The Oxford Handbook of African American Language (eBook, ePUB)
Redaktion: Lanehart, Sonja
29,95 €
29,95 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar
15 °P sammeln
29,95 €
Als Download kaufen
29,95 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar
15 °P sammeln
Jetzt verschenken
Alle Infos zum eBook verschenken
29,95 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar
Alle Infos zum eBook verschenken
15 °P sammeln
The Oxford Handbook of African American Language (eBook, ePUB)
Redaktion: Lanehart, Sonja
- Format: ePub
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
Bitte loggen Sie sich zunächst in Ihr Kundenkonto ein oder registrieren Sie sich bei
bücher.de, um das eBook-Abo tolino select nutzen zu können.
Hier können Sie sich einloggen
Hier können Sie sich einloggen
Sie sind bereits eingeloggt. Klicken Sie auf 2. tolino select Abo, um fortzufahren.
Bitte loggen Sie sich zunächst in Ihr Kundenkonto ein oder registrieren Sie sich bei bücher.de, um das eBook-Abo tolino select nutzen zu können.
The goal of The Oxford Handbook of African American Language is to provide readers with a wide range of analyses of both traditional and contemporary work on language use in African American communities in a broad collective.
- Geräte: eReader
- mit Kopierschutz
- eBook Hilfe
- Größe: 14.47MB
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Paul BakerThe Language of Patient Feedback (eBook, ePUB)42,95 €
- Alan CruttendenWriting Systems and Phonetics (eBook, ePUB)37,95 €
- The Oxford Handbook of African American Language (eBook, PDF)29,95 €
- New Media Language (eBook, ePUB)40,95 €
- Language, Global Mobilities, Blue-Collar Workers and Blue-collar Workplaces (eBook, ePUB)42,95 €
- Language and Intercultural Communication in the New Era (eBook, ePUB)56,95 €
- Jack PunThe Role of Language in Eastern and Western Health Communication (eBook, ePUB)42,95 €
-
-
-
The goal of The Oxford Handbook of African American Language is to provide readers with a wide range of analyses of both traditional and contemporary work on language use in African American communities in a broad collective.
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Juni 2015
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780190273224
- Artikelnr.: 43223293
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Juni 2015
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780190273224
- Artikelnr.: 43223293
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Sonja Lanehart is Professor and Brackenridge Endowed Chair in Literature and the Humanities at the University of Texas at San Antonio.
* Language Use in African American Communities: An Introduction
* Sonja L. Lanehart, Jennifer Bloomquist, and Ayesha M. Malik
* PART I. ORIGINS AND HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES
* The English Origins Hypothesis
* Gerard Van Herk
* The Creole Origins Hypothesis
* John R. Rickford
* The Emergence of African American English: Monogenetic or
Polygenetic? With or Without "Decreolization"? Under How Much
Substrate Influence?
* Salikoko S. Mufwene
* On the Origins of African American Vernacular English: Beginnings
* Donald Winford
* African American English Over Yonder: The Language of the Liberian
Settler Community
* John Victor Singler
* Documenting the History of African American Vernacular English: A
Survey and Assessment of Sources and Results
* Edgar W. Schneider
* Regionality in the Development of African American English
* Walt Wolfram and Mary E. Kohn
* PART II. LECTS AND VARIATION
* The Place of Gullah in the African American Linguistic Continuum
* Tracey L. Weldon and Simanique Moody
* Rural African American Vernacular English
* Patricia Cukor-Avila and Guy Bailey
* African American English in the Mississippi Delta: A Case Study of
Copula Absence and /r/-Lessness in the Speech of Black Women in
Coahoma County
* Rose Wilkerson
* African American Voices in Atlanta
* William A. Kretzschmar
* African American Language in Pittsburgh and the Lower Susqueshanna
Valley
* Jennifer Bloomquist and Shelome Gooden
* African American Phonology in a Philadelphia Community
* William Labov and Sabriya Fisher
* African American Language in New York City
* Renée A. Blake, Cara Shousterman, and Luiza Newlin-Lukowicz
* African American Vernacular English In California: Four Plus Decades
Of Vibrant Variationist Research
* John R. Rickford
* The Black American Sign Language Project: An Overview
* Joseph Hill, Carolyn McCaskill, Robert Bayley, and Ceil Lucas
* The Sociolinguistic Construction of African American Language
* Walt Wolfram
* PART III. STRUCTURE AND DESCRIPTION
* Syntax and Semantics
* Lisa J. Green and Walter Sistrunk
* The Systematic Marking of Tense, Modality and Aspect in African
American Language
* Charles E. DeBose
* On the Syntax-Prosody Interface in African American Language James A.
