
The Mixed Language Debate
Description
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Mixed Languages are speech varieties that arise in bilingual settings, often as markers of ethnic separateness. They combine structures inherited from different parent languages, often resulting in odd and unique splits that present a challenge to theories of contact-induced change as well as genetic classification. This collection of articles is devoted to the theoretical and empirical controversies that surround the study of Mixed Languages. Issues include definitions and prototypes, similarities and differences to other contact languages such as pidgins and creoles, the role of codeswitching in the emergence of Mixed Languages, the role of deliberate and conscious mixing, the question of the existence of a Mixed Language continuum, and the position of Mixed Languages in general models of language change and contact-induced change in particular. An introductory chapter surveys the current study of Mixed Languages.
Contributors include leading historical linguists, contact linguists and typologists, among them Carol Myers-Scotton, Sarah Grey Thomason,William Croft, Thomas Stolz, Maarten Mous, Ad Backus, Evgeniy Golovko, Peter Bakker, Yaron Matras.
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Persons
Yaron Matras, Manchester, Great Britain; Peter Bakker, Aarhus University, Denmark.
Content
2 - Contents [Seite 5]
3 - The study of mixed languages [Seite 7]
4 - Social factors and linguistic processes in the emergence of stable mixed languages [Seite 27]
5 - Mixed languages and acts of identity: An evolutionary approach [Seite 47]
6 - What lies beneath: Split (mixed) languages as contact phenomena [Seite 79]
7 - Mixed languages as autonomous systems [Seite 113]
8 - Mixed languages: Re-examining the structural prototype [Seite 157]
9 - Language contact and group identity: The role of "folk" linguistic engineering [Seite 183]
10 - The linguistic properties of lexical manipulation and its relevance for Ma'á [Seite 215]
11 - Can a mixed language be conventionalized alternational codeswitching? [Seite 243]
12 - Not quite the right mixture: Chamorro and Malti as candidates for the status of mixed language [Seite 277]
13 - Backmatter [Seite 323]
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