In:Variation in the Caribbean: From creole continua to individual agency
Edited by Lars Hinrichs and Joseph T. Farquharson
[Creole Language Library 37] 2011
► pp. v–vi
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Published online: 26 January 2011
https://doi.org/10.1075/cll.37.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/cll.37.toc
Table of contents
Introduction
Part I. Variation and linguistic systems
Revisiting variation between sa and o in Sranan
Inherent variability and coexistent systems: Negation in Bequia
Putting individuals back in contact: Accommodation strategies by Barbadians in Ipswich
Relative markers in spoken Standard Jamaican English
Part II. Variation and identity
“Flying at half-mast”? Voices, genres, and orthographies in Barbadian Creole*
The creole continuum and individual agency: Approaches to stylistic variation in Jamaica
Language attitudes and linguistic awareness in Jamaican English
Part III. Variation and the community
The varilingual repertoire of Tobagonian speakers
On the emergence of new language varieties: The case of the Eastern Maroon Creole in French Guiana
‘Creole’ and youth language in a British inner-city community
Le Page’s theoretical and applied legacy in sociolinguistics and creole studies
Name index
Subject index
