Cover not available

Reconstructing Non-Standard Languages

A socially-anchored approach

HardboundAvailable
ISBN 9789027212573 | EUR 99.00 | USD 149.00
 
e-Book
ISBN 9789027257345 | EUR 99.00 | USD 149.00
 
Focusing on language contact involving Russian, and the linguistic varieties that emerged from that contact in different social settings, this book analyzes issues and methodologies in reconstructing both the linguistic effects of language contact and the social contexts of usage. In-depth analyses of Odessan Russian, a southern Russian contact variety with Yiddish and Ukrainian elements, and Russian lexifier pidgins illustrate the reconstruction process, which involves making the most of all available documentation, particularly literature and stereotypical descriptions. Historical sociolinguistics of this kind straddles the fields of historical linguistics, sociolinguistics, and contact; this book brings together the methods and theories of these areas to show how they can result in a rich reconstruction of linguistic and socially-conditioned variation. We reconstruct the circumstances and social settings that produced this variation, and demonstrate how to reconstruct which variants were used by different types of speakers under different circumstances, and what kinds of social identities they indexed.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 22 November 2022
Table of Contents
Reconstructing Non-Standard Languages provides a unique approach on the role of Russian language contact in the emergence of sociolectal varieties.”
“This book is a well-informed study that provokes discussion well beyond OdR and RLPs. [...] Theoretical issues involving validity, authenticity and the use of literary sources are of concern to scholars in historical sociolinguistics, literary multilingualism, creolistics and contact linguistics in general.”
Cited by (5)

Cited by five other publications

Kapranov, Yan, Anna Verschik, Liisa-Maria Lehto & Maria Frick
2025. Suržyk as a Transitional Stage from Russian to Ukrainian: The Perspective of Ukrainian Migrants and War Refugees in Finland. Languages 10:10  pp. 254 ff. DOI logo
Madariaga, Nerea & Olga Romanova
2025. The Russian language of Odesa: simplification and reduction of grammatical complexity. Canadian Slavonic Papers 67:3  pp. 322 ff. DOI logo
Giles, Howie
2023. New Book Alerts, 2021–2024. Journal of Language and Social Psychology 42:5-6  pp. 688 ff. DOI logo
Grenoble, Lenore A & Boris Osipov
2023. Understanding language shift. Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism 13:1  pp. 122 ff. DOI logo
Kabanen, Inna
2023. From Odessa to “Little Odessa”: Migration of Food and Myth. Open Cultural Studies 7:1 DOI logo

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 30 march 2026. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.

Subjects and metadata

Main BIC Subject

Main BISAC Subject

ONIX Metadata

ONIX 2.1
ONIX 3.0

VPAT

ePub Accessibility Conformance Report (VPAT)

LoC, MARC XML

U.S. Library of Congress Control Number:  2022037530 | Marc record
Mobile Menu Logo with link to supplementary files background Layer 1 prag Twitter_Logo_Blue