北方城市的兴衰变迁

IF 1 4区 文学 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS
Monica Nesbitt
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引用次数: 9

摘要

最近对北美五大湖地区英语的声学分析表明,该地区特有的元音链移位,即北方城市移位(NCS),正在减弱。态度分析表明,非华语在一些非华语城市已经失去了声望,因此它不再被视为“标准的美国英语”。然而,资本损失和方言衰落的社会文化和时间解释仍有待探索。本文研究了20世纪密歇根州兰辛市一个非华语城市的36名白人(18名女性和18名男性)产生的陷阱的F1、F2和双元音质量。结果表明,陷阱的实现受到性别和出生年份的制约,因此女性在20世纪中期引领了非华语实现的转变,然后又远离了非华语。这些发现反映了兰辛语言重组期间去工业化的背景,并表明随着地区工业——(汽车)制造业——失去声望,地区变体也会失去声望,从而引发陷阱。本文通过在我们对地区方言维护的讨论中增加去工业化和婴儿潮对X世代过渡的重要性,扩展了我们对北美方言学的理解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Rise and Fall of the Northern Cities Shift
Recent acoustic analyses examining English in the North American Great Lakes region show that the area’s characteristic vowel chain shift, the Northern Cities Shift (NCS), is waning. Attitudinal analyses suggest that the NCS has lost prestige in some NCS cities, such that it is no longer regarded as “standard American English.” Sociocultural and temporal accounts of capital loss and dialect decline remain unexplored, however. This article examines F1, F2, and diphthongal quality of trap produced by 36 White speakers (18 women and 18 men) in one NCS city—Lansing, Michigan—over the course of the twentieth century. Results show that trap realization is conditioned by gender and birth year, such that women led the change toward NCS realizations into the middle of the twentieth century and then away from them thereafter. These findings reflect the backdrop of deindustrialization during this time of linguistic reorganization in Lansing and show that as the regional industry—(auto) manufacturing—loses prestige, so does the regional variant, raised trap. This article expands our understanding of North American dialectology by adding the importance of deindustrialization and the Baby Boomer to Generation X generational transition to our discussion of regional dialect maintenance.
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来源期刊
American Speech
American Speech Multiple-
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
26
期刊介绍: American Speech has been one of the foremost publications in its field since its founding in 1925. The journal is concerned principally with the English language in the Western Hemisphere, although articles dealing with English in other parts of the world, the influence of other languages by or on English, and linguistic theory are also published. The journal is not committed to any particular theoretical framework, and issues often contain contributions that appeal to a readership wider than the linguistic studies community. Regular features include a book review section and a “Miscellany” section devoted to brief essays and notes.
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