by a change of language, which will have major consequences for that community and will be indicated in the state of health of that community. 

At community level there is a state of physical health as possessed by the preponderant number of individuals and manifested in life expectancy, infant mortality, suicide, depression, substance addiction and other epidemiological indicators.  The presence of significant mental problems has been described as psychopathology or the inability to behave in ways that foster the wellbeing of the individual and ultimately of society (Coon 1986:483).  Some of the forms that psychopathological conditions may take concern self-attitude, self-actualisation of potential, the unity of the personality, perceptions of reality, control of the environment and problem solving (Jahoda 1960:32-33). When a large proportion of the members of a community are experiencing these kinds of problems, collective anxiety neuroses can spread by contagion (Kiev, 1973: 418). Though it is possible to speak of a dichotomy of a &quot;well&quot; or a &quot;sick&quot; society, it is more usual to conceptualise a spectrum of health and disease or, as Antonovsky proposes in relation to the question &quot;how come this group has such a relatively low proportion of people who have broken down?&quot; (1980: 56), a continuum of health ease/disease. When a community engages in aggression, cruelty, destructiveness (including self-destruction), genocide and autogenocide and offensive (as distinct from defensive) war, it is possible to see these aggressive behaviours as collectively pathological. 

Depression is a condition of disease which may prevail in a community. In depression there is a sense of inadequacy, despondency, pessimism, sadness and a decrease in activity and reactivity (Reber 1995: 197), which if severe enough can put survival in question. Does language play a role here?  The ensemble of factors including language which appear to be essential for community survival have been collectively called &quot;ethno-linguistic vitality&quot; (Giles, Bourhis and Taylor 1977).  Although it is fundamental in Oriental medicine (as Chi or Qi) (Lewith, 1982), energy is not a concept in widespread use in Western medicine. Both approaches do however, recognise a fundamental link between physical and mental health and disease. A theory of health maintenance and enhancement or salutogenesis  asserts that the key casual factor is a sense of coherence  or &quot;. . global orientation that expresses the extent to which one has a pervasive, enduring though dynamic feeling of confidence that one's internal and external environments are predictable and that there is a high probability that things will work out as well as can be reasonably expected&quot; (Antonovsky 1980:123). The sense of coherence concept is, moreover, valid at the group level, be it family, class, neighbourhood, region or country (Antonovsky 1987: 171), with the proviso that there must first be a sense of group consciousness or subjectively identifiable collectivity (Antonovsky, 1987: 175).  An individual or group with a highly developed sense of coherence will have a high level of generalised resistance resources which are identified as rationality, flexibility and farsightedness (Antonovsky, 1979:112-113), and it is possible to see language as fundamental to the maintenance of that sense.

