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Ålanders Knowing Finnish : A Necessity or a Threat to Autonomy? The Ålandic Language Debate of 1968

Scherman, Ida LU (2023) In Journal of Finnish Studies 26(2). p.180-213
Abstract

The autonomy created for Åland in 1920 along with the linguistic and cultural guarantees stipulated in the 1921 Åland Agreement established Åland as a monolingual Swedish-speaking province within otherwise bilingual Finland. In particular, the Ålandic municipalities could themselves decide whether Finnish was to be taught in their primary schools. One hundred years later, Åland is still monolingually Swedish-speaking. The Finnish language, however, has been a hotly debated topic on Åland over the years. This article examines the status of the Swedish and Finnish languages that was established by the Autonomy Act and the Åland Agreement and explores the degree to which the Finnish language was present in Ålandic society during the first... (More)

The autonomy created for Åland in 1920 along with the linguistic and cultural guarantees stipulated in the 1921 Åland Agreement established Åland as a monolingual Swedish-speaking province within otherwise bilingual Finland. In particular, the Ålandic municipalities could themselves decide whether Finnish was to be taught in their primary schools. One hundred years later, Åland is still monolingually Swedish-speaking. The Finnish language, however, has been a hotly debated topic on Åland over the years. This article examines the status of the Swedish and Finnish languages that was established by the Autonomy Act and the Åland Agreement and explores the degree to which the Finnish language was present in Ålandic society during the first decades of the autonomy. The arguments and ideas presented in one particular political dispute that took place in 1968 between the speaker of the legislative assembly, Thorvald “Thusse” Eriksson, and the premier of the provincial government, Martin Isaksson, are then analyzed in more detail. The debate was precipitated by, among other things, an upcoming reform of the school system that called attention to the question of whether Finnish were to be taught in Ålandic schools. Eriksson and Isaksson disagreed on what atti-tude Åland should have toward Finland, Finnish speakers, and the Finnish language and on whether Finnicization was a threat to Åland. Eriksson saw any intrusion of the Finnish language as a threat to Åland’s autonomy, while Isaksson believed Ålanders had to know some Finnish to be competitive on the job market. The overall aim of the article is to broaden our understanding of how ideas and perceptions related to language and autonomy have developed over time on Åland and to put them in a broader per-spective through the use of the concept of societal cultures.

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author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
language ideology, minority language policy, national language policy, Åland, Åland Agreement, Åland autonomy
in
Journal of Finnish Studies
volume
26
issue
2
pages
34 pages
publisher
University of Illinois Press
external identifiers
  • scopus:85193466381
ISSN
1206-6516
DOI
10.5406/28315081.26.2.04
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
3b9b8af6-288a-4aba-a7e8-88ae4d34feed
date added to LUP
2024-06-18 14:04:33
date last changed
2024-06-18 14:05:12
@article{3b9b8af6-288a-4aba-a7e8-88ae4d34feed,
  abstract     = {{<p>The autonomy created for Åland in 1920 along with the linguistic and cultural guarantees stipulated in the 1921 Åland Agreement established Åland as a monolingual Swedish-speaking province within otherwise bilingual Finland. In particular, the Ålandic municipalities could themselves decide whether Finnish was to be taught in their primary schools. One hundred years later, Åland is still monolingually Swedish-speaking. The Finnish language, however, has been a hotly debated topic on Åland over the years. This article examines the status of the Swedish and Finnish languages that was established by the Autonomy Act and the Åland Agreement and explores the degree to which the Finnish language was present in Ålandic society during the first decades of the autonomy. The arguments and ideas presented in one particular political dispute that took place in 1968 between the speaker of the legislative assembly, Thorvald “Thusse” Eriksson, and the premier of the provincial government, Martin Isaksson, are then analyzed in more detail. The debate was precipitated by, among other things, an upcoming reform of the school system that called attention to the question of whether Finnish were to be taught in Ålandic schools. Eriksson and Isaksson disagreed on what atti-tude Åland should have toward Finland, Finnish speakers, and the Finnish language and on whether Finnicization was a threat to Åland. Eriksson saw any intrusion of the Finnish language as a threat to Åland’s autonomy, while Isaksson believed Ålanders had to know some Finnish to be competitive on the job market. The overall aim of the article is to broaden our understanding of how ideas and perceptions related to language and autonomy have developed over time on Åland and to put them in a broader per-spective through the use of the concept of societal cultures.</p>}},
  author       = {{Scherman, Ida}},
  issn         = {{1206-6516}},
  keywords     = {{language ideology; minority language policy; national language policy; Åland; Åland Agreement; Åland autonomy}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{2}},
  pages        = {{180--213}},
  publisher    = {{University of Illinois Press}},
  series       = {{Journal of Finnish Studies}},
  title        = {{Ålanders Knowing Finnish : A Necessity or a Threat to Autonomy? The Ålandic Language Debate of 1968}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/28315081.26.2.04}},
  doi          = {{10.5406/28315081.26.2.04}},
  volume       = {{26}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}