Abstract
This article demonstrates the importance of investigating
language variation and change both within and across ethnic
groups, especially those that have been relatively insular
historically. The focus is on the variable patterning of
/ay/ in the variety of English spoken by the Lumbee Indians
in tri-ethnic Robeson County, North Carolina. (The Lumbee
refer to themselves as “Indians” rather than
“Native Americans”; I use their term when referring
to their tribe.) The analysis reveals that the Lumbee have
been surprisingly innovative and heterogeneous. Explanations
are both linguistic and extralinguistic. Insular groups
do not face linguistic pressure to level intra- and inter-community
differences or to curb internal innovations. In addition,
insular groups are often more concerned with intra- than
inter-group relations and hence with intra-group social
and linguistic distinctions. The study also shows a lessening
of inter- and intra-group dialect differences with increased
inter-group contact. However, the Lumbee still preserve
a degree of dialectal distinctiveness, indicating that
the need to preserve cultural uniqueness may outweigh linguistic
pressure to level out differences.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Education,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
46 articles.
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