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    <h1 class="ep_tm_pagetitle">Language Grief: Its nature and function at community level</h1>
    <p style="margin-bottom: 1em" class="not_ep_block"><span class="person_name">Bostock, William W.</span> (1997) <xhtml:em>Language Grief: Its nature and function at community level.</xhtml:em> International Journal: Language, Society and Culture, 02 . ISSN 1327-774X</p><p style="margin-bottom: 1em" class="not_ep_block"></p><table style="margin-bottom: 1em" class="not_ep_block"><tr><td valign="top" style="text-align:center"><a href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/1631/1/Bostock.html"><img alt="[img]" src="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/style/images/fileicons/text_html.png" class="ep_doc_icon" border="0" /></a></td><td valign="top"><a href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/1631/1/Bostock.html"><span class="ep_document_citation">HTML</span></a><br />38Kb</td></tr></table><p style="margin-bottom: 1em" class="not_ep_block">Official URL: <a href="http://www.educ.utas.edu.au/users/tle/JOURNAL/Articles/Bostock/Bostock.html">http://www.educ.utas.edu.au/users/tle/JOURNAL/Articles/Bostock/Bostock.html</a></p><div class="not_ep_block"><h2>Abstract</h2><p style="padding-bottom: 16px; text-align: left; margin: 1em auto 0em auto">As part of its culture a community will have an identity or "property of being one and the same" (Brennan 1988:7). Identity implies survival and because survival in an unchanged form is not possible it is normal to accept a degree of continuity as a sufficient defining characteristic of a community. A community can for example change its language and still see itself as the same community as many immigrant communities have done. The extinction of a language therefore does not necessarily involve the extinction of a culture or a community (Edwards 1985). Communities can survive a change of language or even several (Brenzinger 1992) but they can also succumb (Day 1985).  Continued functioning requires a concept of future if a community is not to fall into disunity and ultimately extinction (Borkenau 1981). The chances of the physical, political, economic and social survival and future development of a community may be considered to be increased by a change of language, which will have major consequences for that community and will be indicated in the state of health of that community. &#13;
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At community level there is a state of physical health as possessed by the preponderant number of individuals and manifested in life expectancy, infant mortality, suicide, depression, substance addiction and other epidemiological indicators.  The presence of significant mental problems has been described as psychopathology or the inability to behave in ways that foster the wellbeing of the individual and ultimately of society (Coon 1986:483).  Some of the forms that psychopathological conditions may take concern self-attitude, self-actualisation of potential, the unity of the personality, perceptions of reality, control of the environment and problem solving (Jahoda 1960:32-33). When a large proportion of the members of a community are experiencing these kinds of problems, collective anxiety neuroses can spread by contagion (Kiev, 1973: 418). Though it is possible to speak of a dichotomy of a "well" or a "sick" society, it is more usual to conceptualise a spectrum of health and disease or, as Antonovsky proposes in relation to the question "how come this group has such a relatively low proportion of people who have broken down?" (1980: 56), a continuum of health ease/disease. When a community engages in aggression, cruelty, destructiveness (including self-destruction), genocide and autogenocide and offensive (as distinct from defensive) war, it is possible to see these aggressive behaviours as collectively pathological. &#13;
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Depression is a condition of disease which may prevail in a community. In depression there is a sense of inadequacy, despondency, pessimism, sadness and a decrease in activity and reactivity (Reber 1995: 197), which if severe enough can put survival in question. Does language play a role here?  The ensemble of factors including language which appear to be essential for community survival have been collectively called "ethno-linguistic vitality" (Giles, Bourhis and Taylor 1977).  Although it is fundamental in Oriental medicine (as Chi or Qi) (Lewith, 1982), energy is not a concept in widespread use in Western medicine. Both approaches do however, recognise a fundamental link between physical and mental health and disease. A theory of health maintenance and enhancement or salutogenesis  asserts that the key casual factor is a sense of coherence  or ". . global orientation that expresses the extent to which one has a pervasive, enduring though dynamic feeling of confidence that one's internal and external environments are predictable and that there is a high probability that things will work out as well as can be reasonably expected" (Antonovsky 1980:123). The sense of coherence concept is, moreover, valid at the group level, be it family, class, neighbourhood, region or country (Antonovsky 1987: 171), with the proviso that there must first be a sense of group consciousness or subjectively identifiable collectivity (Antonovsky, 1987: 175).  An individual or group with a highly developed sense of coherence will have a high level of generalised resistance resources which are identified as rationality, flexibility and farsightedness (Antonovsky, 1979:112-113), and it is possible to see language as fundamental to the maintenance of that sense.&#13;
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</p></div><table style="margin-bottom: 1em" cellpadding="3" class="not_ep_block" border="0"><tr><th valign="top" class="ep_row">Item Type:</th><td valign="top" class="ep_row">Article</td></tr><tr><th valign="top" class="ep_row">Keywords:</th><td valign="top" class="ep_row">Language, grief, survival</td></tr><tr><th valign="top" class="ep_row">Subjects:</th><td valign="top" class="ep_row"><a href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/view/subjects/429999.html">420000 Language and Culture &gt; 429900 Other Language and Culture &gt; 429999 Other Language and Culture</a></td></tr><tr><th valign="top" class="ep_row">ID Code:</th><td valign="top" class="ep_row">1631</td></tr><tr><th valign="top" class="ep_row">Deposited By:</th><td valign="top" class="ep_row"><span class="ep_name_citation"><span class="person_name">Dr William Bostock</span></span></td></tr><tr><th valign="top" class="ep_row">Deposited On:</th><td valign="top" class="ep_row">10 Sep 2007</td></tr><tr><th valign="top" class="ep_row">Last Modified:</th><td valign="top" class="ep_row">09 Jan 2008 02:30</td></tr><tr><th valign="top" class="ep_row">ePrint Statistics:</th><td valign="top" class="ep_row"><a target="ePrintStats" href="/es/index.php?action=show_detail_eprint;id=1631;">View statistics for this ePrint</a></td></tr></table><p align="right">Repository Staff Only: <a href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/cgi/users/home?screen=EPrint::View&amp;eprintid=1631">item control page</a></p>
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