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This volume brings together state-of-the-art research on population movement and language change from a team of international scholars.
List of contents
List of contributors; List of figures; List of tables; Preface; Introduction; 1. Language contact: what a rich and intellectually stimulating history since the late 19th century! Salikoko S. Mufwene and Anna María Escobar; Part I. Language Contact and Genetic Linguistics: 2. Language contact and historical linguistics Brian D. Joseph; 3. The Chinese expansion and language coexistence in modern China Randy J. LaPolla; 4. Tracing language contact in Africa's past Bonny Sands; 5. Populations in contact: linguistic, archaeological, and genomic evidence for Indo-European diffusion Bridget Drinka; 6. The impact of autochthonous languages on Bantu language variation: a comparative view on southern and central Africa Koen Bostoen and Hilde Gunnink; Part II. Linguistic Areas: 7. The Balkans Victor A. Friedman; 8. The Amazon basin: linguistic areas and language contact Alexandra Y. Aikhenvald; 9. Migration and trade as drivers of language spread and contact in indigenous Latin America Thiago Costa Chacon; 10. Language contact in South Asia Hans Henrich Hock; Part III. Language Spread: 11. The geographic and demographic expansion of Malay James T. Collins; 12. Geographic and demographic spread of Swahili Alamin Mazrui; 13. Arabic language contact Jonathan Owens; Part IV. Emergence and Spread of Some European Languages: 14. The emergence and evolution of romance languages in Europe and the Americas John M. Lipski; 15. The expansion and evolution of Portuguese J. Clancy Clements; 16. French and English in contact in North America Robert A. Papen; 17. French in African contact settings Cécile B. Vigouroux; 18. The geographical and demographic expansion of English Edgar W. Schneider and Sarah Buschfeld; Part V. Language Diasporas: 19. Diasporas: an overview Dirk Hoerder and Henry Yu; 20. Labor migrations: language change in communities and diasporas Dirk Hoerder and Henry Yu; 21. The Korean diaspora Joseph Sung-Yul Park; 22. The Chinese diaspora: language maintenance and loss Sherman Lee; 23. The diachrony of Yiddish and Judaeo-Spanish as contact languages Marie-Christine Bornes Varol and Anne Szulmajster-Celnikier; Author index; Subject index.
About the author
Salikoko S. Mufwene is the Edward Carson Waller Distinguished Service Professor of Linguistics at the University of Chicago. His current research is on the phylogenetic emergence and speciation of languages, and on language vitality. His books include The Ecology of Language Evolution (Cambridge, 2001), Iberian Imperialism and Language Evolution in Latin America (2014), and Bridging Linguistics and Economics (Cambridge, 2020). He is the founding editor of Cambridge Approaches to Language Contact.Anna María Escobar is Professor Emerita at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Through the study of grammatical change, her work focuses on the emergence of contact-induced linguistic outcomes and minoritized Spanish varieties. Her long-term project focuses on the making of Andean Spanish, with colonial and post-colonial corpora.
Summary
With contributions from a global team of scholars, this two-volume Handbook represents the state-of-the-art in the field of language contact. Focusing on population movement and language change, this first volume is ideal for anybody interested in how people behave linguistically in new ecologies arising from population movement and contact.
Foreword
This volume brings together state-of-the-art research on population movement and language change from a team of international scholars.