John Benjamins Publishing Company
Chapter 2. Chocó Spanish
Abstract
This paper presents sociohistorical and linguistic data to cast light on the origin and nature of Chocó Spanish (CS), an Afro-Hispanic dialect spoken in the Pacific lowlands of Colombia. This research suggests that neither the Decreolization Hypothesis (Granda, 1977; Schwegler, 1991a, 1991b) nor the Afrogenesis Hypothesis (McWhorter, 2000) can account for the phenomena encountered in contemporary CS. Conversely, the present study indicates that the grammatical elements found in this dialect may be better analyzed as the result of advanced second language acquisition strategies, which were conventionalized at the community level in a sociohistorical context in which black captives had relatively good access to the colonial language.
Abstract
This paper presents sociohistorical and linguistic data to cast light on the origin and nature of Chocó Spanish (CS), an Afro-Hispanic dialect spoken in the Pacific lowlands of Colombia. This research suggests that neither the Decreolization Hypothesis (Granda, 1977; Schwegler, 1991a, 1991b) nor the Afrogenesis Hypothesis (McWhorter, 2000) can account for the phenomena encountered in contemporary CS. Conversely, the present study indicates that the grammatical elements found in this dialect may be better analyzed as the result of advanced second language acquisition strategies, which were conventionalized at the community level in a sociohistorical context in which black captives had relatively good access to the colonial language.
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- Hispanic contact linguistics 1
-
Theoretical and methodological approaches
- Chapter 1. The New Spanishes in the context of contact linguistics 11
- Chapter 2. Chocó Spanish 43
- Chapter 3. Methodological considerations in heritage language studies 61
-
Phonetics, phonology, prosody
- Chapter 4. Social change and /s/ variation in Concepción, Chile and Lima, Peru 85
- Chapter 5. The acento pujado in Yucatan Spanish 115
-
Morphology
- Chapter 6. First person singular subject expression in Caribbean heritage speaker Spanish oral production 139
- Chapter 7. Use of the Present Perfect Indicative in New York Dominican Spanish 163
- Chapter 8. Transfer and convergence between Catalan and Spanish in a bilingual setting 179
-
Syntax
- Chapter 9. The distribution and use of present and past progressive forms in Spanish-English and Spanish-Brazilian Portuguese bilinguals 215
- Chapter 10. Portuguese-Spanish contacts in Misiones, Argentina 235
-
Language variation, linguistic perceptions and attitudes
- Chapter 11. Real perception or perceptive accommodation? 263
- Chapter 12. Andean Spanish and Provinciano identity 283
- Chapter 13. On the effects of Catalan contact in the variable expression of Spanish future tense 315
- Index 335
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- Hispanic contact linguistics 1
-
Theoretical and methodological approaches
- Chapter 1. The New Spanishes in the context of contact linguistics 11
- Chapter 2. Chocó Spanish 43
- Chapter 3. Methodological considerations in heritage language studies 61
-
Phonetics, phonology, prosody
- Chapter 4. Social change and /s/ variation in Concepción, Chile and Lima, Peru 85
- Chapter 5. The acento pujado in Yucatan Spanish 115
-
Morphology
- Chapter 6. First person singular subject expression in Caribbean heritage speaker Spanish oral production 139
- Chapter 7. Use of the Present Perfect Indicative in New York Dominican Spanish 163
- Chapter 8. Transfer and convergence between Catalan and Spanish in a bilingual setting 179
-
Syntax
- Chapter 9. The distribution and use of present and past progressive forms in Spanish-English and Spanish-Brazilian Portuguese bilinguals 215
- Chapter 10. Portuguese-Spanish contacts in Misiones, Argentina 235
-
Language variation, linguistic perceptions and attitudes
- Chapter 11. Real perception or perceptive accommodation? 263
- Chapter 12. Andean Spanish and Provinciano identity 283
- Chapter 13. On the effects of Catalan contact in the variable expression of Spanish future tense 315
- Index 335