Walker
* Segmental Phonology of African American English
* Erik R. Thomas and Guy Bailey
* Prosodic Features of African American English
* Erik R. Thomas
* PART IV. CHILD LANGUAGE ACQUISITION AND DEVELOPMENT
* Language Acquisition in the African American Child: Prior to Age Four
* Brandi L. Newkirk-Turner, RaMonda Horton, and Ida J. Stockman
* The Development of African American English through Childhood and
Adolescence
* Janneke Van Hofwegen
* Development of Variation
* Lisa J. Green and Jessica White-Sustaíta
* Narrative Structures of African American Children: Commonalities and
Differences
* Tempii B. Champion and Allyssa McCabe
* Some Similarities and Differences between African American English
and Southern White English in Children Janna B. Oetting
* Contemporary Approaches and Perspectives for Assessing Young and
School-Age AAE Child Speakers
* Toya A. Wyatt
* PART V. EDUCATION
* African American Language and Education: History and Controversy in
the Twentieth Century
* Geneva Smitherman
* Managing Two Varieties: Code-switching in the Educational Context
* Monique T. Mills and Julie A. Washington
* Balancing Pedagogy with Theory: The Infusion of African American
Language Research Into Everyday Pre K-12 Teaching Practices
* Sharroky Hollie, Tamara Butler, and Jamila Gillenwaters
* History of Research on Multiliteracies and Hip Hop Pedagogy: A
Critical Review
* K.C. Nat Turner and Tyson L. Rose
* African-American Vernacular English and Reading
* William Labov and Bettina Baker
* Dialect Switching and Mathematical Reasoning Tests: Implications for
Early Educational Achievement
* J. Michael Terry, Randall Hendrick, Evangelos Evangelou, and Richard
L. Smith
* Beyond Bidialecticalism: Language Planning and Policies for African
American Students
* John Baugh
* PART VI. LANGUAGE IN SOCIETY
* African American Church Language
* Charles E. DeBose
* The (Re)turn to Remus Orthography: The Voices of African American
Language in American Literature
* James Braxton Peterson
* African American Language and Black Poetry
* Howard Rambsy II and Briana Whiteside
* African American Divas of Comedy: Staking a Claim in Public Space
* Jacquelyn Rahman
* The Construction of Ethnicity via Voicing: African American English
in Children's Animated Film
* Jennifer Bloomquist
* SWB: (Speaking while Black or Speaking while Brown): Linguistic
Profiling and Discrimination Based on Speech as a Surrogate for Race
in International Perspective
* John Baugh
* PART VII. LANGUAGE AND IDENTITY
* Racializing Language: Unpacking Linguistic Approaches to Attitudes
about Race and Speech
* Kate T. Anderson
* African American Standard English
* Arthur K. Spears
* African American English in the Middle Class
* Erica Britt and Tracey L. Weldon
* African American Women's Language: Mother Tongues Untied
* Marcyliena Morgan
* Black Masculine Language
* David E. Kirkland
* Hip Hop Nation Language: Localization and Globalization
* H. Samy Alim
* African American Language and Identity: Contradictions and Conundrums
* Sonja L. Lanehart
* Sonja L. Lanehart, Jennifer Bloomquist, and Ayesha M. Malik
* PART I. ORIGINS AND HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES
* The English Origins Hypothesis
* Gerard Van Herk
* The Creole Origins Hypothesis
* John R. Rickford
* The Emergence of African American English: Monogenetic or
Polygenetic? With or Without "Decreolization"? Under How Much
Substrate Influence?
