Applied Linguistics 2013: 34/5: 574–591 ß Oxford University Press 2013 doi:10.1093/applin/amt027 Advance Access published on 12 October 2013 ‘Veneto out of Italy? Dialect, Migration, and Transnational Identity’ *SABINA PERRINO Department of Romance Languages and Literatures, University of Michigan, MI, USA *E-mail: sperrino@umich.edu In recent years, new efforts have been made to revitalize and promote local dialects in northern Italy. This project of dialect promotion has occurred side by side with new political restrictions on illegal immigrants in Italy, and both projects—dialect revitalization and anti-immigrant legislation—have been led by the influential federalist political party called Lega Nord. This revitalization is part of a larger set of political initiatives launched by two main political parties in Veneto, Liga Veneta, a subdivision of the Lega Nord, and the new, independently born Veneto Stato. Using a variety of discourse data collected in the Veneto region, this article shows how the promotion of Veneto dialect is intimately related to Veneto speakers’ defense against migrants and the Italian state. This link between local linguistic revitalization and anti-immigration efforts is not just a case of ‘regionalization’ within the Italian state, however. On the one hand, Veneto speakers emphasize their regional belonging rather than their national one by promoting dialect over Standard Italian; on the other hand, they construct a transnational identity as Veneti nel mondo (‘Veneto people in the world’)—reaching out especially to Veneto speakers in Argentina, Brazil, Peru, and the USA. Through an analysis of style shifting between Veneto dialect and Standard Italian in a corpus of naturally recorded data among Veneto speak- ers, I investigate how they foster and solidify a Veneto identity through oppos- ition to foreigners and the Italian state, and how they build a Veneto transnational identity that stretches beyond regional and national boundaries. INTRODUCTION In recent years, Veneto, one of the 20 regions of Italy, has been a theatre of political agitation for increased regional autonomy, which has led to new ideo- logical emphasis on Veneto’s identity and local language. The local ‘regional’ dialect, Veneto (‘Veneto dialect’), which has old roots and a significant literary tradition, has been strengthened within the region but also promoted beyond the region’s borders and the Italian state. Given the peculiar linguistic land- scape of the Italian peninsula, this recent revalorization of Veneto dialect as- sumes a certain significance if one considers its historical background. De Fina (Forthcoming) recalls that although Italy has been unified since 1871, first as a kingdom, and later as a Republic (1946), it was fragmented in many small states for a long time, and this fragmentation lasted after Italy’s official unifi- cation. These small states had different languages, which evolved directly from at University of Michigan on August 24, 2014 http://applij.oxfordjournals.org/ Downloaded from