Lifespan Acquisition and Language Change
Historical sociolinguistic perspectives
This volume connects the latest research on language acquisition across the lifespan with the explanation of language change in specific sociohistorical settings. This conversation benefits from recent advances in two areas: on the one hand, the study of how learners of various ages and in various sociolinguistic contexts acquire language variation; on the other, historical sociolinguistics as the field that focuses on the study of historical patterns of language variation and change. The overarching rationale for this interdisciplinary dialogue is that all forms of language change start and spread as the result of individual acts of acquisition throughout the speakers’ lives. The thirteen chapters in this book are authored by an international group of both established and emerging scholars. They encompass theoretical overviews of specific research areas within the broader realm of the acquisition of language variation, as well as case studies applying these theoretical advances to the exploration of language change in a wide range of sociohistorical contexts in the Americas, Oceania, and Asia. This volume will be of interest to students and researchers in the area of language acquisition, language variation and language change, especially those working on interdisciplinary and crosslinguistic connections among these areas.
[Advances in Historical Sociolinguistics, 14] 2024. x, 336 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 23 March 2024
Published online on 23 March 2024
© John Benjamins
Table of Contents
-
Acknowledgements | pp. ix–x
-
Part I. Introduction
-
Chapter 1. Language acquisition across the lifespan in historical sociolinguisticsIsrael Sanz-Sánchez | pp. 2–42
-
Part II. Perspectives on acquisition and change
-
Chapter 2. Monolingual and bilingual child language acquisition and language changeNaomi Shin | pp. 44–63
-
Chapter 3. The second language acquisition of variation in adulthood and language changeKimberly Geeslin, Travis Evans-Sago, Stephen A. Fafulas and Thomas Goebel-Mahrle | pp. 64–83
-
Chapter 4. The dynamics of lifelong acquisition in dialect contact and changeJennifer Hendriks | pp. 84–103
-
Chapter 5. Multilingual acquisition across the lifespan as a sociohistorical trigger for language changeSuzanne Aalberse | pp. 104–126
-
Chapter 6. Language acquisition across the lifespan and the emergence of new varietiesDevyani Sharma | pp. 127–147
-
Part III. Case studies
-
Chapter 7. Tracing the emergence of the voseo/tuteo semantic split in Río de la Plata second person subjunctives: The role of child language acquisitionMaría Irene Moyna and Pablo E. Requena | pp. 150–178
-
Chapter 8. The influences of adult and child speakers in the emergence of Light Warlpiri, an Australian mixed languageCarmel O’Shannessy | pp. 179–202
-
Chapter 9. Child and adolescent transmission and incrementation in acquisition in historical sociophonetic data from English in Missouri, 1880–2000Christopher Strelluf | pp. 203–233
-
Chapter 10. Language dominance across the lifespan in Wisconsin German and English varieties: Voice onset time and final obstruent neutralization, 1863–2013Samantha M. Litty | pp. 234–263
-
Chapter 11. The contact origin(s) of ‘hand’ and ‘foot’ > ‘limb’ in Antioquian Spanish: Tracing historical adult L1 transferEliot Raynor | pp. 264–293
-
Chapter 12. Adult L2 acquisition of for-complementation in Chinese Pidgin English and Hong Kong English: A sociohistorical perspectiveMichelle Li | pp. 294–316
-
Part IV. Future directions
-
Chapter 13. Towards an acquisitionally informed historical sociolinguisticsIsrael Sanz-Sánchez | pp. 318–326
-
Language index | pp. 327–329
-
Subject index | pp. 331–336
Subjects
Main BIC Subject
CFB: Sociolinguistics
Main BISAC Subject
LAN009050: LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / Sociolinguistics