Alaskan?
Jim
festushaggen at SBCGLOBAL.NET
Mon Sep 8 14:31:35 UTC 2008
Hal,
Thanks for breaking down the details of this PNW accent I've discerned--with
examples no less!
Your encounter with the student is also interesting. It reminds me of some
responses I've had to students regarding my politics:
At some point near the end of my entry-level composition classes--when
students are learning to argue their points logically into essay format--I
ask the open question: "So, does anyone have any idea what my political
views are?" (Having occasionally suffered the political views of my own
teachers, I always present material in classes from a very politically
neutral standpoint.) Their responses are adamant: "You are very liberal,"
one says...or "I'd say you are pretty conservative," from another. I still
don't discuss my political views--but I use their uncertainty to emphasize
ways of making arguments in an academic setting.
It is amazing how students form opinions about us based on the least
significant details. But it comes down to the same assumptions--because the
students who are convinced that I'm liberal are usually pretty conservative
students--and vice versa. As is too often the case, any one perceived
difference seems to suggest to the perceiver that the perceived is based in
"an opposing" camp. A topic for Anthropological linguists and sociolinguists
to explain, no doubt...
Regional differences are a fascinating topic, as are student opinions of
these differences.
Jim Webb
http://www.uwosh.edu/filmandhistory/index.php
http://www.uwosh.edu/filmandhistory/events/documents/CinematicExtraterrestri
als.doc
-----Original Message-----
From: Linguistic Anthropology Discussion Group
[mailto:LINGANTH at listserv.linguistlist.org] On Behalf Of Harold Schiffman
Sent: Sunday, September 07, 2008 6:35 PM
To: LINGANTH at LISTSERV.LINGUISTLIST.ORG
Subject: Re: Alaskan?
Having lived in the Pacific Northwest for 28 years, and taught linguistics
courses
there, I have a few ideas about the PNW "accent" if indeed one can make
generalizations
about it as it might apply to Alaska. (Ms. Palin was born in Idaho, I'm
told, and also
attended college in that state, so maybe she has some of her accent from
Idaho.)
The most noticeable thing about PNW English that I can attest is that
certain vowel
contrasts that are found in east coast American English are missing, or
rare.
1. There is no contrast between the low back vowel in "caller" as contrasted
with the /a/ in 'collar,
and that applies across the board. "Otto" is pronounced the same as
"auto", 'caught' the same as
'cot', etc.
2. The high-lax back vowel in "should, put, good" etc. is often more
unrounded, more
like the final /u/ in Japanese, or Russian "jeri". In some c ases it may
even approach
the quality of barred-i.
.
3. There is no contrast between the vowel of 'bed' and the vowel of 'bad'
(sorry I can't
represent them well from this email system) when they occur before /r/, i.e.
'perish' and
'parish' are identical, as are the names Aaron and Erin, Barry and berry,
'merry' and 'marry',
and so on.
These are the most salient features I have noticed in the phonology of the
PNW dialect. There
may be others, but I never noticed whether people said "eye-rack" instead
of "ear-rack".
One thing I should report--whenever I did surveys in my ling classes to see
whether people had
the contrasts I've mentioned above, if anybody did have those contrasts,
they were surely not
from the local area. Once, after doing this, a student asked me if I was
"from this country." I was
rather outraged by this question, since the student was assuming that his
English was "normal" and
mine was therefore "foreign". Or maybe it was meant as a joke, since I
would assume students
watched TV and heard other accents from the media.
Hal Schiffman
On Sat, Sep 6, 2008 at 6:16 PM, Jim <festushaggen at sbcglobal.net> wrote:
> Robert Lawless comments:
> ************
> My son heard Sarah Palin today and said, "She talks funny. Is that an
> Alaska accent." Frankly I didn't notice anything that I could label a
> regional accent -- just that she sounds rather strident. Any comments?
>
> ************
>
>
> My fiancée and I have noted what we discern as a "Canadian accent"...
>
> As an "armchair linguist" I would guess Western Canadian...or more
> precisely, North American West Coast. (Northern Oregon...Washington
> State...and Brit Columbia all seem to have the same hollow sound to their
> broad vowels. (Surely, there's a term for this sound I hear...???)
>
> I have limited experience with true Alaskans...and almost none with native
> born Alaskans... So N American W Coast is about the best I can do.
>
> As to her philosophical accent--I think she is clearly from one very
> distinct, very American region: the private sector. (Is Stepford the
> capitol
> of Alaska???)
>
> I hope my linguistic attempts offer you any insights whatsoever. (Please
> keep us posted if you track down anything more on this matter of
> Palin-guistics.)
>
> Jim
>
> http://www.uwosh.edu/filmandhistory/index.php
>
>
http://www.uwosh.edu/filmandhistory/events/documents/CinematicExtraterrestri
> als.doc
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Linguistic Anthropology Discussion Group
> [mailto:LINGANTH at listserv.linguistlist.org] On Behalf Of Robert Lawless
> Sent: Saturday, September 06, 2008 2:29 PM
> To: LINGANTH at LISTSERV.LINGUISTLIST.ORG
> Subject: Alaskan?
>
> My son heard Sarah Palin today and said, "She talks funny. Is that an
> Alaska accent." Frankly I didn't notice anything that I could label a
> regional accent -- just that she sounds rather strident. Any comments?
>
--
=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+
Harold F. Schiffman
Professor Emeritus of
Dravidian Linguistics and Culture
Dept. of South Asia Studies
University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, PA 19104-6305
Phone: (215) 898-7475
Fax: (215) 573-2138
Email: haroldfs at gmail.com
http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/~haroldfs/
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