Abstract
Recent research into heritage languages has shown the results of language contact structurally and socially. This work is almost exclusively synchronic. This special issue presents five papers that look at the historical record of language contact in migration contexts. In using ego-documents written by everyday users of the languages in contact, we uncover the usefulness of incorporating historical sociolinguistic analysis into heritage language research.
Acknowledgements
I am grateful to Mark Lauersdorf, Mike Putnam, and Joe Salmons for their comments on earlier versions; the usual disclaimers apply.
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© 2019 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Article
- Historical heritage language ego-documents: From home, from away, and from below
- Civil War writings of the Pennsylvania Dutch
- Letters home: German-American Civil War soldiers’ letters 1864–1865
- Varying social roles and networks on a family farm: Evidence from Swedish immigrant letters, 1880s to 1930s
- “Sollte dies mein Geschreibsel meine theure Heymath erreichen”: Linguistic variation in the diary of a nineteenth-century Swiss German migrant
- Canadian heritage German across three generations: A diary-based study of language shift in action
- Book Review
- Schaeken Jos: Voices on Birchbark. Everyday Communication in Medieval Russia (Studies in Slavic and General Linguistics 43)
- Simeon Dekker: Old Russian Birchbark Letters. A Pragmatic Approach (Studies in Slavic and General Linguistics 42)
- Derek Offord, Vladislav Rjéoutski and Gesine Argent: The French Language in Russia: A Social, Political, Cultural, and Literary History (Languages and Culture in History)
- Beal Joan C. and Sylvie Hancil: Perspectives on Northern Englishes (Topics in English Linguistics 96)
- Denkler Markus, Stephan Elspaß, Dagmar Hüpper and Elvira Topalović: Deutsch im 17. Jahrhundert: Studien zu Sprachkontakt, Sprachvariation und Sprachwandel. Gedenkschrift für Jürgen Macha (Sprache – Literatur und Studien zur Linguistik/Germanistik 46)
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Article
- Historical heritage language ego-documents: From home, from away, and from below
- Civil War writings of the Pennsylvania Dutch
- Letters home: German-American Civil War soldiers’ letters 1864–1865
- Varying social roles and networks on a family farm: Evidence from Swedish immigrant letters, 1880s to 1930s
- “Sollte dies mein Geschreibsel meine theure Heymath erreichen”: Linguistic variation in the diary of a nineteenth-century Swiss German migrant
- Canadian heritage German across three generations: A diary-based study of language shift in action
- Book Review
- Schaeken Jos: Voices on Birchbark. Everyday Communication in Medieval Russia (Studies in Slavic and General Linguistics 43)
- Simeon Dekker: Old Russian Birchbark Letters. A Pragmatic Approach (Studies in Slavic and General Linguistics 42)
- Derek Offord, Vladislav Rjéoutski and Gesine Argent: The French Language in Russia: A Social, Political, Cultural, and Literary History (Languages and Culture in History)
- Beal Joan C. and Sylvie Hancil: Perspectives on Northern Englishes (Topics in English Linguistics 96)
- Denkler Markus, Stephan Elspaß, Dagmar Hüpper and Elvira Topalović: Deutsch im 17. Jahrhundert: Studien zu Sprachkontakt, Sprachvariation und Sprachwandel. Gedenkschrift für Jürgen Macha (Sprache – Literatur und Studien zur Linguistik/Germanistik 46)