Abstract
Abstract This article examines the presence of language(s) in the public space of the Intramuros district in the Philippine capital, Manila, connecting Linguistic Landscape research with heritage tourism and language ideologies. The aim is to analyze the visibility of languages both top-down and bottom-up in the super-diverse, post-colonial context of the Philippine capital, based on a combination of different types of data and methods. The focus is on the former colonial language, Spanish.
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