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This volume investigates sociolinguistic discourses, identity
choices and their representations in postcolonial national and
social life, and traces them to the impact of colonial contact. The
chapters stitch together current voices and identities emerging
within both ex-colonized and ex-colonizer communities as each copes
with the social, lingual, cultural, and religious mixes triggered
by colonialism. These mixes, reflected in the five thematic parts
of the book - 'postcolonial identities', 'nationhood discourses',
'translating the postcolonial', 'living the postcolonial', and
'colonizing the colonizer' - call for deeper investigations of
postcolonial communities using emic approaches.
This timely book brings together research on the features and
evolution of Cameroon English and Cameroon Pidgin English,
approached from a variety of innovative multilingual frameworks
that focus on the emergence of mother tongue speakers. The authors
illustrate how language and population contact, history
(colonialism), multilingualism, translation, and indigenization
have contributed to shaping the norms of postcolonial Englishes and
Pidgins. Employing naturalistic data, the volume provides a new
fascinating perspective that better situates and supplements
existing research in the fields of African Englishes and
Creolistics. It is particularly of key interest to sociolinguists,
contact linguists, Africanists, Anglicists, creolists and
historical linguists.
Descriptions of new varieties of European languages in postcolonial
contexts have focused exceedingly on system-based indigenisation
and variation. This volume while further illustrating processes and
instantiations of indigenisation at this level incorporates
investigations of sociolinguistic and pragmatic phenomena in daily
social interaction e.g. politeness, respect, compliment response,
naming and address forms, and gender through innovative analytic
frameworks that view indigenisation from emic perspectives.
Focusing on postcolonial Cameroon and using natural and
questionnaire data, the book assesses the salience of linguistic
and sociocultural hybridisation triggered by colonialism and,
recently, globalisation in interaction in and across languages and
cultures. The authors illustrate how the multilingual nature of the
society and individuals multilingual repertoires shape patterns in
the indigenisation and evolution of the ex-colonial languages,
English and French, and Pidgin English."
Descriptions of new varieties of European languages in postcolonial
contexts have focused exceedingly on system-based indigenisation
and variation. This volume-while further illustrating processes and
instantiations of indigenisation at this level-incorporates
investigations of sociolinguistic and pragmatic phenomena in daily
social interaction-e.g. politeness, respect, compliment response,
naming and address forms, and gender-through innovative analytic
frameworks that view indigenisation from emic perspectives.
Focusing on postcolonial Cameroon and using natural and
questionnaire data, the book assesses the salience of linguistic
and sociocultural hybridisation triggered by colonialism and,
recently, globalisation in interaction in and across languages and
cultures. The authors illustrate how the multilingual nature of the
society and individuals' multilingual repertoires shape patterns in
the indigenisation and evolution of the ex-colonial languages,
English and French, and Pidgin English.
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Discovery Miles 4 820
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