ABSTRACT: This article examines the inherently political nature of perspectival work, particularly in the context of language revitalization movements and the discourses of endangerment. I argue that these movements navigate a complex alternation of perspectives, at once challenging dominant ideologies while also adapting to them in order to legitimate their claims for linguistic preservation. This dual positioning reflects a broader dialectic of “somewhereness” and “nowhereness,” in which minority languages are framed as both universally valuable and uniquely irreplaceable. Drawing on historical analysis, I trace the evolution of perspectives on linguistic minorities from the nineteenth century onwards, highlighting how minority language groups were transformed from perceived threats to objects of romanticized nostalgia. This shift, I suggest, strengthened what Michel-Rolph Trouillot (2003) termed the “Savage slot”—a framework that renders marginalized populations intelligible within dominant ideological formations, often in ways that depoliticize their struggles. Using a case study based on Scottish Highland history, I illustrate how perspectival reordering turns perceptions of danger into narratives of endangerment. Waverley (1814), as a narrative metonym for this shift, exemplifies how cultural and linguistic forms once associated with insurgency were gradually reframed as fragile relics of the past. This process ultimately serves the interests of dominant groups, neutralizing former political threats while simultaneously providing a platform for resistance and identity affirmation among marginalized communities. By attending to the politics of perspective, this article sheds light on the ways in which language, place, and identity are continually reconfigured through ideological work, shaping the conditions under which minority languages are remembered, revitalized, and repurposed in the present.
James T. Costa (Mon,) studied this question.
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