Abstract:
Pakistan is a land of linguistic diversity having more than sixty languages. Punjabi, along
with its numerous mutually intelligible dialects, is an ancient language. It is mainly
spoken in the Pakistani province of Punjab and Indian Punjab in the subcontinent. It is a
member of the Indo-Aryan branch of the Indo-European language family. The aim of this
ethnographic study is to explore the status of Punjabi language in our society by looking
at the language usage and linguistic practices of Punjabi native speakers residing in
selected urban and rural areas. Ten families, five from urban area and five from rural
area, participated in the study. The participants were selected on the basis of their
educational level, marital status, monthly income, occupation, family background and the
size of land owned by them. The theoretical framework which informs this research is the
constructivist qualitative paradigm. The tools of data collection include semi structured
interviews and recordings of informal conversation of the research participants. The
analysis of the collected data reveals that in the urban areas, Punjabi language is not the
dominant medium of communication among the research participants. The participants
do not consider it important and worthwhile to maintain Punjabi language, as they do not
see it as economically advantageous and profitable to them. It is just a part of their
cultural heritage, but they do not use it for communicative purposes. In the rural areas,
however, the research participants expressed a strong sense of association and affiliation
with Punjabi language; Punjabi language is their dominant medium of communication
with others; they consider Punjabi an inevitable part of their cultural heritage and
identity; they support the idea of learning English and Urdu languages but not at the cost
of Punjabi language. These findings suggest that language desertion is an urban
phenomenon, as Punjabi language is not maintained by the urban research participants
due to certain wider socio-political factors which have disrupted and distorted the status
of Punjabi language while consolidating the role of English and Urdu in the society.