A Minority Language in the Shadow of the State Language: Bilingual Communication of Mayor's Office

Patrik Schulcz, Gizella Szabómihály

Research output: Book chapterConference contributionpeer-review

Abstract

This paper presents some of the results of a research that was carried out in 2019-2022 in municipal councils in southern Slovakia, in order to determine the required competencies, including language skills, of administrative staff. There are a number of municipalities in southern Slovakia where the proportion of the Hungarian minority is higher compared to the proportion of population of Slovak nationality. In such settlements, the dominant language of municipality officers is usually the minority (Hungarian) language, as it is used more often by their clients, compared to the state language. The presentation points out the language-related difficulties encountered from the minority position in the daily work of municipal officers. During orality, officers use translanguaging (code switching) where state language loanwords (mainly administrative terminology) are included in the minority language. This 'occasionally created' language, when officers use their whole linguistic repertoire, contributes to efficient oral administration, as this language is understood by the administrative officers and the clients as well. However, it is different when the administration is extended to written communication. In this case, the administrative officers must be able to translate texts received from the state or public authorities so that they can be communicated in the language of the minority. Most of the employees have not received training in professional translation, and moreover, the municipal officers are not thoroughly familiar with the special administrative terminology in the minority language, and therefore, they do not have the appropriate vocabulary to translate the state language texts into the minority language (Szabómihály 2002). This presentation examines the Hungarian language competence of the officers working at the mayor's office in one southern Slovakian village and in one town, on the basis of official statements posted online, translated and created by the employees. The presentation examines only those posts where the source text is written in the Slovak state language, and the target language is the language of the minority (Hungarian), and which meet the following criteria: 1. are related to COVID-19 virus and epidemic 2. information related to the local government office (local taxes, opening hours of local government institutions, etc.) 3. are shared in the first half of 2020 The results show that the Hungarian target written texts are usually simplified (compared to the texts in the state language) due to a lack of knowledge of minority terminology, and contain contact-induced phenomena that characterize the contact variety of the Hungarian language in Slovakia.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationGLOCAL COMELA 2022 - The Conference on European and Mediterranean Linguistic Anthropology 2022
Subtitle of host publicationBounded Languages ... Unbounded, Selected Conference Proceedings Papers
EditorsMichael Hadzantonis, Nathan Hill
PublisherGlobal Council on Anthropological Linguistics
Pages343-348
Number of pages6
ISBN (Electronic)9780648535621
Publication statusPublished - 2022
Externally publishedYes
Event2022 GLOCAL Conference on European and Mediterranean Linguistic Anthropology, COMELA 2022 - Athens, Greece
Duration: 19 Jul 202223 Jul 2022

Publication series

NameGLOCAL Conference Proceedings
ISSN (Electronic)2707-8647

Conference

Conference2022 GLOCAL Conference on European and Mediterranean Linguistic Anthropology, COMELA 2022
Country/TerritoryGreece
CityAthens
Period19/07/2223/07/22

Keywords

  • bilingual texts
  • linguistic anthropology
  • Minority language
  • state language

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