Changing argument structure in (heritage) Pennsylvania German
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Doris Stolberg
Doris Stolberg is a researcher at the Institut fuer deutsche Sprache (Mannheim, Germany) where she currently heads a project on German colonial linguistics. Her primary research interests include language contact, language change, colonial linguistics, multilingualism, and (early) second language acquisition.
Abstract
By way of migration, large numbers of German-speaking settlers arrived in Pennsylvania between roughly 1700 and 1750. Pennsylvania German, as a distinct variety, developed through levelling processes from L1 varieties of these migrants who came mainly from the southwestern regions of the German speaking area. Pennsylvania German is still spoken today by specific religious groups (primarily Amish and Menonnite groups) for many of whom it is an identity marker. My paper focuses on those Pennsylvania Germans who are not part of these religious groups but have the same migration history. Due to their being closer to the cultural values of American mainstream society, they were integrated into it, and during the 20th century their use of Pennsylvania German was continually diminishing. A revival of this heritage language has occurred over the past c. three decades, including language courses offered at community colleges, public libraries, etc., where ethnic Pennsylvania Germans wish to (re-)learn the language of their grandparents.
Written Pennsylvania German data from four points in time between the 1860s and the 1990s were analysed in this study. Based on these linguistic analyses, differences between the data sets are shown that point towards a diachronic change in the language contact situation of Pennsylvania German speakers. Sociolinguistic and extralinguistic factors are considered that influence the role of PG and make their speakers heritage speakers much in the sense of recent immigrant heritage speakers, although delayed by 200 years.
About the author
Doris Stolberg is a researcher at the Institut fuer deutsche Sprache (Mannheim, Germany) where she currently heads a project on German colonial linguistics. Her primary research interests include language contact, language change, colonial linguistics, multilingualism, and (early) second language acquisition.
©2014 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Munich/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Maintaining Language and Developing Multilingualism
- Intergenerational heritage language practices: A case study of Spanish-speaking families in Britain
- Changing argument structure in (heritage) Pennsylvania German
- Convergent developments in Dutch Turkish word order – A comparative study using ‘elicited production’ and ‘judgment’ data: Converging evidence?
- Maintained and acquired heritage Spanish in the Netherlands: The case of dative constructions
- Language competencies of future teachers – Design and results of an empirical study
- Heritage language use and maintenance in multilingual communities
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Maintaining Language and Developing Multilingualism
- Intergenerational heritage language practices: A case study of Spanish-speaking families in Britain
- Changing argument structure in (heritage) Pennsylvania German
- Convergent developments in Dutch Turkish word order – A comparative study using ‘elicited production’ and ‘judgment’ data: Converging evidence?
- Maintained and acquired heritage Spanish in the Netherlands: The case of dative constructions
- Language competencies of future teachers – Design and results of an empirical study
- Heritage language use and maintenance in multilingual communities