* Salikoko S. Mufwene
* On the Origins of African American Vernacular English: Beginnings
* Donald Winford
* African American English Over Yonder: The Language of the Liberian
Settler Community
* John Victor Singler
* Documenting the History of African American Vernacular English: A
Survey and Assessment of Sources and Results
* Edgar W. Schneider
* Regionality in the Development of African American English
* Walt Wolfram and Mary E. Kohn
* PART II. LECTS AND VARIATION
* The Place of Gullah in the African American Linguistic Continuum
* Tracey L. Weldon and Simanique Moody
* Rural African American Vernacular English
* Patricia Cukor-Avila and Guy Bailey
* African American English in the Mississippi Delta: A Case Study of
Copula Absence and /r/-Lessness in the Speech of Black Women in
Coahoma County
* Rose Wilkerson
* African American Voices in Atlanta
* William A. Kretzschmar
* African American Language in Pittsburgh and the Lower Susqueshanna
Valley
* Jennifer Bloomquist and Shelome Gooden
* African American Phonology in a Philadelphia Community
* William Labov and Sabriya Fisher
* African American Language in New York City
* Renée A. Blake, Cara Shousterman, and Luiza Newlin-Lukowicz
* African American Vernacular English In California: Four Plus Decades
Of Vibrant Variationist Research
* John R. Rickford
* The Black American Sign Language Project: An Overview
* Joseph Hill, Carolyn McCaskill, Robert Bayley, and Ceil Lucas
* The Sociolinguistic Construction of African American Language
* Walt Wolfram
* PART III. STRUCTURE AND DESCRIPTION
* Syntax and Semantics
* Lisa J. Green and Walter Sistrunk
* The Systematic Marking of Tense, Modality and Aspect in African
American Language
* Charles E. DeBose
* On the Syntax-Prosody Interface in African American Language James A.
Walker
* Segmental Phonology of African American English
* Erik R. Thomas and Guy Bailey
* Prosodic Features of African American English
* Erik R. Thomas
* PART IV. CHILD LANGUAGE ACQUISITION AND DEVELOPMENT
* Language Acquisition in the African American Child: Prior to Age Four
* Brandi L. Newkirk-Turner, RaMonda Horton, and Ida J. Stockman
* The Development of African American English through Childhood and
Adolescence
* Janneke Van Hofwegen
* Development of Variation
* Lisa J. Green and Jessica White-Sustaíta
* Narrative Structures of African American Children: Commonalities and
Differences
* Tempii B. Champion and Allyssa McCabe
* Some Similarities and Differences between African American English
and Southern White English in Children Janna B. Oetting
* Contemporary Approaches and Perspectives for Assessing Young and
School-Age AAE Child Speakers
* Toya A. Wyatt
* PART V. EDUCATION
* African American Language and Education: History and Controversy in
the Twentieth Century
* Geneva Smitherman
* Managing Two Varieties: Code-switching in the Educational Context
* Monique T. Mills and Julie A. Washington
* Balancing Pedagogy with Theory: The Infusion of African American
Language Research Into Everyday Pre K-12 Teaching Practices
* Sharroky Hollie, Tamara Butler, and Jamila Gillenwaters
* History of Research on Multiliteracies and Hip Hop Pedagogy: A
Critical Review
* K.C. Nat Turner and Tyson L. Rose
* African-American Vernacular English and Reading
* William Labov and Bettina Baker
* Dialect Switching and Mathematical Reasoning Tests: Implications for
Early Educational Achievement
* J. Michael Terry, Randall Hendrick, Evangelos Evangelou, and Richard
L. Smith
* Beyond Bidialecticalism: Language Planning and Policies for African
