In the upcoming “Preserving the Czech Language around the World: Texas Czech Legacy Project,” linguistics professor Lida Cope will talk about her efforts to document a dying dialect of Czech Moravians who started arriving in Texas in the second half of the 19th century. She will share the story of Svatava Pirkova Jakobson who gathered a unique archive of folklore from immigrants in New York City's "Czech village," Texas, and elsewhere, and discuss the challenges in promoting and preserving Czech language, culture, and identity in the English-speaking world.
Free and open to the public. Suggested donation $5. The event will be livestreamed on Zoom. RSVP through Eventbrite to receive the Zoom link.
About
Lida Cope is a professor of applied linguistics at East Carolina University in Greenville, North Carolina. Her areas of expertise include first language attrition, language contact and diaspora, and language documentation. Her research examines the questions of language, culture, and identity in historically Czech Moravian communities in Texas. Dr. Cope directs the Texas Czech Legacy Project, housed at the University of Texas at Austin, whose main objective is to build an open-access corpus of Texas Czech speech. Her publications include a comprehensive overview of Czech communities around the world Language loss: Czech in the diaspora (co-authored with Robert Dittmann of Charles University, BRILL 2020) and Taking Stock and Looking Forward: Documenting a diasporic variety of Czech in Texas (Naše řeč [Our Speech] 2021).
This event is organized by the Czechoslovak Society of Arts and Sciences (SVU), New York Chapter, with the support of the Bohemian Benevolent and Literary Association.