Issues in English creoles : papers from the 1975 Hawaii conference

Bibliographic Information

Issues in English creoles : papers from the 1975 Hawaii conference

edited by Richard R. Day

(Varieties of English around the world, General series ; v. 2)

Groos, c1980

  • : pbk

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Note

Papers first presented at the International Conference on Pidgins and Creoles, held in Honolulu, Hawaii, January 5-10, 1975

Includes bibliographies

Contents of Works
  • Introduction / Richard R. Day
  • Creolization, linguistic universals, natural semantax, and the brain / Derek Bickerton
  • The adequacy of certain theories in accounting for important grammatical relationships in a creole language / Robert A. Peters
  • On the notion of decreolization and St. Kitts Creole personal pronouns / Vincent O. Cooper
  • The creole situation in the context of sociolinguistic studies / Donald Winford
  • How does doz disappear? / John R. Rickford
  • From preposition to complementizer in Caribbean English Creole / William Washabaugh
  • A Creole English continuum and the theory of grammar / Dennis R. Craig
  • Bahamian English, a non-continuum? / Alison Shilling
  • Sufficiency conditions for a prior creolization of Black English / Robert Berdan
  • Lexicalization in Black English / Carol W. Pfaff
Description and Table of Contents

Description

The purpose of this volume is to make more accessible, for the use of researchers and students in the field of pidgins and creoles, presentations of the third International Conference on Pidgins and Creoles in Honolulu, 1975, dealing with English-based creoles. Aside from their documentary value, the ten papers of this volume are of interest for several reasons: they contain interesting data and observations on the languages themselves, in particular Trinidadian Creole, Guyanese Creole, St. Kitts Creole, and Bahamian English. Additionally, the contributions are significant for the insights they have into the importance of variation, a topic which must be confronted by those who investigate pidgins and creoles. Apart from Bickerton's paper dealing with universals, the papers are presented according to the geographic area where the linguistic systems are used.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Acknowledgments, piii
  • 2. Introduction (by Day, Richard R.), pvii
  • 3. Creolization, Linguistic Universals, Natural Semantax and the Brain (by Bickerton, Derek), p1
  • 4. The Adequacy of Certain Theories in Accounting for Important Grammatical Relationship in a Creole Language (by Roberts, Peter A.), p19
  • 5. On the Notion of Decreolization and St. Kitts Creole Personal Pronouns (by Cooper, Vincent O.), p39
  • 6. The Creole Situation in the Context of Sociolinguistic Studies (by Winford, Donald), p51
  • 7. How Does Doz Disappear? (by Rickford, John R.), p77
  • 8. From Preposistion to Complementizer in Caribbean English Creole (by Washabaugh, William), p97
  • 9. A Creole English Continuum and the Theory of Grammar (by Craig, Dennis R.), p111
  • 10. Bahamian English - A Non-Continuum? (by Shilling, Alison Watt), p133
  • 11. Sufficiency Conditions for a Prior Creolization of Black English (by Berdan, Robert), p147
  • 12. Lexicalization in Black English (by Pfaff, Carol W.), p163
  • 13. Appendix, p181
  • 14. List of Papers Presented

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