This article examines gender and language
in post-Soviet Ukraine, where language laws and turbulent
socioeconomic changes are affecting language use. It discusses
ideologies of gender, language, and ethnicity in Ukraine and
assesses the significance of gender in shaping stances toward
three competing languages, Ukrainian, Russian, and English.
The analysis focuses on language ideologies and attitudes, based
on survey and matched-guise language attitude test data. Two
kinds of explanations for the gendered patterning are considered:
first, how socialization and cultural ideologies of women's
relationship to language shape the attitudes documented; and
second, how political/economic forces (differences in possibilities
for social power and social advancement linked to language use)
lead men and women to benefit from different strategies in their
use and valuation of linguistic capital. It is shown that, while
sociocultural and political/economic forces reinforce each other
in some cases, in others they contradict each other, with economic
motives prevailing over cultural paradigms of traditionalism.