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Автор Poplack, Shana
Автор Tagliamonte, Sali
Дата выпуска 1991
dc.description ABSTRACTIn this article, we describe a new research project on African Nova Scotian English (ANSE), a variety spoken by descendants of African American slaves who immigrated to Nova Scotia in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Subsequent segregation from surrounding populations has created a situation favoring retention of the vernacular, in conjunction with Standard English. In addition to providing the first systematic linguistic documentation of ANSE, we detail the characteristics of the Canadian scenario that make it an ideal test of the creole-origins and divergence hypotheses: in particular, that, more clearly than other African American English varieties that evolved independently in the diaspora, the Canadian situation has featured no creole influence. This fact can effectively date the occurrence of any creole-like features in contemporary ANSE (and, by extension, other varieties of African American Vernacular English [AAVE]) to (at least) the late 18th century, an important time-depth characterization. We then present the results of a series of quantitative analyses of linguistically diagnostic features and compare them to those obtained for (1) another transplanted variety of African American English (Samaná English) and (2) a prototype variety (the Ex-slave Recordings), and note the striking similarities among them. The results militate in favor of a genetic relationship among ANSE and its counterparts as a common precursor of contemporary varieties, thereby providing the first methodologically consistent cross-linguistic comparison of three distinct vestiges of “early” African American English, and contributing missing links in the history and development of AAVE.
Формат application.pdf
Издатель Cambridge University Press
Копирайт Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1991
Название African American English in the diaspora: Evidence from old-line Nova Scotians
Тип research-article
DOI 10.1017/S0954394500000594
Electronic ISSN 1469-8021
Print ISSN 0954-3945
Журнал Language Variation and Change
Том 3
Первая страница 301
Последняя страница 339
Аффилиация Poplack Shana; University of Ottawa
Аффилиация Tagliamonte Sali; University of Ottawa
Выпуск 3

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