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E-raamat: Interfaces and Domains of Contact-Driven Restructuring: Volume 168: Aspects of Afro-Hispanic Linguistics

(University of Texas, Austin)
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"The Afro-Hispanic Languages of the Americas (AHLAs) present a number of grammatical similarities that have traditionally been ascribed to a previous creole stage. Approaching creole studies from contrasting standpoints, this groundbreaking book providesa new account of these phenomena. How did these features come about? What linguistic mechanisms can account for their parallel existence in several contact varieties? How can we formalize such mechanisms within a comprehensive theoretical framework? How can these new datasets help us test and refine current formal theories, which have primarily been based on standardized language data? In addressing these important questions, this book not only casts new light on the nature of the AHLAs, it also providesnew theoretical and methodological perspectives for a more integrated approach to the study of contact-driven restructuring across language interfaces and linguistic domains"--

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Approaching creole studies from contrasting standpoints, this book offers new insights into language variation and contact-induced change.
List of Figures
xi
List of Maps
xii
List of Tables
xiii
Acknowledgments xv
1 Questioning a Long-Lasting Assumption in the Field
1(34)
1.1 The Creole Debate
8(11)
1.1.1 My Two Cents
10(6)
1.1.2 Degrees of Contact-Driven Restructuring
16(3)
1.2 Second-Language Acquisition and Creole Formation
19(2)
1.3 Vernacular Universals
21(2)
1.4 Theoretical Assumptions
23(6)
1.4.1 The Framework
23(3)
1.4.2 Interfaces and Second-Language Development
26(3)
1.5 Domino Effects
29(3)
1.6 Overview
32(3)
2 The African Diaspora to the Andes and Its Linguistic Consequences
35(22)
2.1 Divergent Views on the Origins of the Afro-Andean Spanish Varieties
35(2)
2.2 A Sociohistorical Sketch of Black Slavery in the Andes
37(13)
2.2.1 First Arrivals
38(6)
2.2.2 The Second Wave
44(4)
2.2.3 The Gradual Path to Social Emancipation
48(2)
2.3 A Closer Look at Three Afro-Andean Communities
50(7)
2.3.1 Yungas, Bolivia
51(2)
2.3.2 Chota Valley, Ecuador
53(2)
2.3.3 Chincha, Peru
55(2)
3 Reconciling Formalism and Language Variation
57(9)
3.1 Synchronic Variation in Traditional Generative Grammar
58(1)
3.2 The Sociolinguistic View on the Matter
59(1)
3.3 Synchronic and Diachronic Attempts to Reconcile Variation and Formalism
60(2)
3.4 Variation and Minimalism
62(4)
4 Variable Phi-Agreement across the Determiner Phrase
66(33)
4.1 Fieldwork and Data Collection
67(2)
4.2 Agreement Configurations Based on Both Grammaticality Judgments and Sociolinguistic Interviews
69(5)
4.3 Quantifying Variation
74(6)
4.4 Reconciling Variable Outputs with Invariable Syntax
80(11)
4.5 On the Persistence of Default Values at the Morphology-Syntax/Semantics Interface
91(8)
5 Partial Pro-Drop Phenomena
99(26)
5.1 A Testing Ground for the Null Subject Parameter
99(3)
5.2 Two Partial Pro-Drop Varieties in Ibero-Romance
102(5)
5.3 On the Nature of Partial Pro-Drop Phenomena in the AHLAs
107(3)
5.4 Rethinking Parameters
110(1)
5.5 Along the Morphology-Semantics and the Syntax-Pragmatics Interfaces
111(14)
6 Early-Peak Alignment and Duplication of Boundary Tone Configurations
125(15)
6.1 Theoretical Background
125(3)
6.2 Methodology
128(2)
6.3 Prosodic Findings
130(5)
6.3.1 Pre-nuclear Position
130(2)
6.3.2 Nuclear position
132(3)
6.4 An Analysis along the Pragmatics-Phonology Interface
135(5)
7 Final Considerations
140(5)
References 145(24)
Index 169
Sandro Sessarego is Associate Professor of Linguistics in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at the University of Texas at Austin and a member of the Rapoport Center for Human Rights and Justice. He works primarily in the fields of contact linguistics, sociolinguistics, syntax and human rights. He has published a number of books on law and linguistics; his most recent one is Language Contact and the Making of an Afro-Hispanic Vernacular (2019, Cambridge).