Abstract:
This thesis explores how Acadians in Halifax Regional Municipality use French to index
their identity, including the importance of language in doing so. Halifax, Nova Scotia is
home to an English majority as well as immigrants from other provinces and all over the
world. The Acadians are a community held together by their culture, language, historical
context, and shared trauma from the 1755-1763 deportations. This thesis also explores
how Acadians are maintaining their cultural and linguistic identity here and the hurdles
they face in doing so. One such hurdle that this research suggests is that Acadian varieties of French may be at risk when confronted with language ideologies that can lead to assimilation and pressures such as a move towards a standard French. This can be seen in results from qualitative interviews with Acadians in Halifax and in statistics such as the decline in French as a first language which from 1971 to 2016 has gone from 3.5% to
1.7% of the province’s population (Statistics Canada 2017b). This thesis applies linguistic
and anthropological theories of identity to analyze the current situation of the Acadian
community in HRM and to look at the potential situations in the future. This research
suggests that French can be a tool used by Acadians, but it is not the only tool.
Additionally, you can identify as Acadian without having any knowledge of the French
language so it may be a more important tool to some than to others. Finally, this thesis
suggests that the Acadian identity as a whole is not at risk of being lost in the mix of other
minority and majority identities that make up the city.