To experience change on the Navajo Reservation, one need only close one's eyes and listen. Today an increasing number of Navajos speak only English, while very few speak only Navajo. The Navajo language continues to be taught, but it is less often practiced. Deborah House asks why, despite the many factors that would seem to contribute to the maintenance of the Navajo language, speakers of the language continue to shift to English at such an alarming rate -- and what can be done about it.
Language Shift among the Navajos provides a dose look at the ideological factors that intervene between the desire of the Navajos to maintain their language as an important aspect of their culture and their actual linguistic practice. Based on more than ten years of fieldwork within a Navajo institution and community, it points to ideologies held by Navajo people about their unequal relationship with the dominant American society as a primary factor in the erosion of traditional language use.
House suggests that the Navajos employ their own paradigm -- Sa'ah Naaghai Bik'eh
Deborah House is Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Social Work at Texas Tech University. She taught at Dine College in Tsaile on the Navajo Reservation from 1985 to 1989 and from 1994 to 1999 and has chaired and consulted for numerous planning committees on Navajo education