“My curiosity turned to pleasure as I read on, since Fians’ writing is both ethnographically rich … and theoretically sound … . Thorough and easy to read, with material from real speakers and situations, Fians’ book would make an excellent text for courses dealing with sociolinguistics and multilingualism – and, of course, for those focused on constructed languages. It could also serve as a model for those conducting research in constructed-language settings and, more generally, for those working with international and dispersed communities.” (Christine Schreyer, Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, July 31, 2022) “Esperanto Revolutionaries and Geeks is a highly-readable ethnography of alternative imaginings of time and space among Esperantists. It identifies liberal and radical forms of resistance to the constraints of institutionalised national standard languages – and so to hierarchical nation-states themselves. The point of Esperanto is not utopian perfection, but rather a democratic participation in a commons.”
Monica Heller, Professor of Anthropology at the University of Toronto, Canada and former President of the American Anthropological Association, USA.
“Guilherme Fians’ incisive book stands out for its sharp ethnographic focus on political practices among Esperanto speakers in Paris. With insight and flair, Fians probes the central paradox of Esperanto: how what appears to be Esperanto’s greatest vulnerability – its ephemerality – is, for many of its speakers, its greatest allure.”
Esther Schor, Professor of English at Princeton University, USA and author of Bridge of Words: Esperanto and the Dream of a Universal Language.
“This account shows how some of those very disabling factors that might have completely undermined the feasibility of an Esperanto-speaking community actually end up driving episodic subcommunity-building practices in enclaves which look mutually isolated but, counterintuitively, connect the dots. The Polish Student Esperanto Committee’s 1980 declaration stressed the need for ‘the individual [to] be a subject, not an object, in the [Esperanto] movement;’ Guilherme Fians magisterially spells out just how such dreams have come true.”
Probal Dasgupta, Professor of Linguistics at the Indian Statistical Institute Kolkata, India and Honorary Member of the Linguistic Society of America, USA.
Guilherme Fians offers a path-breaking
contribution to the ethnography of the Esperanto movement, focusing on who
speaks the language, why they do so, and how this movement for an
international language is changing as patterns of communication and
political agendas change. In the process he reveals a social movement that
is both widespread and insufficiently studied. An important addition to the
literature.
Humphrey Tonkin, Professor of the Humanities and President Emeritus at Hartford University, USA
“In this insightful ethnography of Esperanto speakers, Guilherme Fians accomplishes the rare achievement of making important contributions to the study of topics as varied as language ideologies, cosmopolitanism, mediation and temporality. Moreover, by learning from a community defined by its dispersion and non-nativeness, the author masterfully leads the reader to reflect about the value of ephemerality in the contemporary world.”
João Felipe Gonçalves, Professor of Anthropology at the University of São Paulo, Brazil
"Vividly engaging and theoretically sophisticated, this book stands out as
the first substantial and extended anthropological account of the sociallife
of Esperanto. Fians gives a vibrant portrayal of the complex and partially
connected intergenerational collective who keep this constructed language
and its broader social project alive. A must-read for anyone interested in
language politics and contemporary social movements.”
Matei Candea, Reader in Social Anthropology at the University of Cambridge, UK and author of Corsican Fragments: Difference, Knowledge and Fieldwork.