In:New Englishes, New Methods:
Edited by Guyanne Wilson and Michael Westphal
[Varieties of English Around the World G68] 2023
► pp. 263–274
Conclusion
New Englishes, new methods, new directions
Published online: 14 April 2023
https://doi.org/10.1075/veaw.g68.13wil
https://doi.org/10.1075/veaw.g68.13wil
Article outline
- 1.Overview
- 2.Expanding old methods
- 3.New methods
- 4.New contexts
- 5.New directions
References
References (30)
Aijmer, Karin. 2013. Understanding Pragmatic Markers: A Variational Pragmatic Approach. Edinburgh University Press.
Deuber, Dagmar, & Glenda-Alicia Leung. 2013. “Investigating Attitudes towards an Emerging Standard of English: Evaluations of Newscasters’ Accents in Trinidad.” Multilingua 32 (3): 289–319.
Dovchin, Sender. 2020. “Translingual English, Facebook, and Gay Identities”. World Englishes 39 (1): 54–66.
Hansen, Beke. 2018. Corpus Linguistics and Sociolinguistics: A Study of Variation and Change in the Modal Systems of World Englishes. Leiden: Brill.
Heyd, Theresa, & Mirka Honkanen. 2015. “From Naija to Chitown: The New African Diaspora and Digital Representations of Place.” Discourse, Context & Media 9: 14–23.
Honkanen, Mirka. 2020. World Englishes on the Web: The Nigerian Diaspora in the USA. Amsterdam: Benjamins.
Hundt, Marianne, & Devyani Sharma (eds). 2014. English in the Indian Diaspora. Amsterdam: Benjamins.
Kachru, Braj. 1985. “Standards, Codification and Sociolinguistic Realism: The English Language in the Outer Circle.” English in the World: Teaching and Learning the Language and Literatures, eds. by Randolph Quirk, & Henry G. Widdowson, 11–30. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Lee, Jamie S. 2020. “Digital Communication, Social Media, and Englishes.” World Englishes 39 (1): 2–6.
Ling, Low Ee, Esther Grabe, & Francis Nolan. 2000. “Quantitative Characterizations of Speech Rhythm: Syllable-Timing in Singapore English.” Language and Speech 43 (4): 377–401.
Mair, Christian. 2013. “The World System of Englishes: Accounting for the Transnational Importance of Mobile and Mediated Vernaculars.” English World-Wide 34 (3): 253–278.
Meer, Philipp, Michael Westphal, Eva C. Hänsel, & Dagmar Deuber. 2019. “Trinidadian Secondary School Students’ Attitudes toward Accents of Standard English.” Journal of Pidgin and Creole Languages 34 (1): 83–125.
Meer, Philipp, Thorsten Brato, & José Alejandro Matute Flores. 2021. “Extending Automatic Vowel Formant Extraction to New Englishes: A Comparison of Different Methods.” English World-Wide 42 (1): 54–84.
Meierkord, Christiane. 2020. “Attitudes towards Exogenous and Endogenous Uses of English: Ugandan’s Judgements of English Structures in Varieties of English.” International Journal of English Linguistics 10 (1): 1–14.
Robinson, Oral. I. 2020. Migration, Social Identities and Regionalism within the Caribbean Community. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan.
Schmidt, Johannes, Leah Kimathi, & Michael Owiso. 2019. Refugees and Forced Migration in the Horn and Eastern Africa. New York: Springer.
Schmied, Josef. 2017. “East African English.” In The Oxford Handbook of World Englishes, eds. by Markku Filppula, Juhani Klemola, & Devyani Sharma, 472–489. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Schneider, Edgar. 2007. Postcolonial English: Varieties around the World. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Sharma, Devyani. 2011. “Style Repertoire and Social Change in British Asian English.” Journal of Sociolinguistics 15 (4): 464–492.
Stell, Gerald. 2018. “Representing Variation in Creole Continua: A Folk Linguistic View of Language Variation in Trinidad.” Journal of English Linguistics 46 (2): 113–139.
Strelluf, Christopher. 2020. “needs+ PAST PARTICIPLE in Regional Englishes on Twitter.” World Englishes 39 (1): 119–134.
Udofot, Inyang. 2003. “Stress and Rhythm in the Nigerian Accent of English: A Preliminary Investigation.” English World-Wide 24 (2): 201–220.
Westphal, Michael. 2017. Language Variation on Jamaican radio. Amsterdam: Benjamins.
. 2022. “The Multilingual Pragmatics of New Englishes: An Analysis of Question Tags in Nigerian English.” Frontiers in Communication 6: 1–16.
Wilson, Guyanne. 2022. English in Africa and the Caribbean: Focus on Agreement. Post-doctoral dissertation, Ruhr University Bochum.
