Language Change. The Interplay of Internal, External and Extra-Linguistic Factors, ed. by Mari C. Jones and Edith Esch
Julia Ulrich
Julia.Ulrich at deGruyter.com
Fri Oct 11 12:41:17 UTC 2002
----------------------------Original message----------------------------
NEW PUBLICATION FROM MOUTON DE GRUYTER!!!!!!!!!!!!!
>>From the series
Contributions to the Sociology of Language
Series Editor: Joshua A. Fishman
LANGUAGE CHANGE
THE INTERPLAY OF INTERNAL, EXTERNAL AND EXTRA-LINGUISTIC FACTORS
Edited by Mari C. Jones and Edith Esch
2002. ix. 338 pages. Cloth.
Euro 88.00 / sFr 141,- / approx. US$ 88.00
ISBN 3-11-017202X
(Contributions to the Sociology of Language 86)
This volume examines the phenomenon of language change from three
different perspectives. It focuses on the effects of internal
developments in the linguistic system, the role of contact with other
varieties and the influence that extra-linguistic factors such as
sociopolitical and economic developments may have on language. Moreover,
as language change is rarely a clear-cut process, the interface between
these different forces are explored.
This book brings together the work of eighteen scholars working in the
fields of historical linguistics, sociolinguistics and bilingualism and
presents hitherto unpublished data from varieties including English,
French, Karaim, Modern Greek, Jordanian, Spanish, Latin, and Arabic. The
chapters are organized around the themes of levelling, convergence and
adaptative mechanisms and combine theoretical debate with case studies
of the varieties discussed.
>>From the contents
Introduction
Kimberley Farrar and Mari C. Jones
1. LEVELLING
Dialect contact and koinéization: the case of northern France
David Hornsby
The depicardization of the vernaculars of the Lille conurbation
Tim Pooley
Jordanian and Palestinian dialects in contact: vowel raising in Amman
Enam Al-Wer
"Salience" as an explanatory factor in language change: evidence from
dialect levelling in urban England
Paul Kerswill and Ann Williams
My Dad's auxiliaries
Edith Esch
2. CONVERGENCE
Mette a haout dauve la grippe des Angllaïs: convergence on the Island of
Guernsey
Mari C. Jones
Modern Greek: towards a standard language or a new diglossia?
David Holton
Standard English and the lexicon: why so many different spellings?
Laura Wright
Latin and Arabic evolutionary processes: some relections
Joseph Cremona
There's sheep and there's penguins: convergence, "drift" and "slant" in
New Zealand and Falkland Island English
David Britain and Andrea Sudbury
3. ADAPTATIVE MECHANISMS
Convergence in the brain: the leakiness of bilinguals' sound systems
Ian Watson
Language contact in early bilinguals: the special statusof function
words
Margaret Deuchar and Marilyn May Vihman
4. CODE-COPYING
Contact-induced change in a code-copying framework
Lars Johanson
Karaim: a high-copying language
Éva Ágnes Csató
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