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sosiolinguistik

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  • Bilingualism and Code-Switching

    Or Why sometimes Ill start a sentence in English y termino en Espanol

  • The Monolingual Default

    Suzanne Romaines book BilingualismShe notes that it would certainly be odd to encounter a book with the title Monolingualism (1995:1)But linguistic theory often seems angled towards monolingualismE.g. Chomsky (1963:3) concerned with an ideal speaker-listener, in a completely homogenous speech-community, who knows its language perfectly.Problem with this: no-one knows all of one language perfectly.Do you know what stubs to can wall penetration welds are? Whats a treble top? Tort? (Harding-Esch & Riley 2003:22)And, besides, what is a homogenous speech community? Weve already seen that most societies are multilingual and that most people grow up with more than one language

  • Who is bilingual?Definitions everyone knows what bilingualism is until we try and define it.Bloomfield (1933:55): native-like control of two or more languagesWeinreich (1953:1): the practice of alternately using two languages Haugen (1953:7) the point where a speaker can first produce complete meaningful utterances in the other language' Grosjean (1997): the use of two (or more) languages in one's everyday life, not knowing two or more languages equally well and optimallyImportant to remember that bilinguals may be competent in speaking and listening, but less competent in reading and writingSometimes just listening (Diebold, 1964) though this goes against Haugens definition and most people can understand at least a few words in a foreign language (this is probably not bilingualism per se)So once again, monolingualism is relative, as with societal.

  • Ways of becoming bilingualLiving in a bilingual communityBeing brought up by bilingual parents, or parents with different language from wider community, or parents with different languagesMoving to a different countryPersonal study/School/UniversityMarrying someone with a different language (Vietnam War, Thai Brides usually women who learn)Political (e.g. black South Africans learning Afrikaans to speak to police, speaking Mandarin in Taiwan public spheres)Religious (Hebrew/Judaism, Church Slavic/Orthodox, Arabic/Islam)Etc. But all in language contact situations

  • Early and Late BilingualismLate: e.g. at school, moving countries after the age of 12 (roughly)Early: moving countries, bilingual parents or multilingual community before 12 (roughly)Early bilingualism: research suggests that children are aware of two language systems very early on. E.g. bilingual children know they are learning two languages at 2 years old, will communicate the right language to the right person very earlyLanguage systems develop as *two* languages, not a welded together version the development of particular structures in both languages is identical to monolingual speakers of both languagesLate bilingualism: tends to be less complete, L1 accent tends to remain in L2, interference and transfer of pragmatic and syntactic norms from L1 > L2, or L2 monolingualism causes fossilisation of L1 (though this may be social)Critical period hypothesis: younger children learn a L2 as if it was L1, even if not exposed to it from birth. Adults seem to find it hard to get rid of old habits. Also, one explanation (Chomsky!) is that adults have less/no access to Universal Grammar (theoretically, the underlying ability of humans to learn *any* language.

  • Monolingual Perspectives on BilingualismBilingualism is detrimental to intelligence:`Several recent studies support earlier evidence as to the adverse effect of bilingualism upon obtained IQ" (Eichorn-Jones 1952).`the general trend in the literature . . . has been toward the conclusion that bilinguists suffer from a language handicap when measured by verbal tests of intelligence" (Darcy 1953, 50) Partially based on the fact that bilingual children tend to produce first sentence later than monolingual (but rapidly catch up so that progress is the same within weeks/months)Bilingualism is not knowing words in one language or another (thus neither language is complete)Contradiction (but argued by the same camp): that bilingualism only happens with native ability, denigrating bilinguals competenceThis can lead to language death e.g. Chinook in the US: kids teased by village elders for making errors in Chinook, decided to just switch to English and refuse to speak Chinook.

  • Code-Switching ICode-Switching

    The juxtaposition within the same speech exchange of passages of speech belonging to two different grammatical systems or subsystems (Gumperz 1982:59)Can be different languages, or varieties of one language, or even stylesBut must be joined together in the same speech act prosodically, semantic, syntax etc.Speech act is a complete utterance (though not necessarily a sentence)

  • Code-Switching IICode-switching is not random there are certain important structures where code-switches do / do not occurSocial reasons: participants in conversation, purpose, context etc.Also syntactic reasons.And not just forgetting a word: code-switching is an active choice to achieve a social or linguistic aim through conversational strategy. (Active, though does not mean conscious)Or in the case of Chinook, choosing not to code-switch So competence, not incompetence.Weinreichs ideal bilingual switches appropriately to changes in the speech situation, but not in an unchanged speech situation, and certainly not within a single sentence.But data suggests otherwise

  • Code-Switching IIIPoplack, 1980 & Romaine 1995Tag-switching: tags which can be inserted anywhere, which do not have too many syntactic limits. Tags in one language, with rest of utterance in other language. E.g. Cantonese and English: No problem, la.So he asked me for money, znas#, and I had to say no, znas# (www.sfu.ca/~papappas/webpages/PPTfiles/L260_03/Lectures/L260_03tut1.ppt)Usually discourse markers: like, you know etc.

    Inter-sentential: switching at either clauses or between sentences. Clauses/sentences are wholly in one language or another, and conform to the rules of both languages.E.g. Sometimes I start a sentence in English y termino en Espanol.A: Are you going to eat?B: Bu yaoIntra-sentential: switching in the middle of sentences or clauses, or even words. Syntactically risky indicates competence in both languages. (Opposite to Weinreich.)E.g. Are you hui jia-ing

  • Examples of blurred switchingGlass eye (.) glass eye zenme shuo.________________ ____________English Chinese

    But

    Glass eye (.)glass eye zenme shuo_________ ___________________English [switch] Chinese

    So not only just switching between two languages, but syntactic structure. Also social context.

  • SummaryRomaine (1995) disagrees with an over-reliance on the syntactic categories of code-switching proposed by Poplack (1980)It is all very well to develop a syntactic-grammatical model of code-switchingBut code-switching is equally well understood as a social phenomena structured as a discourse-pragmatic strategyIt is a strategy of bilingualismBilingualism is not incompetence, but rather an enhanced competenceCode-switching by bilinguals is not fundamentally that much different from style-shifting by monolinguals, it just has a bigger linguistic repertoire to draw fromUltimately, language is a means to get things doneAnd as long as the task is accomplished