Abstract

Indian language contact situations are multilingual in nature, due to presence of
 different cultural and linguistic groups. In majority of the Indian multilingual contact
 situations, language groups are not clearly divided under dimensions of dominant/
 non-dominant, majority/minority, etc. In this backdrop the present paper makes an
 effort to understand the nature and dynamics of ethnolinguistic identity of three
 language communities of central Kolkata and their relationships with each other based
 on a study conducted in a language contact situation. The language groups taken for
 the study were English speaking Anglo-Indians, native Bengali speakers, and Urdu
 speaking Muslims of central Kolkata region. The study with help of theoretical principals
 of cross-cultural and social psychological perspectives tried to explore the dynamics of
 a multilingual contact situation, where none of the languages in the contact situation
 clearly fits the dimensions of majority/minority, dominant/non-dominant groups.

Full Text
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