American Students
* John Baugh
* PART VI. LANGUAGE IN SOCIETY
* African American Church Language
* Charles E. DeBose
* The (Re)turn to Remus Orthography: The Voices of African American
Language in American Literature
* James Braxton Peterson
* African American Language and Black Poetry
* Howard Rambsy II and Briana Whiteside
* African American Divas of Comedy: Staking a Claim in Public Space
* Jacquelyn Rahman
* The Construction of Ethnicity via Voicing: African American English
in Children's Animated Film
* Jennifer Bloomquist
* SWB: (Speaking while Black or Speaking while Brown): Linguistic
Profiling and Discrimination Based on Speech as a Surrogate for Race
in International Perspective
* John Baugh
* PART VII. LANGUAGE AND IDENTITY
* Racializing Language: Unpacking Linguistic Approaches to Attitudes
about Race and Speech
* Kate T. Anderson
* African American Standard English
* Arthur K. Spears
* African American English in the Middle Class
* Erica Britt and Tracey L. Weldon
* African American Women's Language: Mother Tongues Untied
* Marcyliena Morgan
* Black Masculine Language
* David E. Kirkland
* Hip Hop Nation Language: Localization and Globalization
* H. Samy Alim
* African American Language and Identity: Contradictions and Conundrums
* Sonja L. Lanehart
* Language Use in African American Communities: An Introduction
* Sonja L. Lanehart, Jennifer Bloomquist, and Ayesha M. Malik
* PART I. ORIGINS AND HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES
* The English Origins Hypothesis
* Gerard Van Herk
* The Creole Origins Hypothesis
* John R. Rickford
* The Emergence of African American English: Monogenetic or
Polygenetic? With or Without "Decreolization"? Under How Much
Substrate Influence?
* Salikoko S. Mufwene
* On the Origins of African American Vernacular English: Beginnings
* Donald Winford
* African American English Over Yonder: The Language of the Liberian
Settler Community
* John Victor Singler
* Documenting the History of African American Vernacular English: A
Survey and Assessment of Sources and Results
* Edgar W. Schneider
* Regionality in the Development of African American English
* Walt Wolfram and Mary E. Kohn
* PART II. LECTS AND VARIATION
* The Place of Gullah in the African American Linguistic Continuum
* Tracey L. Weldon and Simanique Moody
* Rural African American Vernacular English
* Patricia Cukor-Avila and Guy Bailey
* African American English in the Mississippi Delta: A Case Study of
Copula Absence and /r/-Lessness in the Speech of Black Women in
Coahoma County
* Rose Wilkerson
* African American Voices in Atlanta
* William A. Kretzschmar
* African American Language in Pittsburgh and the Lower Susqueshanna
Valley
* Jennifer Bloomquist and Shelome Gooden
* African American Phonology in a Philadelphia Community
* William Labov and Sabriya Fisher
* African American Language in New York City
* Renée A. Blake, Cara Shousterman, and Luiza Newlin-Lukowicz
* African American Vernacular English In California: Four Plus Decades
Of Vibrant Variationist Research
* John R. Rickford
* The Black American Sign Language Project: An Overview
* Joseph Hill, Carolyn McCaskill, Robert Bayley, and Ceil Lucas
* The Sociolinguistic Construction of African American Language
* Walt Wolfram
* PART III. STRUCTURE AND DESCRIPTION
* Syntax and Semantics
* Lisa J. Green and Walter Sistrunk
* The Systematic Marking of Tense, Modality and Aspect in African
American Language
* Charles E. DeBose
* On the Syntax-Prosody Interface in African American Language James A.
