
Language Maintenance and Language Death
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Content
- Language Maintenance and Language Death
- Editorial page
- Title page
- LCC data
- Dedication page
- Table of contents
- List of tables
- List of figures
- List of illustrations
- Chapter One. Introduction
- 1.1 Overview
- 1.2 Methodology and data collection
- 1.3 What is Texas Alsatian?
- 1.3.1 The land of origin
- 1.3.2 The Upper Rhenish donor dialect
- 1.4 The decline of Texas German dialects
- 1.4.1 Linguistic homogeneity versus heterogeneity
- 1.4.2 Standard French and German Uberdachung
- 1.4.3 Elsasser and Dietsche: Two cultural communities
- 1.5 Adopted home of Texas Alsatian: Medina County 2000
- 1.6 Participant profile
- 1.6.1 Speaker fluency
- 1.6.2 Language acquisition and fluency
- 1.7 Contact with the European homeland and language use today
- 1.8 Book overview
- Chapter Two. The sociohistorical context
- 2.1 The ecology of language
- 2.2 Beginnings: The historical context
- 2.2.1 German immigration to Texas
- 2.2.2 Immigration to Medina County
- 2.2.3 Henri Castro, Empresario
- 2.2.4 The founding of Castroville
- 2.3 Socio-cultural contexts: Religion and education
- 2.4 Political and economic contexts
- 2.4.1 Insulation
- 2.4.2 "Reawakening"
- 2.4.3 Verticalization vs. horizontalization
- 2.5 Sociolinguistic contexts
- 2.5.1 Language use in early Castroville
- 2.5.2 Diglossia and language shift in early Castroville
- 2.5.3 Real and apparent-time analysis of 2009 participants
- 2.6 "Group vitality" and language maintenance and shift
- 2.7 Summary
- Chapter Three. The lexicon of Texas Alsatian
- 3.1 Introduction
- 3.2 Distinguishing Texas Alsatian lexically
- 3.3 Lexical borrowing
- 3.4 Lexical innovation and convergence
- 3.5 Code-switching
- 3.6 Summary
- Chapter Four. The phonology of Texas Alsatian
- 4.1 Introduction
- 4.2 Phonological features of European Alsatian
- 4.2.1 Regional German dialects in contact with Alsatian
- 4.2.2 Distinguishing consonantal features of Alsatian
- 4.2.3 Distinguishing vocalic features of Alsatian
- 4.2.4 Alsatian regional varieties: Upper and lower Rhenish
- 4.3 Texas Alsatian
- 4.3.1 Preservation of Alsatian vocalic features
- 4.4.2 Preservation of consonantal features
- 4.3.3 Phonological transference
- 4.4 Summary
- Chapter Five. The morphosyntax of Texas Alsatian
- 5.1 Introduction
- 5.2 The standard German noun: Gender, case, and number
- 5.3 The Upper Rhenish noun: Gender, case, and number
- 5.4 The Texas Alsatian noun: Gender, case, and number
- 5.4.1 Gender
- 5.4.2 Case marking
- 5.4.3 Number and plural formation
- 5.4.4 The diminutive
- 5.4.5 Pronouns
- 5.5 The Upper Rhenish verb
- 5.6 The Texas Alsatian verb
- 5.6.1 The present perfect tense
- 5.6.2 Temporal auxiliaries
- 5.6.3 Modal auxiliaries
- 5.6.4 Word order in verb complements
- 5.7 Summary and analysis
- Chapter Six. Language attitudes
- 6.1 Introduction
- 6.2 Attitudes, feelings, beliefs
- 6.3 The Castroville Alsatians
- 6.4 Language use and attitudes toward "the other"
- 6.4.1 The "other"
- 6.4.2 The Texas German community: not "the other"?
- 6.5 The decline of Texas Alsatian
- 6.6 Preservation
- 6.7 Summary
- Chapter Seven. Language maintenance and death
- 7.1 Introduction
- 7.2 Structural maintenance of the Upper Rhenish donor dialect(s)
- 7.3 Structural change and loss in Texas Alsatian
- 7.4 Texas Alsatian versus other Texas German varieties
- 7.5 Group identity markers for the Castroville Alsatian community
- 7.6 Attitudes, dispositions, and ideologies
- 7.7 The decline of Texas Alsatian
- 7.8 Implications for various research areas
- 7.8.1 Implications for structural research on language maintenance
- 7.8.2 Implications for sociolinguistic research on language maintenance
- 7.8.3 Implications for research on linguistic change related to language death
- 7.8.4 Implications for sociolinguistic research on language death
- 7.9 Concluding remarks
- Appendices
- Appendix A
- Appendix B
- Appendix C
- Appendix D
- Appendix E
- Appendix F
- References
- Index
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