African American Vernacular English: Features, Evolution, Educational Implications / Edition 1

African American Vernacular English: Features, Evolution, Educational Implications / Edition 1

by John Russell Rickford
ISBN-10:
0631212450
ISBN-13:
9780631212454
Pub. Date:
07/09/1999
Publisher:
Wiley
ISBN-10:
0631212450
ISBN-13:
9780631212454
Pub. Date:
07/09/1999
Publisher:
Wiley
African American Vernacular English: Features, Evolution, Educational Implications / Edition 1

African American Vernacular English: Features, Evolution, Educational Implications / Edition 1

by John Russell Rickford

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Overview

In response to the flood of interest in African American Vernacular English (AAVE) following the recent controversy over "Ebonics," this book brings together sixteen essays on the subject by a leading expert in the field, one who has been researching and writing on it for a quarter of a century.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780631212454
Publisher: Wiley
Publication date: 07/09/1999
Series: Language in Society , #26
Pages: 428
Product dimensions: 6.05(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.92(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

John R. Rickford is the Martin Luther King Centennial Professor of Linguistics and African and Afro-American Studies at Stanford University. He is also the Director of the thirty-year-old degree-granting Program in African and Afro-American Studies, and President of the International Society for Pidgin and Creole Linguistics. He is the author of numerous scholarly articles, and several books, including Dimensions of a Creole Continuum (1987), editor of A Festival of Guyanese Words (1978), Sociolinguistics and Pidgin-Creole Studies (1988), and co-editor of Analyzing Variation in Language (1987).

Table of Contents

Series Editor’s Preface.

Preface.

Foreword.

Acknowledgments.

Part I: Features and Use.

1. Phonological and Grammatical Features of African American Vernacular English.

2. Carrying the New Wave into Syntax: The Case of Black English BIN.

3. Preterit Had+ V- ed in the Narratives of African American Adolescents: with Christine Theberge Rafal.

4. Rappin on the Copula Coffin: Theoretical and Methodological Issues in the Analysis of Copula variation in African American Vernacular English: with Arnetha Ball, Renée Blake, Raina Jackson, and Nomi.

Martin I.

5. Ethnicity as a Sociolinguistic Boundary.

6. Addressee- and Topic-Influenced Style Shift: A Quantitative Sociolinguistic Study: with Faye McNair-Knox.

Part II: Evolution.

7. Cut-Eye and Suck-Teeth: African Words and Gestures in New World Guise: with Angela E. Rickford.

8. Social Contact and Linguistic Diffusion: Hiberno English and New World Black English.

9. Copula Variability in Jamaican Creole and African American Vernacular English: A Reanalysis of DeCamp's Texts.

10. Prior Creolization of AAVE? Sociohistorical and Textual Evidence from the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries.

11. Are Black and White Vernaculars Diverging?.

12. Grammatical Variation and Divergence in Vernacular Black English.

Part III: Educational Implications.

13. Attitudes Toward AAVE, and Classroom Implications and Strategies. 14. Unequal Partnership; Sociolinguistics and the African American Speech Community.

15. Suite for Ebony and Phonics.

16. Using the Vernacular to Teach the Standard.

References.

Index.

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