The Missing Spanish Creoles :Recovering the Birth of Plantation Contact Languages

The Missing Spanish Creoles

The Missing Spanish Creoles :Recovering the Birth of Plantation Contact Languages

hardback
Published: 12 June, 2000
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Description

John McWhorter challenges an enduring paradigm among linguists in this provocative exploration of the origins of plantation creoles. Using a wealth of data--linguistic, sociolinguistic, historical--he proposes that the "limited access model" of creole genesis is seriously flawed. That model maintains that plantation creole languages emerged because African slaves greatly outnumbered whites on colonial plantations. Having little access to the slaveholders' European languages, the slaves were forced to build a new language from what fragments they did acquire. Not so, says McWhorter, who posits that plantation creole originated in West African trade settlements, in interactions between white traders and slaves, some of whom were eventually transported overseas. The evidence that most New World creoles were imports traceable to West Africa strongly suggests that the well-established limited access model for plantation creole needs revision. In forcing a reexamination of this basic tenet, McWhorter's book will undoubtedly cause controversy. At the same time, it makes available a vast amount of data that will be a valuable resource for further explorations of genesis theory.
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More Details

Type Book
ISBN13 9780520219991
ISBN10 0520219996
Number Of Pages 292
Item Weight 590 g
Product Dimensions 152 x 229 x 25 mm
Publisher / Reseller University of California Press
Format hardback
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Author's Bio

John H. McWhorter is Associate Professor of Linguistics at the University of California, Berkeley, and the author of Towards a New Model of Creole Genesis (1997), The Word on the Street: Fact and Fable about American English (1998), and Spreading the Word: Language and Dialect in America (1999).

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