On January 18, the Plurilingual Lab at McGill held its latest Grad Talk, with speaker Nimasha Malalasekera from the Université de Montréal presenting a session entitled The Vedda language of indigenous Adivasi of Dambana in Sri Lanka: A creole or something else?
The Dambana Adivasi, descendants of Sri Lanka's original inhabitants, speak the endangered Vedda language. Scholars have debated whether the Vedda language is a Sinhala dialect or a creole. Malalasekera’s discussion examined linguistic data collected through collaborative ethnographic documentation to determine if the Dambana Adivasi's language can be classified as a mixed language.
Nimasha Malalasekera is a PhD candidate in Anthropology (Ethnolinguistics), whose research interests include language ideology, language policies and planning, endangered languages and the cultures of South Asia.
The Plurilingual Lab Grad Talks are coordinated by Angelica Galante and hosted by PhD student John Wayne dela Cruz. They are sponsored by McGill University’s Faculty of Education and the Centre for the Study of Learning and Performance, and co-organized by the BILD Research Group and McGill’s Department of Integrated Studies in Education (DISE).