Linguistic Communities and Migratory Processes: Newcomers Acquiring Sociolinguistic Variation in Northern Ireland

Author:   Karen P. Corrigan
Publisher:   De Gruyter
ISBN:  

9783110991567


Pages:   413
Publication Date:   18 July 2022
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Linguistic Communities and Migratory Processes: Newcomers Acquiring Sociolinguistic Variation in Northern Ireland


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Author:   Karen P. Corrigan
Publisher:   De Gruyter
Imprint:   De Gruyter Mouton
Weight:   0.767kg
ISBN:  

9783110991567


ISBN 10:   311099156
Pages:   413
Publication Date:   18 July 2022
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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"Endorsement In today's mobile world, foreign accents are everywhere and they can tell us a great deal about human conditions and social situations. In this book, Corrigan masterfully details the complex facets of the language contact situation in Northern Ireland, focussing on the contrast between teens of local Irish origin and newcomer teens of Lithuanian and Polish descent. Using a novel ""fourth wave approach"" with a ""lens that is also attuned to various subdisciplines of linguistics (formal and variationist as well as functional, historical and typological)"" (p. 328) Corrigan's analyses and lucid insider interpretations resound with insight, offering anyone with a curiosity about language, a window on the increasingly diverse multilingual communities of our modern world. Sali A. Tagliamonte, Professor at University of Toronto (September 2020) The author has produced an extremely well researched and clearly argued interdisciplinary work which makes use of historical, social and linguistic models and perspectives. Her primary focus is on the linguistic consequences of migration, with particular reference to speakers in three locations in Northern Ireland. This book provides an excellent resource for students and researchers with an interest in the social and historical contexts which shape language variation and change - in the broadest sense of these terms. It is also characterised by methodological care and sophistication. The author makes use of a variety of corpora and databases, as well as contemporary recordings of everyday spoken language. She has provided us with an excellent example of the virtues of interdisciplinary perspectives for socio- and historical linguists who aspire to an understanding of the processes they seek to explain. Lesley Milroy, Professor Emerita at University of Michigan (September 2020) This interdisciplinary account of migration to and from Northern Ireland is a major achievement, documenting the impact on the linguistic ecologies of both the receiving and sending countries, from the moderate linguistic diversity of Stone Age times to the superdiverse multicultural polylingualism of urban centres today. Detailed linguistic analyses make invaluable contributions to theories of language acquisition and language contact, and address foundational issues in our understanding of how migrants acquire sociolinguistic variation. Beautifully written and enlivened throughout with extracts from letters and interviews with migrants, ancient maps and more, this book is a gem! Jenny Cheshire, Professor of Linguistics at Queen Mary University of London (September 2020)"


Endorsement In today's mobile world, foreign accents are everywhere and they can tell us a great deal about human conditions and social situations. In this book, Corrigan masterfully details the complex facets of the language contact situation in Northern Ireland, focussing on the contrast between teens of local Irish origin and newcomer teens of Lithuanian and Polish descent. Using a novel fourth wave approach with a lens that is also attuned to various subdisciplines of linguistics (formal and variationist as well as functional, historical and typological) (p. 328) Corrigan's analyses and lucid insider interpretations resound with insight, offering anyone with a curiosity about language, a window on the increasingly diverse multilingual communities of our modern world. Sali A. Tagliamonte, Professor at University of Toronto (September 2020) The author has produced an extremely well researched and clearly argued interdisciplinary work which makes use of historical, social and linguistic models and perspectives. Her primary focus is on the linguistic consequences of migration, with particular reference to speakers in three locations in Northern Ireland. This book provides an excellent resource for students and researchers with an interest in the social and historical contexts which shape language variation and change - in the broadest sense of these terms. It is also characterised by methodological care and sophistication. The author makes use of a variety of corpora and databases, as well as contemporary recordings of everyday spoken language. She has provided us with an excellent example of the virtues of interdisciplinary perspectives for socio- and historical linguists who aspire to an understanding of the processes they seek to explain. Lesley Milroy, Professor Emerita at University of Michigan (September 2020) This interdisciplinary account of migration to and from Northern Ireland is a major achievement, documenting the impact on the linguistic ecologies of both the receiving and sending countries, from the moderate linguistic diversity of Stone Age times to the superdiverse multicultural polylingualism of urban centres today. Detailed linguistic analyses make invaluable contributions to theories of language acquisition and language contact, and address foundational issues in our understanding of how migrants acquire sociolinguistic variation. Beautifully written and enlivened throughout with extracts from letters and interviews with migrants, ancient maps and more, this book is a gem! Jenny Cheshire, Professor of Linguistics at Queen Mary University of London (September 2020)


Author Information

Karen Corrigan, University of Newcastle, UK.

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