Whither the southern accent?

Harold F. Schiffman haroldfs at ccat.sas.upenn.edu
Mon Nov 28 15:02:36 UTC 2005


Whither the Southern Accent?

By JEFFREY COLLINS and KRISTEN WYATT,
Associated Press Writers
Wed Nov 23, 6:20 PM ET

"Y'all" isn't welcome in Erica Tobolski's class in voice and diction at
the University of South Carolina. And forget about "fixin'," as in getting
ready to do something, or "pin" when talking about the writing instrument.
Tobolski's class is all about getting rid of accents, mostly Southern ones
in the heart of the former Confederacy, and replacing them with Standard
American Dialect, the uninflected tone of TV news anchors that oozes
authority and refinement. "We sort of avoid talking about class in this
country, but clearly class is indicated by how we speak," she said.

"Many come to see me because they want to sound less country," she said.
"They say, 'I don't want to lose my accent completely, but I want to be
able to minimize it or modify it.'" That was the case for sophomore Ali
Huffstetler, who said she "luuuvs" the slow-paced softness of her upstate
South Carolina magnolia mouth but wants to be able to turn it on and off
depending on her audience. "I went to New Hampshire to visit one of my
best friends and all they kept saying was, 'Will you please talk, can you
just talk for me?'" Huffstetler said. "I felt like a little puppet show."

Across the fast-growing South, accents are under assault, and not just
from the modern-day Henry Higginses of academia. There's the flood of
transplants from other regions, notions of Southern upward mobility that
require dropping the drawl, and stereotypes that "y'alls" and "suhs"
signal low status or lack of intelligence. But is the Southern accent
really disappearing? That depends what accent you mean. The South, because
of its rural, isolated past, boasts a diversity of dialects, from
Appalachian twangs in several states to Elizabethan lilts in Virginia to
Cajun accents in Louisiana to African-influenced Gullah accents on the
coasts of Georgia and South Carolina.

One accent that has been all but wiped out is the slow
juleps-in-the-moonlight drawl favored by Hollywood portrayals of the
South. To find that so-called plantation accent in most parts of the
region nowadays requires a trip to the video store. "The
Rhett-and-Scarlett accent, that is disappearing, no doubt about it,"
said Bill Kretzschmar, a linguist at the University of Georgia and editor
of the American Linguistic Atlas, which tracks speech patterns. "Blame it
on the boll weevil," he said, referring to the cotton pest.  "That accent
from plantation areas, which was never the whole South, has been in
decline for a long time. The economic basis of that culture started going
away at the turn of the last century," when the bugs nearly wiped out the
South's cotton economy.

Even as the stereotypical Southern accent gets rarer, other speech
patterns take its place, and they're not any less Southern. The Upland
South accent, a faster-paced dialect native to the Appalachian mountains,
is said to be spreading just as fast as the plantation drawl disappears.
"The one constant about language is, it's always changing," Kretzschmar
said. "The Southern accent is not going anywhere. But you have all kinds
of mixtures and changes."

For a long-term study on whether the Southern accent is disappearing,
University of Georgia linguists went to Roswell, Ga., an Atlanta suburb
that is just the kind of transient place that leads to the death of
indigenous dialects. It's packed with strip malls and subdivisions with no
cotton patches or peach trees in sight. "I don't hear it," 21-year-old
Roswell native Amanda Locher said of the accent. She's never lived outside
the South, but even Northern newcomers question her Southernness. "People
tell me I sound like I'm from up North.  To hear a true Southern accent,
you'd have to go deeper south than here."

Adam Mach, a 25-year-old tire shop worker who moved to the Atlanta suburbs
from Lafayette, La., has got a noticeable Louisiana lilt. But he said his
accent seldom makes conversation because the area is such a melting pot of
newcomers. "Everybody I meet's not from here," he shrugged. North Carolina
State University linguist Walt Wolfram said it's a misconception among
Southerners that Yankee newcomers are stamping out traditional speech.
More likely, he said, is that newcomers pick up local speech patterns.

"When people move here and don't think they've changed at all, they go
home and people say, 'Wow. You've turned Southern.' They pick up enough to
be identified as Southern. So it's still there, still strongly identified
with the South," Wolfram said. But that doesn't mean that population
change in the South isn't chipping away at old-timey dialects, especially
in cities. Wolfram said the "dearest feature" of the Southern accent the
vowel shift where one-syllable words like "air" come out in two syllables,
"ay-ah"  is certainly vanishing. Other aspects such as double-modal
constructions like "might could"  are still pervasive.

Kretzschmar, who has recorded Roswell speakers for three years, said his
suburban Atlanta studies have backed up his suspicion that the Southern
accent is morphing along with the urbanizing South. "It's not really
disappearing, but the circumstances of living make it different," he said.
"People don't have connections with their neighbors to maintain their way
of speech.

"The circumstances of how people get together and talk in the cities have
changed; they're not constantly talking to people who talk just like them.
But in the South outside the cities, you have a lot of similarities."
Georgia-bred humorist Roy Blount Jr. understands that people with strong
Southern accents are often perceived as "slow and dimwitted." But he
thinks it's "sort of a shame" that people should feel the need to soften
or even lose their accents.

"My father, who was a surely intelligent man, would say `cain't'. He
wouldn't say `can't.' And, `There ain't no way, just there ain't no way.'
You don't want to say, `There isn't any way.' That just spoils the whole
thing," Blount said. "I just think that there's a certain eloquence in
Southern vernacular that I wouldn't want to lose touch with ... you ought
to sound like where you come from." But never fear. There are still plenty
of professions that thrive on a good Southern twang from preachers to
football coaches to a certain breed of courtroom litigators.

And South Carolina's Tobolski, an Indiana native who came south eight
years ago, can help there, too. As a private coach she has even taught a
politician she wouldn't name how to ratchet up his Southern accent to make
him appear more folksy before certain crowds a technique she calls "code
switching." "He didn't want to lose his dialect entirely. He just wanted
to be able to adapt." "I don't think that any regional accent is going to
be eliminated," she said. "There's still people who want to hang on to how
they sound. That's who they are. That's their identity. And that goes from
New Jersey to Minnesota to Wyoming to Georgia."

___

EDITOR'S NOTE  Kristen Wyatt reported this story from Roswell, Ga.; Greg
Bluestein in Atlanta and Allen G. Breed in Raleigh, N.C., also contributed
to this report.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20051123/ap_on_re_us/southern_identity_accents

Copyright  2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.



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