Folk Perception of African American English Regional Variation

David S. B. Mitchell, M. Lesho, Abby Walker
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Contrary to previous “sociolinguistic folklore” that African American (Vernacular) English has a uniform structure across different parts of the US, recent studies have shown that it varies regionally, especially phonologically (Wolfram, 2007; Thomas & Wassink, 2010). However, there is little research on how Americans perceive AAE variation. Based on a map-labeling task, we investigate the folk perception of AAE variation by 55 participants, primarily African Americans in Columbus, Ohio. The analysis focuses on the dialect regions recognized by the participants, the linguistic features associated with different regions, and the attitudes associated with these beliefs. While the perceived regional boundaries mostly align with those identified by speakers in previous perceptual dialectology studies on American English, the participants consistently identified linguistic features that were specific to AAE. The participants recognized substantial phonological and lexical variation and identified “proper” dialects that do not necessarily sound “white”. This study demonstrates the value of considering African Americans’ perspectives in describing African American varieties of English.
非裔美国人英语地区差异的民间认知
与之前的“社会语言学民俗学”认为非裔美国人(白话)英语在美国不同地区具有统一的结构相反,最近的研究表明,它在地区上有所不同,尤其是在语音上(Wolfram,2007;Thomas和Wassink,2010)。然而,关于美国人如何看待AAE变异的研究很少。基于地图标记任务,我们调查了55名参与者对AAE变异的民间看法,这些参与者主要是俄亥俄州哥伦布市的非裔美国人。分析的重点是参与者识别的方言区域、与不同区域相关的语言特征以及与这些信仰相关的态度。虽然感知的区域边界大多与先前对美国英语的感知方言学研究中说话者所确定的区域边界一致,但参与者一致确定了AAE特有的语言特征。参与者识别了大量的语音和词汇变化,并确定了听起来不一定是“白色”的“适当”方言。这项研究证明了在描述非裔美国人的英语变体时考虑非裔美国人观点的价值。
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