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  • Tracing Language Movement in Africa

    Tracing Language Movement in Africa by Albaugh, Ericka A.; de Luna, Kathryn M.;

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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP USA
    • Date of Publication 22 March 2018

    • ISBN 9780190657543
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages444 pages
    • Size 165x236x33 mm
    • Weight 839 g
    • Language English
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    Short description:

    Many disciplines study language movement and change in Africa, but they rarely interact. Here, eighteen scholars from a range of disciplines explore differing conceptions of language movement in Africa through empirical case studies.

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    Long description:

    The great diversity of ethnicities and languages in Africa encourages a vision of Africa as a fragmented continent, with language maps only perpetuating this vision by drawing discrete language groups. In reality, however, most people can communicate with most others within and across linguistic boundaries, even if not in languages taught or learned in schools.
    Many disciplines have looked carefully at language movement and change on the continent, but their lack of interaction has prevented the emergence of a cohesive picture of African languages. Tracing Language Movement in Africa gathers eighteen scholars together to offer a truly multidisciplinary representation of language in Africa, combining insights from history, archaeology, religion, linguistics, political science, and philosophy. The resulting volume illuminates commonalities and distinctions in these disciplines' understanding of language change and movement in Africa. The volume is empirical -- aiming to represent language more accurately on the continent -- as well as theoretical. It identifies the theories that each discipline uses to make sense of language movement in Africa in plain terms and highlights the themes that cut across all disciplines: how scholars use data, understand boundaries, represent change, and conceptualize power. The volume is organized to reflect differing conceptions of language that arise from its discipline-specific contributions: that is, tendencies to study changes that consolidate language or those that splinter it, viewing languages as whole or in part.
    Each contribution includes a short explanation of a discipline's theoretical and methodological approaches to language movement and change to ensure that the chapters are accessible to non-specialists, followed by an illustrative empirical case study. This volume will inspire multidisciplinary conversations around the study of language change in Africa, opening new interdisciplinary dialogue and spurring scholars to adapt the questions, data, and method of other disciplines to the problems that animate their own fields.

    In a nutshell, the authors have successfully achieved their goals by providing the readers with a synthesis and analysis of Aftrican languages and their movements. Postgraduates and academics who have an interest in language change and variation should find fresh perspectives and information in this collection.

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    Table of Contents:

    1. Toward an Interdisciplinary Perspective on Language Movement and Change
    Ericka A. Albaugh and Kathryn M. de Luna
    Part I: Describing and Classifying Language Movement and Change
    2. Language Change and Movement as Seen by Historical Linguistics
    Derek Nurse
    3. The Ethnologue and L2 Mapping
    Kenneth S. Olson and M. Paul Lewis
    4. Understanding Distributions of Chadic Languages: Archaeological Perspectives
    Scott MacEachern
    5. 800 Languages and Counting: Lessons from Survey Research across a Linguistically Diverse Continent
    Carolyn Logan
    Part II: Forces of Fixity and Consolidation
    6. Conquest and Contact in North African Languages
    Moha Ennaji
    7. Ajami Literacies of West Africa
    Fallou Ngom
    8. Vernacular Language and Political Imagination
    Derek R. Peterson
    9. Language Movement and Civil War in West Africa
    Ericka A. Albaugh
    10. How a Lingua Franca Spreads
    Fiona Mc Laughlin
    Part III: Influences on Fragmentation, Transformation, and Recombination
    11. Scales and Units: Language Movement and Change in Central Africa
    Kathryn M. de Luna
    12. Localizing the Global: The Wanderwörter of Nineteenth-Century South Central Africa
    David M. Gordon
    13. The Invisible Niche of AUYL
    Phillip W. Rudd
    14. Language Movement and Pragmatic Change in a Conflict Area: The Border Triangle of Uganda, Rwanda, and DR Congo
    Nico Nassenstein
    Part IV: Traveling Remnants: African Languages and the Diaspora
    15. The African Diaspora and Language: Movement, Borrowing, and Return
    Maureen Warner-Lewis
    16. Metaphors to Live By in the Diaspora: Conceptual Tropes and Ontological Wordplay among Central Africans in the Middle Passage and Beyond
    Robert W. Slenes
    17. Caribbean French-African Creole and African Metaphysics
    Hanétha Vété-Congolo
    18. Population Movements, Language Contact, Linguistic Diversity, Etc.: A Postscript
    Salikoko S. Mufwene

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