Walker
* Segmental Phonology of African American English
* Erik R. Thomas and Guy Bailey
* Prosodic Features of African American English
* Erik R. Thomas
* PART IV. CHILD LANGUAGE ACQUISITION AND DEVELOPMENT
* Language Acquisition in the African American Child: Prior to Age Four
* Brandi L. Newkirk-Turner, RaMonda Horton, and Ida J. Stockman
* The Development of African American English through Childhood and
Adolescence
* Janneke Van Hofwegen
* Development of Variation
* Lisa J. Green and Jessica White-Sustaíta
* Narrative Structures of African American Children: Commonalities and
Differences
* Tempii B. Champion and Allyssa McCabe
* Some Similarities and Differences between African American English
and Southern White English in Children Janna B. Oetting
* Contemporary Approaches and Perspectives for Assessing Young and
School-Age AAE Child Speakers
* Toya A. Wyatt
* PART V. EDUCATION
* African American Language and Education: History and Controversy in
the Twentieth Century
* Geneva Smitherman
* Managing Two Varieties: Code-switching in the Educational Context
* Monique T. Mills and Julie A. Washington
* Balancing Pedagogy with Theory: The Infusion of African American
Language Research Into Everyday Pre K-12 Teaching Practices
* Sharroky Hollie, Tamara Butler, and Jamila Gillenwaters
* History of Research on Multiliteracies and Hip Hop Pedagogy: A
Critical Review
* K.C. Nat Turner and Tyson L. Rose
* African-American Vernacular English and Reading
* William Labov and Bettina Baker
* Dialect Switching and Mathematical Reasoning Tests: Implications for
Early Educational Achievement
* J. Michael Terry, Randall Hendrick, Evangelos Evangelou, and Richard
L. Smith
* Beyond Bidialecticalism: Language Planning and Policies for African
American Students
* John Baugh
* PART VI. LANGUAGE IN SOCIETY
* African American Church Language
* Charles E. DeBose
* The (Re)turn to Remus Orthography: The Voices of African American
Language in American Literature
* James Braxton Peterson
* African American Language and Black Poetry
* Howard Rambsy II and Briana Whiteside
* African American Divas of Comedy: Staking a Claim in Public Space
* Jacquelyn Rahman
* The Construction of Ethnicity via Voicing: African American English
in Children's Animated Film
* Jennifer Bloomquist
* SWB: (Speaking while Black or Speaking while Brown): Linguistic
Profiling and Discrimination Based on Speech as a Surrogate for Race
in International Perspective
* John Baugh
* PART VII. LANGUAGE AND IDENTITY
* Racializing Language: Unpacking Linguistic Approaches to Attitudes
about Race and Speech
* Kate T. Anderson
* African American Standard English
* Arthur K. Spears
* African American English in the Middle Class
* Erica Britt and Tracey L. Weldon
* African American Women's Language: Mother Tongues Untied
* Marcyliena Morgan
* Black Masculine Language
* David E. Kirkland
* Hip Hop Nation Language: Localization and Globalization
* H. Samy Alim
* African American Language and Identity: Contradictions and Conundrums
* Sonja L. Lanehart
* Sonja L. Lanehart, Jennifer Bloomquist, and Ayesha M. Malik
* PART I. ORIGINS AND HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES
* The English Origins Hypothesis
* Gerard Van Herk
* The Creole Origins Hypothesis
* John R. Rickford
* The Emergence of African American English: Monogenetic or
Polygenetic? With or Without "Decreolization"? Under How Much
Substrate Influence?
* Salikoko S. Mufwene
* On the Origins of African American Vernacular English: Beginnings
* Donald Winford
* African American English Over Yonder: The Language of the Liberian
Settler Community
* John Victor Singler
* Documenting the History of African American Vernacular English: A
Survey and Assessment of Sources and Results
* Edgar W. Schneider
* Regionality in the Development of African American English
* Walt Wolfram and Mary E. Kohn
* PART II. LECTS AND VARIATION
* The Place of Gullah in the African American Linguistic Continuum
* Tracey L. Weldon and Simanique Moody
* Rural African American Vernacular English
* Patricia Cukor-Avila and Guy Bailey
* African American English in the Mississippi Delta: A Case Study of
Copula Absence and /r/-Lessness in the Speech of Black Women in
Coahoma County
* Rose Wilkerson
* African American Voices in Atlanta
* William A. Kretzschmar
* African American Language in Pittsburgh and the Lower Susqueshanna
Valley
* Jennifer Bloomquist and Shelome Gooden
* African American Phonology in a Philadelphia Community
* William Labov and Sabriya Fisher
* African American Language in New York City
* Renée A. Blake, Cara Shousterman, and Luiza Newlin-Lukowicz
* African American Vernacular English In California: Four Plus Decades
Of Vibrant Variationist Research
* John R. Rickford
* The Black American Sign Language Project: An Overview
* Joseph Hill, Carolyn McCaskill, Robert Bayley, and Ceil Lucas
* The Sociolinguistic Construction of African American Language
* Walt Wolfram
* PART III. STRUCTURE AND DESCRIPTION
* Syntax and Semantics
* Lisa J. Green and Walter Sistrunk
* The Systematic Marking of Tense, Modality and Aspect in African
American Language
* Charles E. DeBose
* On the Syntax-Prosody Interface in African American Language James A.
