Uniformitarianism is the widely held assumption that, in the case of languages, structural and other changes in the past must have been triggered and constrained by the same ecological factors as changes in the present. This volume, led by two of the most eminent scholars in language contact, brings together an international team of authors to shed new light on Uniformitarianism in historical linguistics. Applying the Uniformitarian Principle to creoles and pidgins, as well as other languages, the chapters show that, contrary to the received doctrine, the former group of languages did not emerge in an exceptional way. Covering a typologically and geographically broad range of languages, and focusing on different contact ecologies in Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean, the book also dispels common misconceptions about what Uniformitarianism is. It shows how similar processes in different ecosystems result in different linguistic patterns, which don't require exceptional linguistic explanations in terms of creolization, pidginization, simplification, or incomplete acquisition.
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Für höhere Schule und Studium
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ISBN-13
978-1-009-62896-9 (9781009628969)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Salikoko S. Mufwene is the Edward Carson Waller Distinguished Service Professor of Linguistics at the University of Chicago. His notable publications include: The Ecology of Language Evolution (Cambridge University Press, 2001), Language Evolution (Continuum Press, 2008), and Ecological Perspectives on Language Endangerment and Loss (Springer Nature, 2025). He is a fellow of the Linguistic Society of America, the American Philosophical Society, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He also held the Chaire Mondes francophones at the College de France in academic year 2023-24. Enoch O. Aboh is Professor of Linguistics at the University of Amsterdam. His research focuses on comparative syntax and language creation and change. His main publications include The Emergence of Hybrid Grammars, (Cambridge University Press, 2015) and The Morphosyntax of Head-Complement Sequences (Oxford University Press, 2004). He is a founding member of the African Linguistics School (ALS).
Herausgeber*in
University of Chicago
University of Amsterdam
1. Uniformitarianism in Language Speciation: An Introduction; Salikoko S. Mufwene and Enoch O. Aboh; 2. The Emergence of Creoles and Pidgins: Some Ecological Perspectives; Salikoko S. Mufwene; 3. Brokers on the Move: Encounters between Europeans and Africans in the Portuguese Seaborne Empire (1425-1521); Konstanze Jungbluth; 4. Why no French Creole nor Pidgin Developed in West Africa: An Ethnographic-Historical Account of Population Contacts and Language Practices from the Early 17th to the Early 20th Centuries; Cecile B. Vigouroux; 5. The Ecology of Language Evolution: A Comparative View of Jewish Languages and Creoles; Ilil Baum; 6. Another Piece of the Puzzle: Afro-Veracruz Spanish and the Spanish Creole Debate; Sandro Sessarego; 7. Uniformitarianism and the Social Ecology of Anguilla's Homestead Period; Don E. Walicek; 8. A Uniformitarian Lens on Creole Languages: On Universal Creolization; Marlyse Baptista; 9. The Evolution of Copula Systems in West African Pidgin: A Uniformitarian Perspective; Kofi Yakpo; 10. Determiner-Noun Fusion in Haitian Creole: A Statistical Learning Perspective; Chi Dat Lam (Daniel); 11. Uniformitarianism and the Emergence of the Brazilian Variety of Portuguese; Esmeralda Vailati Negrao and Evani Viotti; 12. Recombination, Feature Pool, and Population Structure: Three Factors Bearing on 'Grammaticalization'; Enoch O. Aboh; Subject Index; Language Index; Author Index.