In:Agency in the Emergence of Creole Languages: The role of women, renegades, and people of African and indigenous descent in the emergence of the colonial era creoles
Edited by Nicholas Faraclas
[Creole Language Library 45] 2012
► pp. v–viii
Get fulltext
This article is available free of charge.
Published online: 12 June 2012
https://doi.org/10.1075/cll.45.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/cll.45.toc
Table of contents
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Marginalized peoples, racialized slavery and the emergence of the Atlantic Creoles
African agency in the emergence of the Atlantic Creoles
Women and colonial era creolization
Indigenous peoples and the emergence of the Caribbean Creoles
Linguistic evidence for the influence of indigenous Caribbean grammars on the grammars of the Atlantic Creoles
Sociétés de cohabitation and the similarities between the English lexifier Creoles of the Atlantic and the Pacific: The case for diffusion from the Afro-Atlantic to the Pacific
Influences of Houma ancestral languages on Houma French: West Muskogean features in Houma French
Marginalized peoples and Creole Genesis: Sociétés de cohabitation and the Founder Principle
References
Index
