ebook img

Towards a Social Science of Language: Papers in Honor of William Labov. Volume 1: Variation and Change in Language and Society PDF

455 Pages·1996·42.887 MB·
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Towards a Social Science of Language: Papers in Honor of William Labov. Volume 1: Variation and Change in Language and Society

TOWARDS A SOCIAL SCIENCE OF LANGUAGE AMSTERDAM STUDIES IN THE THEORY AND HISTORY OF LINGUISTIC SCIENCE General Editor E. F. KONRAD KOERNER (University of Ottawa) Series IV - CURRENT ISSUES IN LINGUISTIC THEORY Advisory Editorial Board Henning Andersen (Los Angeles); Raimo Anttila (Los Angeles) Thomas V. Gamkrelidze (Tbilisi); John E. Joseph (Hong Kong) Hans-Heinrich Lieb (Berlin); Ernst Pulgram (Ann Arbor, Mich.) E. Wyn Roberts (Vancouver, B.C.); Danny Steinberg (Tokyo) Volume 127 Gregory R. Guy, Crawford Feagin, Deborah Schiffrin and John Baugh (eds) Towards a Social Science of Language TOWARDS A SOCIAL SCIENCE OF LANGUAGE PAPERS IN HONOR OF WILLIAM LABOV VOLUME 1 VARIATION AND CHANGE IN LANGUAGE AND SOCIETY Edited by GREGORY R. GUY CRAWFORD FEAGIN DEBORAH SCHIFFRIN JOHN BAUGH JOHN BENJAMINS PUBLISHING COMPANY AMSTERDAM/PHILADELPHIA The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences — Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1984. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Towards a social science of language : papers in honor of William Labov / edited by Gregory R. Guy ... [et al.]. p. cm. -- (Amsterdam studies in the theory and history of linguistic science. Series IV, Current issues in linguistic theory, ISSN 0304-0763 ; v. 127) Includes bibliographical references and index. Contents: v. 1. Variation and change in language and society. 1. Sociolinguistics. I. Guy. Gregory R. II. Labov, William. III. Series. P40.T68 1995 306.4'4-dc20 95-46466 ISBN 90 272 3630 5 (Eur.) / 1-55619-581-8 (US) (alk. paper) CIP © Copyright 1996 - John Benjamins B.V. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, by print, photoprint, microfilm, or any other means, without written permission from the publisher. John Benjamins Publishing Co. • P.O.Box 75577 • 1070 AN Amsterdam • The Netherlands John Benjamins North America • P.O.Box 27519 • Philadelphia PA 19118-0519 • USA William Labov Contents Preface ix Foreword xv Michael K I. The Social Organization of Variation and Change Dialect Typology: Isolation, Social Network and Phonological Structure 3 Peter Trudgill Dialect and Style in the Speech of Upper Class Philadelphia 23 Anthony Kroch (ay) Goes To the City. Exploring the Expressive Use of Variation 47 Penelope Eckert Social Class and Language Variation in Bilingual Speech Communities 69 Raymond Mougeon & Édouard Beniak "Why do women do this?" Sex and Gender Differences in Speech 101 Niloofar Haeri Interactional Conditioning of Linguistic Heterogeneity 115 Claude Paradis Peaks and Glides in Southern States Short-a 135 Crawford Feagin Denasalization of the Velar Nasal in Tokyo Japanese: Observations in Real Time 161 Junko Hibiya II. The Linguistic Structure of Variation and Change Variation and Drift: Loss of Agreement in Germanic 173 Charles A. Ferguson Turning Different at the Turn of the Century: 19th Century Brazilian Portuguese 199 Fernando Tarallo Form and Function in Linguistic Variation 221 Gregory R. Guy The History of the Ancient Hebrew Modal System and Labov's Rule of Compensatory Structural Change 253 Richard . Steiner viii Contents Phonetic Evidence for the Evolution of Lexical Classes: The Case of a Montreal French Vowel Shift 263 Malcah Yaeger-Dror Phonological Rule Set Complexity in a Very Large Vocabulary Word Recognition System 289 Philip Franz Seitz & Matthew Lennig III. African-American Varieties of English The Origins of Variation in Guyanese 311 Derek Bickerton The Urbanization of Creole Phonology: Variation and Change in Jamaican (KYA) 329 Peter L. Patrick Copula Variability in Jamaican Creole and African American Vernacular English: A Reanalysis of DeCamp's Texts 357 John R. Rickford Contraction and Deletion in Vernacular Black English: Creole History and Relationship to Euro-American English 373 Ralph W. Fasold & Yoshiko Nakano Dimensions of a Theory of Econolinguistics 397 John Baugh William Labov: A bibliography 421 Index 429 Preface This book is intended to provide a survey and a synthesis of the field that may be called 'Labovian linguistics' — the research areas and methods that were pioneered, and are still being sustained and inspired, by William Labov. This discipline has long lacked a suitable name. The term most commonly applied to it is 'sociolinguistics', which has its merits, but is often misconstrued as involving nothing more than the enumeration of the social correlates of certain linguistic features — a sort of perpetual rewriting of a few chapters of The Social Stratification of English in New York City (Labov 1966). For this reason, Labov himself has often preferred to characterize his own work merely as 'linguistics'. While this makes a rhetorically effective aphorism, it is deficient as a general term for the Labovian field, because it neither captures the distinctive characteristics of that approach, nor contrasts it with other areas of linguistics that are not Labovian. And even the term 'Labovian' is inappropriate; although convenient and readily apprehensible for informal purposes, it tends to undermine what it tries to describe. The central feature of the approach to the study of language that Labov has always espoused is the 'dynamic paradigm': that is, seeing language not as a static structure but as a dynamic social system, which is continuously moving, changing, interacting, and working. It would be profoundly undynamic of us to fix a cult of personality around the pioneer, and name the field after him. We have therefore preferred to define the field in terms of its methods and goals, rather than its subject matter or its practitioners. Hence, the title of this book is Towards a Social Science of Language. We want to pursue a "science of language", because we seek to do work that is empirically founded, and follows Labov's 'principle of accountability'; it is a "social science", because we want to account for language use, and because language itself is quintessentially social, the fundamental medium for the creation and maintenance of distinctively human society. And finally, we say "towards" in recognition of the dynamism of the discipline itself: we are part of a process, not an edifice.

See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.