Abstract
This article focuses on the discrimination against Kashubians and the Kashubian language since 1772, since the first partition of Poland. The author argues that Kashubians were always the people of the Polish-German borderland and thus were heavily influenced by the dominant state, yet they kept their Kashubian identity, language, and literature. However, today many Kashubians are in danger of losing working knowledge of their native language.
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Copyright 2019 by the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois
2019
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