Walker
* Segmental Phonology of African American English
* Erik R. Thomas and Guy Bailey
* Prosodic Features of African American English
* Erik R. Thomas
* PART IV. CHILD LANGUAGE ACQUISITION AND DEVELOPMENT
* Language Acquisition in the African American Child: Prior to Age Four
* Brandi L. Newkirk-Turner, RaMonda Horton, and Ida J. Stockman
* The Development of African American English through Childhood and
Adolescence
* Janneke Van Hofwegen
* Development of Variation
* Lisa J. Green and Jessica White-Sustaíta
* Narrative Structures of African American Children: Commonalities and
Differences
* Tempii B. Champion and Allyssa McCabe
* Some Similarities and Differences between African American English
and Southern White English in Children Janna B. Oetting
* Contemporary Approaches and Perspectives for Assessing Young and
School-Age AAE Child Speakers
* Toya A. Wyatt
* PART V. EDUCATION
* African American Language and Education: History and Controversy in
the Twentieth Century
* Geneva Smitherman
* Managing Two Varieties: Code-switching in the Educational Context
* Monique T. Mills and Julie A. Washington
* Balancing Pedagogy with Theory: The Infusion of African American
Language Research Into Everyday Pre K-12 Teaching Practices
* Sharroky Hollie, Tamara Butler, and Jamila Gillenwaters
* History of Research on Multiliteracies and Hip Hop Pedagogy: A
Critical Review
* K.C. Nat Turner and Tyson L. Rose
* African-American Vernacular English and Reading
* William Labov and Bettina Baker
* Dialect Switching and Mathematical Reasoning Tests: Implications for
Early Educational Achievement
* J. Michael Terry, Randall Hendrick, Evangelos Evangelou, and Richard
L. Smith
* Beyond Bidialecticalism: Language Planning and Policies for African
American Students
* John Baugh
* PART VI. LANGUAGE IN SOCIETY
* African American Church Language
* Charles E. DeBose
* The (Re)turn to Remus Orthography: The Voices of African American
Language in American Literature
* James Braxton Peterson
* African American Language and Black Poetry
* Howard Rambsy II and Briana Whiteside
* African American Divas of Comedy: Staking a Claim in Public Space
* Jacquelyn Rahman
* The Construction of Ethnicity via Voicing: African American English
in Children's Animated Film
* Jennifer Bloomquist
* SWB: (Speaking while Black or Speaking while Brown): Linguistic
Profiling and Discrimination Based on Speech as a Surrogate for Race
in International Perspective
* John Baugh
* PART VII. LANGUAGE AND IDENTITY
* Racializing Language: Unpacking Linguistic Approaches to Attitudes
about Race and Speech
* Kate T. Anderson
* African American Standard English
* Arthur K. Spears
* African American English in the Middle Class
* Erica Britt and Tracey L. Weldon
* African American Women's Language: Mother Tongues Untied
* Marcyliena Morgan
* Black Masculine Language
* David E. Kirkland
* Hip Hop Nation Language: Localization and Globalization
* H. Samy Alim
* African American Language and Identity: Contradictions and Conundrums
* Sonja L. Lanehart