Article published In: Journal of Pidgin and Creole Languages
Vol. 14:1 (1999) ► pp.93–119
Looking Beyond Decreolization as an Explanatory Model of Language Change in Creole-Speaking Communities
Published online: 6 August 1999
https://doi.org/10.1075/jpcl.14.1.04ace
https://doi.org/10.1075/jpcl.14.1.04ace
This paper discusses internally-motivated change as a largely ignored factor in understanding diachrony in creole languages: that is, externally-motivated models — and the most popular of these is certainly decreolization and the related concept of the creole continuum — have been nearly exclusively relied upon by creolists to explain phenomena associated with language variation and change in creole-speaking communities, particularly among the Atlantic English-derived creoles. This paper presents one alternative to viewing variation data derived from creole speakers as solely a function of decreolization. It raises issues associated with (and explores alternatives to) that singular view of diachrony.
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Snow, Peter
Aceto, Michael
2004. Review of Neumann-Holzschuh & Schneider (2000): Degrees of Restructuring in Creole Languages. English World-Wide. A Journal of Varieties of English 25:1 ► pp. 137 ff.
ACETO, MICHAEL
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[no author supplied]
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