Article published In: Spanish in Context
Vol. 4:1 (2007) ► pp.1–43
Afro-Yungueño speech
The long-lost “black Spanish”
Published online: 6 April 2007
https://doi.org/10.1075/sic.4.1.02lip
https://doi.org/10.1075/sic.4.1.02lip
The pidginized Spanish learned by millions of Africans in Latin America had a profound but as yet underexplored impact on the formation of Spanish American dialects. Literary imitations from previous centuries are questionable, and few vestiges of actual Afro-Hispanic language remain. This paper reports on a unique Afro-American speech community in highland Bolivia, possibly the oldest surviving Afro-American variety of any language. The Afro-Yungueño dialect, now spoken in contact with regional Andean Spanish, differs systematically from any other Spanish dialect, and provides empirical evidence of the earliest stages of Afro-Hispanic language in the Americas. It also provides key evidence in the debate surrounding the possible creolization of Spanish and Portuguese in other Afro-American contexts.
Cited by (5)
Cited by five other publications
Sanz-Sánchez, Israel & María Irene Moyna
Niño‐Murcia, Mercedes
Cozart, Dan
Balam, Osmer, Ana de Prada Pérez & Dámaris Mayans
2014. A congruence approach to the study of bilingual compound verbs in Northern Belize contact Spanish. Spanish in Context 11:2 ► pp. 243 ff.
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