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- W1977751519 abstract "This guide accompanies the following article : Erik R. Thomas, ‘Phonological and Phonetic Characteristics of African American Vernacular English, Language and Linguistics Compass 1/5 (2007): 450–475. DOI: 10.1111/j.1749‐818X.2007.00029.x Author’s Introduction African American Vernacular English (AAVE) and, more generally, African American English (AAE) are the most heavily studied group of dialects in North American English. Much of the enquiry has focused on morphosyntactic variation, but a significant amount has dealt with phonological and phonetic variables. Linguistic variables that can set AAE off from local European American varieties (EAE) in a given community span every realm of phonology and phonetics. Consonantal variables such as non‐rhoticity, consonant cluster simplification, and th‐stopping have attracted a great deal of attention. These variables usually involve phonological alternations, but phonotactic constraints also occur. Vowel variables, such as the degree of fronting of the goat vowel, are gaining some attention, mostly to address how closely local AAE varieties approach local EAE forms. Prosody has received some study and voice quality a small amount. Study of these variables is used to address several theoretical and applied issues. Among the most important theoretical issues are the Creolist/Anglicist controversy, over the origins of AA(V)E; the convergence/divergence controversy, over whether AAVE is becoming more or less like EAE vernaculars; and, recently, the uniformity controversy, concerning the degree of uniformity or diversity within AAE across the United States. Applied issues have focused largely on educational policy: whether or not AAE variants hinder learning for African American schoolchildren and to what extent AAE variants can be incorporated into classroom instruction. The Author Recommends Bailey, Guy. 2001. The relationship between African American and White Vernaculars in the American South: A sociocultural history and some phonological evidence. Sociocultural and Historical Contexts of African American English . ed. by Sonja L. Lanehart, 54–92 (Varieties of English around the World, General Series, 27). Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Bailey provides a table with 45 phonological and phonetic variables known to be correlated either with AAE (for the majority of them) or with Southern White Vernacular English, giving an approximate date for each one. He focuses on the history of AAE in the South, explaining how agriculture and the expansion of slavery were interconnected in the antebellum South. He also lists some corpora of African Americans’ recordings of historical value. Fridland, Valerie. 2003. Network strength and the realization of the Southern Vowel Shift among African Americans in Memphis, Tennessee. American Speech 78. 3–30. http://americanspeech.dukejournals.org/cgi/reprint/78/1/3?maxtoshow=&hits=10&RESULTFORMAT=&author1=Fridland%2C+V&searchid=1&FIRSTINDEX=0&sortspec=relevance&resourcetype=HWCIT This study was the first systematic community investigation into vowel shifting in AAE. Fridland finds that African Americans in Memphis showed nearly all of the vowel shifts comprising the ‘Southern Shift’, although usually not to the most extreme degrees found among whites in Memphis. Younger whites seemed to be pulling back from the extreme forms, while young African Americans did not show an analogous development. She relates the findings to social network patterns. Green, Lisa J. 2002. African American English: A Linguistic Introduction . Cambridge, UK/New York: Cambridge University Press. Chapter 4, Phonology of AAE, pp. 106–33. This chapter provides an overview and some detail about many of the important consonantal variables relevant to African American English. Some of these variables, such as r ‐lessness, are well‐studied, while others, such as /skr/ for /str/, are lesser known. In addition, there is a discussion of Green’s work on the intonation of yes/no questions in AAE. Labov, William, Paul Cohen, Clarence Robins, and John Lewis. 1968. A Study of the Non‐Standard English of Negro and Puerto Rican Speakers in New York City . Report on cooperative research project 3288. New York, NY: Columbia University. This investigation is a classic study and one that helped launch the intensive analysis of AAE that has followed in the years since its publication. It examined a range of consonantal variables: r ‐lessness, /l/deletion, substitutions for /θ/ and /ð/, and consonant cluster simplification. It also established methods for analysing each of these variables. Emphasis was placed on the role of social networks in the degree to which variants associated with AAE occurred. Pederson, Lee A., Susan Leas McDaniel, Guy Bailey, Marvin H. Basset, Carol M. Adams, Caisheng Liao, and Michael B. Montgomery. (eds.) 1986–1992. The Linguistic Atlas of the Gulf States , 7 vols. Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press. Volume One, Handbook. Volume Six, Social Matrix. Volume Seven, Social Pattern. The Linguistic Atlas of the Gulf States (LAGS) is an unfortunately neglected treasure trove of information about AAE in the South. Phonological, phonetic, and lexical incidence variables are all included, along with morphosyntactic and lexical ones. Information can be found about phonetic variation for all vowels and most consonants. Volume 1 provides descriptions of each subject who was interviewed. Volumes 6 and 7 provide breakdowns by social groupings, including race, for a very large number of variables. The main stumbling block for most potential users is that the presentation style is somewhat opaque. Users have to refer to the introduction to each volume to understand what the tables and maps represent and to see the total number of subjects included in each cell in the tables. The rather daunting layout was a consequence of the need to compress huge amounts of data into the most concise format. Nevertheless, it is well worth a researcher’s time to learn how to use LAGS. Thomas, Erik R. 2011. Sociophonetics: An Introduction . Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave. Although its analyses of AAE are limited to a few illustrative examples, this book should be crucial for future studies of AAE because it demonstrates how to analyse phonetic variables using current techniques from experimental phonetics. It covers both production and perception, and methods for examining segmental, prosodic, and voice quality variables, as well as ways of relating them to cognition. Numerous variables in AAE are unstudied, but this guidebook opens the door to analysis of them. Future progress in understanding AAE will depend on being able to explore such variables. Wolfram, Walter A. 1969. A Sociolinguistic Description of Detroit Negro Speech (Urban language series 5). Washington, DC: Center for Applied Linguistics. Another classic study that followed close on the heels of Labov et al. (1968), this examination has been just as important as a point of comparison for later studies. It examined r ‐lessness, substitutions for /θ/, consonant cluster simplification, and devoicing of final /d/ and provided a systematic method for quantifying each one. Its emphasis on constructing socially comparable samples of African Americans and European Americans demonstrated that variants associated with AAE really were ethnic variables and not merely social class variables. Yaeger‐Dror, Malcah, and Erik R. Thomas, eds. 2010. Variation in English Among African Americans . (Publication of the American Dialect Society 94.) Durham, NC: Duke University Press. Chapter 1, Introduction, by Thomas and Yaeger‐Dror, pp. 1–20. Chapter 2, Vowel phonology and ethnicity in North Carolina, by Christine Mallinson, Becky Childs, and Jeannine Carpenter, pp. 23–47. Chapter 3, Mapping a dialect ‘mixtury’: Vowel phonology of African American and white men in rural southern Louisiana, by Michael Wroblewski, Thea Strand, and Sylvie Dubois, pp. 48–72. Chapter 4, African American Vernacular English: Vowel phonology in a Georgia community, by Claire Andres and Rachel Votta, pp. 75–98. Chapter 5, The vowel phonologies of African American and white New York City residents, by Elizabeth L. Coggshall and Kara Becker, pp. 101–28. Chapter 6, African American and white vowel systems in Pittsburgh, by Maeve Eberhardt, pp. 129–57. Chapter 7, Convergence in blue‐collar Columbus, Ohio, African American and white vowel systems?, by David Durian, Robin Dodsworth, and Jennifer Schumacher, pp. 161–90. Chapter 8, The vowel phonology of urban southeastern Wisconsin, by Thomas C. Purnell, pp. 191–217. This collection of articles explores the Uniformity Controversy. Each chapter covers a different urban centre or collection of rural locales covering widely scattered locations in the United States. It is shown that AAE exhibits considerable geographic diversity, both within the South and outside it. At the same time, a core of AAE features emerges, even though different communities maintain or discard different core features. Online Materials 1. Center for Applied Linguistics. Dialects: African American English. http://www.cal.org/topics/dialects/aae.html The most important features of this site are its links to an extensive bibliography on AAE, to other online resources, and to discussions of literary uses of AAE. 2. Library of Congress. American Memories Collection. http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/collections/voices/title.html The Library of Congress website now has all the known sound recordings of African Americans born as slaves. The recordings can be downloaded free of charge as well. Information about the recording medium and the circumstances of each interview are provided, as are transcripts. 3. Patrick, Peter L. African American English: A Webpage for Linguists and Other Folks. http://privatewww.essex.ac.uk/~patrickp/AAVE.html This website focuses on the controversies surrounding AA(V)E, especially with regard to education. It also has links to a bibliography of AAE and to course syllabi related to AAE. 4. Pollock, Karen, et al. Phonological Features of African American Vernacular English (AAVE). http://www.rehabmed.ualberta.ca/spa/phonology/features.htm Pollock’s website lists many phonological features of AAE, with illustrations of each. The list is not exhaustive, and much of it is based either on Pollock’s research or on Guy Bailey’s publications. Focus Questions What phonological and phonetic evidence provides information relevant to the creolist/Anglicist controversy? What phonological and phonetic evidence provides information relevant to the divergence/convergence controversy? What phonological and phonetic evidence provides information relevant to the uniformity controversy? How have migration patterns shaped the pronunciation of African American English? How has the traditional focus on consonantal variation shaped our view of AAE, and how might analysis of vowels and prosody change that view? Why does AAE need to be approached differently in the South than in cities outside the South? How might pronunciation features of AAE relate to classroom instruction procedures? To what extent does the impact of different pronunciation features differ in this regard? Sample Syllabus Controversies in AAE Phonological and Phonetic Variation in AAE Historical developments in AAE" @default.
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- W1977751519 title "Teaching and Learning Guide for: Phonological and Phonetic Characteristics of African American Vernacular English" @default.
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