8.168, Sum: Appalachian English
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Tue Feb 4 17:47:34 UTC 1997
LINGUIST List: Vol-8-168. Tue Feb 4 1997. ISSN: 1068-4875.
Subject: 8.168, Sum: Appalachian English
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Date: Sun, 2 Feb 1997 19:52:14 -0500 (EST)
From: Christen Marie Pearson <cpearson at indiana.edu>
Subject: Sum: Appalachian English
-------------------------------- Message 1 -------------------------------
Date: Sun, 2 Feb 1997 19:52:14 -0500 (EST)
From: Christen Marie Pearson <cpearson at indiana.edu>
Subject: Sum: Appalachian English
Dear Linguists,
Here is the summary from the question I posed about 10 days ago. I
was amazed at the number of people who responded to the request;
several people suggested certain researchers, who then themselves
contacted me. I truly appreciate the time everyone took to help. I
would like to acknowledge the following people:
Stefan Martin
Marc Picard
George Huttar
James Cornish
Tom McClive
Marion Kee
Tim Thornes
Ernest McCarus
Donna Christian
Paul Purdom
Peter Svenonius
James Fidelholtz
John Konopak
Mark Mandel
Michael Montgomery
The following resources were suggested:
Appalachian English by Donna Christian and Walt Wolfram
Arlington/Wash., D.C.: Center for Applied LInguistics 1976
This was suggested by six different people.
The Oxford Companion to the English Language by McArthur
Some relationships between Appalachian language and culture and high
school drop-out rates as found in two West Virginia counties.
MA thesis University of Texas at Arlington, by Diana McLaughlin,
1984
Way with Words
Shirley Brice Heath, Cambridge University Press
(re: learning styles influenced by rearing practices)
River of Earth
James Still
(novel set in Appalachia, includes typical dialogue)
Monograph on Ozark and Appalachian English
early 1980's, University of Alabama Press
Walt Wolfram and Donna Christian
The Personal Dative in Appalachian Speech, in Dialects of English:
Studies in Grammatical Variation, by Donna Christian, ed. by
Peter Trudgill and J.K. Chambers, Longman, London and New York,
p.11-19, 1991.
Towards a description of a-prefixing in Appalachian English, by Walt
Wolfram, same source as above, pg. 229-240.
Foxfire series
ed. by Elliot Wigginton
Dialects of English
ed. Peter Trudgill and J. K. Chambers
Work in press by Michael Montgomery (University of South Carolina)
Including a historical account and a dictionary
Due to be published in 1998
Suggestion of contacting Ohio University: Depts. of Linguistics,
Geography, and Anthropology
Suggestion of searching under "Pittsburghese"
American Dialect Society
http://humanities.byu.edu/humstudents/lillie/ads/index.htm
ADS-L (their mail discussion list)
http://humanities.byu.edu/humstudents/lillie/ads/adsl.htm
To subscribe, send following as the complete body of an email message to:
listserv at uga.cc.uga.edu
sub ADS-L Your Name
Questions about ADS-L
maynor at ra.msstate.edu
Again, I would like to thank everyone for their help. I should note
that works by Donna Christian, Walt Wolfram, and Michael Montgomery
were most frequently suggested.
Christen M. Pearson
cpearson at indiana.edu
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