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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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The Syntax of Jamaican Creole

A cartographic perspective

Stephanie Durrleman-Tame
University of Geneva

2008. xii, 190 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 5510 5 / EUR 110.00 / USD 165.00
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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9069 4 / EUR 110.00 / USD 165.00
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This book offers an in-depth study of the overall syntax of (basilectal) Jamaican Creole, the first since Bailey (1966). The author, a Jamaican linguist, meticulously examines distributional and interpretative properties of functional morphology in Jamaican Creole (JC) from a cartographic perspective (Cinque 1999, 2002; Rizzi 1997, 2004), thus exploring to what extent the grammar of JC provides morphological manifestations of an articulate IP, CP and DP. The data considered in this work offers new evidence in favour of these enriched structural analyses, and the instances where surface orders differ from the underlying functional skeleton are accounted for in terms of movement operations. This investigation of Jamaican syntax therefore allows us to conclude that the 'poor' inflectional morphology typical of Creole languages in general and of (basilectal) Jamaican Creole in particular does not correlate with poor structural architecture. Indeed the free morphemes discussed, as well as the word order considerations that indicate syntactic movement to designated projections, serve as arguments in favour of a rich underlying functional map.


Table of contents

Acknowledgements
ix–x
Preface: A tribute to Miss Lou (1919-2006)
xi–xii
Chapter 1. Introduction
1–17
Chapter 2. IP – The articulation of inflection in Jamaican Creole
19–59
Chapter 3. CP – The left periphery in Jamaican Creole
61–121
Chapter 4. DP – JC nominals and their extended projection
123–177
Chapter 5. General conclusion
179–180
References
181–186
Index of names
187–188
Index of subjects
189–190


Durrleman's is one of the most thorough and enlightening descriptions of a creole to have been written, with important implications for general syntactic theory.
Guglielmo Cinque, University of Venice

This is a wonderful piece of work that nicely combines careful empirical study of Jamaican Creole and very sophisticated theoretical analysis. I warmly recommend it to anyone interested in language description and theorizing.
Enoch O. Aboh, Universiteit van Amsterdam

In the first full-fledged cartographic study of a Creole Language, Stephanie Durrleman provides a rich and original analysis of the major syntactic configurations of Jamaican Creole, with important consequences for Creole studies and syntactic theory.
Luigi Rizzi, University of Siena

This work by Stephanie Durrleman is exciting. It is the first work since the pioneering work of Beryl Bailey in 1966 to attempt a study of such a broad sweep of the syntax of Jamaican. The work is both ambitious in its scope and solid in the modern theoretical framework within which it is presented. This is a must read for all scholars and students of Caribbean Creoles.
Hubert Devonish, University of the West Indies, Jamaica

This work presents a very detailed description of Jamaican Creole morpho-syntax in terms of a theoretically-explicit model of functional structure in clauses and noun phrases. Tame-Durrleman's book is an excellent example of theoretically-driven empirical research and should be inspiring to students and researchers alike.
Ur Shlonsky, University of Geneva

Durrleman describes fine-grained word order asymmetries among the optional, closed-class adverbial, adnominal and adclausal modifiers of Jamaican English, and derives these rich patterns from a few simple, fixed templates of highly articulated phrase structure in the mode of Rizzi and Cinque. Data are carefully controlled against a backdrop of theoretical literature in the comparative syntax of other Caribbean languages as well as of Germanic, Romance, Hungarian, Semitic and Gbe. Numerous judgements of optionality, coocurrence restrictions and semantic scope interaction will prove indispensable in testing syntactic models for many years to come.
Victor Manfredi, African Studies Center, Boston University