Affiliation:
1. University of Canterbury
2. University of Waikato
3. University of Auckland
Abstract
Abstract
Māori, the threatened language of the indigenous people of New Zealand, has been undergoing revitalisation since
the 1970s. The MAONZE project (Māori and New Zealand English) has studied sound change in Māori by comparing the speech of
historical elders, present-day elders and young speakers. Here we analyse the read speech from nine present-day elders and twelve
young speakers and compare it with the results from our previous analysis of their conversational material to investigate whether
style shift occurs in more careful Māori speech. Pronunciation change was restricted to the backing of long /u:/, a sound whose
fronting had been stigmatised and of which older female speakers seemed to be particularly aware. We conclude that, although there
is some indication of style-shift in the read material, ‘first wave’ (Eckert 2012)
sociolinguistic methodology is not appropriate for Māori speakers whose notion of class and prestige differ from that of
previously articulated sociolinguistic norms.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Cited by
2 articles.
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