Fr. 76.00

Varieties of Spoken French

English · Paperback / Softback

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This book examines the variation found in modern spoken French, based on the research programme 'Phonology of Contemporary French' (Phonologie du Français Contemporain, PFC). Extensive data are drawn from all over the French-speaking world, including Algeria, Canada, Louisiana, Mauritius, and Switzerland. Although the principal focus is on differences in pronunciation, the authors also analyse the spoken language at all levels from sound to meaning. The book is accompanied by a website hosting audio-visual material for teaching purposes, data, and a variety of tools for working with corpora.

The first part of the book outlines some key concepts and approaches to the description of spoken French. Chapters in Part II are devoted to the study of individual samples of spoken French from all over the world, covering phonological and grammatical features as well as lexical and cultural aspects. The book's companion website provides a class-friendly ready-to-use multimedia version of these 17 chapters, as well as the sound files and full transcription for each extract. Part III looks at inter and intra-speaker variation: it begins with chapters that provide the methodological background to the study of phonological variation using databases, while in the second section authors present case studies of a number of PFC survey points, including Paris, the Central African Republic, and Québec. Varieties of Spoken French will be an invaluable resource for researchers, teachers, and students of all aspects of French language and linguistics.

List of contents

  • List of contributors

  • Map showing of survey points

  • Introduction: How to use this book and accompanying digital material

  • Part I: Variation in Spoken French: Concepts and Approaches

  • 1: Sylvain Detey, Jacques Durand, Bernard Laks, and Chantal Lyche: The PFC programme and its methodological framework

  • 2: Jacques Durand, Bernard Laks, and Chantal Lyche: Variation and corpora: Concepts and methods

  • 3: Sylvain Detey and Chantal Lyche: A framework for the pedagogical use of a corpus of spoken French

  • APPROACHES

  • 4: Sylvain Detey, Chantal Lyche, Isabelle Racine, Sandra Schwab, and David Le Gac: The notion of norm in spoken French: Production and perception

  • 5: Corine Astésano: Prosodic characteristics of Reference French

  • 6: Nathalie Rossi-Gensane: Syntactic variation in spoken French

  • 7: Lorenza Mondada and Véronique Traverso: Beyond orality: Multimodality and interaction

  • Part II: The French-Speaking World: Extracts and Analyses

  • 8: Anita Berit Hansen: French in Paris (Ile-de-France): A speaker from the XIVth arrondissment

  • 9: Dominique Nouveau and Martin Riegel: French in Bas-Rhin (Alsace): A speaker from Strasbourg

  • 10: Alain Dawson, Cyril Auran, Caroline Bouzon, Laurence Delrue, Rudy Loock, Kathleen M. O'Connor, and Cédric Patin: French in Nord (Nord-Pas de Calais): A speaker from La Madeleine

  • 11: Laurie Buscail and Chantal Lyche: French in Orne (Basse-Normandie): A speaker from Domfront

  • 12: Damien Chabanal, Jacques Durand, and Corinne Ratier: French in Auvergne (Centre): A speaker from Clermont-Ferrand

  • 13: Léa Courdès-Murphy, Jacques Durand, Corinne Ratier, and Nathalie Rossi-Gensane: French in Haute-Garonne (Midi-Pyrénées): A speaker from Toulouse

  • 14: Elissa Pustka and Martin Vordermayer: French in Haute-Savoie (Rhône-Alpes): A speaker from Passy

  • 15: Claudine Pagliano, Astrid Nome, and Léa Courdès-Murphy: French in Alpes-Maritimes (Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur): A speaker from Nice

  • 16: Philippe Hambye, Anne Catherine Simon, and Alice Bardiaux: French in Belgium: A speaker from Henri-Chapelle

  • 17: Isabelle Racine, Helene N. Andreassen, and Laurence Benetti: French in Switzerland: A speaker from Neuchâtel

  • 18: Guri Bordal Steien, Béatrice Akissi Boutin, and Robert Beyom: French in the Central African Republic: A speaker from Bangui

  • 19: Sarah Leroy: French in Algeria: A speaker from Chlef

  • 20: Gudrun Ledegen and Chantal Lyche: French in Mauritius: A speaker from Quatre-Bornes

  • 21: Marie-Hélène Côté: French in Quebec: A speaker from Montréal

  • 22: Douglas C. Walker and Réjean Canac-Marquis: French in Alberta: A speaker from Rivière-la-Paix

  • 23: Jeff Tennant and François Poiré: French in Ontario: A speaker from Hearst

  • 24: Nathalie Dajko: French in Louisiana: A speaker from Ville Platte

  • 25: Lorenza Mondada and Véronique Traverso: French in interaction: A multimodal study of a meeting in Paris

  • Part III: Aspects of Inter- and Intra-Speaker Variation

  • METHODOLOGY
    About the author

    Sylvain Detey is Professor of Applied Linguistics and French Studies at Waseda University, and was formerly Maître de Conférences at the University of Rouen. His current research interests lie in the use of oral corpora for language education and the role of variation and multimodality in second language phonology acquisition. He is one of the coordinators of the research project Phonology of Contemporary French (Phonologie du Français Contemporain, PFC) and co-editor of Les variétés du français parlé dans l'espace francophone. Ressources pour l'enseignement (2010).

    Jacques Durand is Emeritus Professor of Linguistics at the University of Toulouse - Jean Jaurès and an Emeritus Member of the Institut Universitaire de France. His extensive publications are mainly in phonology (general and as applied to English and French). He is the co-founder of the PFC research project, editor of the OUP series 'The Phonology of the World's Languages' and co-editor of The Oxford Handbook of Corpus Phonology (OUP 2014).

    Bernard Laks is Professor of Linguistics at the University of Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense (Research Laboratory MoDyCo UMR 7114) and a Member of the Institut Universitaire de France. Until 2012, he was Vice President (Research) of that university and formerly a researcher at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS). His research and extensive publications mainly address phonology, formal and cognitive linguistics, the history of linguistics, and cognitive sciences. He is the co-founder of the PFC research project.

    Chantal Lyche is Professor of French Linguistics at the University of Oslo. She has published widely on French phonology and is the co-founder of the PFC research project. Her research has focused most recently on varieties of French spoken outside France, particularly in Switzerland, Louisiana, Mauritius, and Africa. She is the co-author of a standard textbook on the phonology of French and is actively involved in the teaching of French as a foreign language.

    Summary

    This book examines the variation found in modern spoken French, based on the research programme 'Phonology of Contemporary French' (Phonologie du Français Contemporain, PFC). Extensive data are drawn from all over the French-speaking world, including Algeria, Canada, Louisiana, Mauritius, and Switzerland.

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