Article published In: Diachronica
Vol. 26:3 (2009) ► pp.380–407
Tracing the origins of Panamanian Congo speech
The pathways of regional variation
Published online: 10 November 2009
https://doi.org/10.1075/dia.26.3.08lip
https://doi.org/10.1075/dia.26.3.08lip
The Afro-descendents of Panama’s Caribbean coast maintain the tradition of the Negros Congos, a series of folkloric manifestations occurring during Carnival season, and including a special cryptolect based loosely on Spanish. According to oral tradition, Congo speech was devised among captive and maroon Africans in colonial Panama as a means of hiding their speech from their colonial masters. Widely felt — both by Congo participants and by outside observers — to consist only of deliberate deformations of Spanish words and semantic inversions, Congo speech in reality also contains numerous elements traceable to Afro-Hispanic communities in other former Spanish-American colonies. Data drawn from twenty-four Congo communities demonstrate systematic regional variation — phonetic and lexical — that verifies the status of Congo speech as a cryptolect undergoing natural language evolution. These data also contribute to the search for the geographical locus of the original Congo dialect.
Keywords: creole languages, Panama, Afro-Hispanic language, Congos, Afro-Panamanioan, cryptolects
Cited by (4)
Cited by four other publications
Lipski, John
Lipski, John M.
2021. Searching for the sociolinguistic history of Afro-Panamanian
Congo speech. In Spanish Socio-Historical Linguistics [Advances in Historical Sociolinguistics, 12], ► pp. 141 ff.
Lipski, John M.
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