COVID-19, kovhidhi, dzihwamupengo: Language use, language change, and pandemic perceptions among Shona-speakers in Gweru, Zimbabwe

Vincent Jenjekwa
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Abstract

Through an examination of the linguistic practices encountered and used by Shona language-speakers in the Zimbabwean city of Gweru, this study explores intersections between language use, language change, and perceptions of the COVID pandemic—as caused by the virus referred to by Gweru’s Shona-speakers as, variously, “COVID-19” in its English-language representation or “kovhidhi” or “dzihwamupengo” in its two most common Shona-language representations. The study is anchored in conceptions of the impacts that natural disasters and pandemics have on language and on communication needs, and in theories of semiotics and language change. The research finds that the predominant terms used by Gweru’s Shona-speakers in relation to the pandemic carry connotations that, in the Zimbabwean socio-cultural context, potentially undermine optimal responses to the pandemic. The article concludes by emphasising the importance of careful management of language as a critical resource in the fight against natural disasters and pandemics.
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2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)、kovhidhi、dzihwamupengo:津巴布韦圭鲁绍纳语使用者的语言使用、语言变化和大流行认知
本研究通过对津巴布韦Gweru市讲绍纳语的人遇到和使用的语言实践的调查,探讨了语言使用、语言变化和对COVID大流行的看法之间的交集。这种流行病是由Gweru的绍纳语使用者在其英语表达中称为“COVID-19”,在其两种最常见的绍纳语表达中称为“kovhidhi”或“dzihwamupengo”。这项研究立足于自然灾害和流行病对语言和交流需求的影响概念,以及符号学和语言变化理论。研究发现,在津巴布韦的社会文化背景下,Gweru的绍纳语使用者使用的与流行病有关的主要术语具有潜在的内涵,可能会破坏对流行病的最佳反应。文章最后强调了谨慎管理语言作为抗击自然灾害和流行病的关键资源的重要性。
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