Inuktitut in Modern Inuit Communities in Northern Canada
The role of language in identity construction of the Inuit in Nunavik (Quebec, Canada), which nourishes the evolution of their ethno-territorial movement in the eastern Canadian Arctic, had been around since the 1970s. This paper is an analysis of the legal-political context of the Quebec State then enables the detachment of the cornerstones of its policy speech in general, and finally those with respect to the indigenous population, in particular to the Inuit language.
There are eight major Inuit communities: those of the LABRADOR, the UNGAVA, and the BAFFIN, of Iglulik, the CARIBOU, of Netsilik and Copper as well as the Inuit of the Western Arctic (which replaced MACKENZIE INUIT). There are five main dialects Inuit in Canada Inuvialuktun, Inuinnaqtun, Inuktitut and inuttut grouped under a single language, Inuktitut or Inuktitut. (McGrath 2007) At the last census, 70% of Inuit said they knew the Inuit language and almost two thirds said that Inuktitut as their mother tongue (first language). (Steckley 2008)
It is in Nunavik and Nunavut, Inuktitut is the most used, and nine out of ten Inuit speak in that language. By comparison, 27% of Inuit of Nunatsiavut and 20% of Inuit in the Inuvialuit region speak this language. Although the use of this language is common among the Inuit, the number of people who speak it gradually declined, prompting the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami and the federal and territorial governments to develop a curriculum Inuktitut in schools.
The Inuit are a people of hunters and gatherers who traditionally move from one camp to another, depending on the season. (Paver 2008) The broad regional groupings were used randomly divided into smaller seasonal groups: winter camps, called "bands," bringing together a hundred people, and summer hunting groups, which comprise less than a dozen. Each band was identified by a place and a name relating thereto, the Arvirtuurmiut Peninsula Booth was called "eating baleen whales." (McGrath 2007)
Today, the fruits, vegetables and milk are too expensive, are rare and their freshness is poor, as they must be transported long distances before arriving in northern communities. However, game, marine mammals and berries abound, so many Inuit share some of the fruits of the hunt, caribou, duck and whaling and fishing and berry picking. (Steckley 2008) A 2005 report shows that almost all Inuit Nunaat of adult derive their livelihood from this food. Game, marine mammals and berries remain an important food source for many Inuit, almost all families Nunaat (96%) that food barter with other households.
Since the beginning of its settlement, 4000 years ago, the emergence of new people has always enriched the cultural life of the Arctic. The ancestors of the Inuit, whose culture is similar to that of Inuppiats (northern Alaska), the Katladlits (Greenland) and Yuit (Siberia and western Alaska), arrived 1050 years ago. From the eleventh century, VIKINGS influence of an unknown magnitude of the Inuit. (Paver 2008)
The successive arrival of explorers, whalers, traders, missionaries, scientists and other irreversibly alter their culture. As these people want to trade and need guidance and show them how to survive, the Inuit are actively involved in the development of the North. (Paver 2008) Despite the changes made by the Inuit themselves over the last three centuries and the abandonment of certain customs, and Inuit culture still raises more than ever an important realization. Inuit retain their cultural identity through language, cultural customs ancestral attitudes and behaviors as well as the INUIT ART, which has a great reputation.
In North, Inuktitut remains one of the most vibrant indigenous languages, although its use is declining. Some Inuit are learning as a second language. (Hauser et al. 2010) In the 2006 Census, 32,200 Inuit, 64% of this population reported Inuktitut as their mother tongue, down 4 percentage points since 1996. Mother tongue is the first language learned at home in childhood and still understood today. (Eber 2008)
The proportion of Inuit who speak Inuktitut most often at home also decreases. In 2006, about 25,500 Inuit (50% of the population of this group) reported Inuktitut as the language spoken most often at home, down 8 percentage points from 1996. (Eber 2008) Some Inuit learning Inuktitut as a second language. Approximately 11,100 Inuit youth aged 14 and under, 63% of this population had Inuktitut as their mother tongue. (King et al. 2005)
Approximately 12,200 Inuit (69%) mastered the language sufficiently to converse, which is a decrease from 1996 (72%). The Inuit probably come from an Asian nation of hunters and gatherers. They came...
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