Affiliation:
1. University of Ghana, Ghana
2. New York University, USA
Abstract
This introduction to the International Journal of Bilingualism special issue on “Codeswitching in West Africa” is divided into three parts. The first part presents an overview of West Africa, with particular attention paid to the linguistic diversity and multilingualism that characterize the region. Multilingualism in the region obtains at both the societal and the individual level: as Dakubu ((1997). Korle meets the sea: A sociolinguistic history of Accra. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press) observes, polyglotism is a longstanding characteristic of West African cities. Within this context, intense intrasentential codeswitching is widespread. A taxonomy is presented, with languages characterized as colonial, majority, or minority, and general patterns set forth as to the most common types of codeswitching dyad. The second part of the introduction provides an overview of the research that has been carried out on codeswitching in the region. Special attention is given to the earliest works. Works are divided according to whether their focus was sociolinguistic or structural, but it is to be noted that authors frequently paid crucial attention to both. Finally, in the third part, the introduction presents the five articles that make up the special issue.
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics,Education
Reference121 articles.
1. Women, Religion, and the Discourses of Legal Ideology in Niger Republic
2. Amuda A. A. (1986). Yoruba-English code-switching in Nigeria: Aspects of its functions and form. PhD Dissertation, University of Reading, UK.
3. Yoruba/english conversational code‐switching as a conversational strategy
4. Amuzu E. K. (2005). Ewe-English codeswitching: A case of composite rather than classic codeswitching. PhD Dissertation, Australian National University.
Cited by
8 articles.
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