
Language, Education, and Development
Urban and Rural Tok Pisin in Papua New Guinea
Suzanne Romaine(Author)
Clarendon Press
Published on 18. June 1992
Book
Hardback
416 pages
978-0-19-823966-6 (ISBN)
Description
Papua New Guinea's struggle for development is intimately bound up with the history of Tok Pisin, an English-based pidgin which is the product of nineteenth-century colonialism in the Pacific. The language has since become the most important lingua franca in the region, being spoken by more than a million people in a highly multilingual society. Suzanne Romaine examines some of the changes that are taking place in Tok Pisin as it becomes the native language of the younger generation of rural and urban speakers. These linguistic processes, which are by no means complete, have to be understood in the socio-historical context of colonial expansion and strategies for socio-economic development in the post-colonial era.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Oxford University Press
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
line figures, tables
Dimensions
Height: 242 mm
Width: 162 mm
Thickness: 28 mm
Weight
790 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-823966-6 (9780198239666)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
Author
Merton Professor of English LanguageMerton Professor of English Language, University of Oxford
Content
Historical development of Tok Pisin; language, education and development - from pre-colonial days to post-colonial society; methods; lexical expansion, borrowing and change; phonological expansion in a developing Pidgin/Creole; morphological variation and change; syntactic change; Tok Pisin i go we? (where is Tok Pisin going?).