This paper explores the interplay between the embodied affective dimensions of language choice, reported linguistic behaviour, and the competing ideologies rooted in family language practices, communicative memory, and discourses of (in)securitisation in the context of Russia's war in Ukraine. The shift in language policy to favour the use of Ukrainian over Russian, even by the Russophone citizens of Ukraine, is often framed as a form of resistance to the Russian military aggressions. In this paper it is considered as an act of 'sharp communication', at times resulting in conflicting selfhoods, and at times contributing to the possibilities of articulating grief.
Tarsoly et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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