🇮🇷 Iran Proxy | https://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tansi_language
Jump to content

Tansi language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tansi
Tansi Creole
Bahasa Tansi
Native toWest Sumatra (Sawahlunto)
RegionIndonesia
EthnicityTansi people
Native speakers
few native speakers left
Language codes
ISO 639-3None (mis)
GlottologNone

Tansi language (Bahasa Tansi), also known as Tansi Creole, is a creole or mixed language spoken by a community known as the Tansi people, in Sawahlunto, a former mining town previously under Dutch colonial rule.[1][2] The Tansi people developed through the use of forced labour from a range of ethnic communities, of which Javanese prisoners were the majority.[1] The community's name comes from the word tansi meaning 'barracks where the labourers lived'.[1]

History

[edit]

Input languages

[edit]

Tansi language began as a polygenetic pidgin language, combining the languages of Minangkabau, Javanese, Chinese, Madurese, Sundanese, Balinese, Buginese, and Batak, with basic Malay and Dutch.[3][4]

Artistic practices

[edit]

The Tansi people have developed a performance practice called Tonel, which relies heavily on the Tansi language.[1] Tonel performances incorporate "mimicry and mockery; hybridization; and parody and satire".[1][5] In the Tonel performances, women reclaimed their identities by acting as main characters in significant roles rather than being used in the colonial period as objects of desire.[1] Within the performances, speakers of the Tansi language illustrate both practices of decreolization towards the source languages of Minangkabau and Javanese, and recreolization illustrating Tansi people solidarity.[1]

Recognition

[edit]

The mining city where the Tansi language originated, Ombilin Coal Mine, was recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2019.[1] The language itself was also recognized by UNESCO as part of the region's intangible cultural heritage.[4]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Pramayoza, Dede; Yuliza, Fresti (2023-07-03). "Recreolization as Decolonial Dramaturgy: Tansi Language in Tonel Performance, Sawahlunto City". eTropic: Electronic Journal of Studies in the Tropics. 22 (1): 53–78. doi:10.25120/etropic.22.1.2023.3967. ISSN 1448-2940.
  2. ^ Syafril, Elsa Putri Ermisah (2011). Menggali Bara, Menemu Bahasa: Bahasa Tansi – Bahasa Kreol Buruh dari Sawahlunto [Digging Coal: Discovering Language: Tansi Language – Labor Creole From Sawahlunto] (in Indonesian). Sawahlunto: Pemerintah Kota Sawahlunto. ISBN 978-602-95957-1-0.
  3. ^ Syafril, Elsa Putri Ermisah (February 2010). Buku Kamus Bahasa Tansi Sawahlunto [Tansi Sawahlunto Language Dictionary Book] (in Indonesian) (2nd ed.). Pemerintah Kota Sawahlunto. p. 1. ISBN 978-602-95957-0-3.
  4. ^ a b Fitri, Titi; Arifah, Bilqis; Dehham, Sabeeha Hamza (2024-04-30). "Tansi Creole Language: Identity and Communication in Sawahlunto Society". KREDO : Jurnal Ilmiah Bahasa dan Sastra. 7 (2): 324–334. doi:10.24176/kredo.v7i2.12280. ISSN 2599-316X.
  5. ^ Pramayoza, Dede (2016-06-14). "Tonel: Teaterikalitas Pascakolonial Masyarakat Tansi Sawahlunto". Jurnal Kajian Seni (in Indonesian). 1 (2): 114–129. doi:10.22146/art.11636. ISSN 2356-3001.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Syafril, E.P.E. (2010). Kamus Bahasa Tansi Sawahlunto (in Indonesian). Sawahlunto: Pemerintah Kota Sawahlunto.