Titelangaben
Dombrowsky-Hahn, Klaudia ; Fanego Palat, Axel:
Mobile and complex: a West African linguistic repertoire.
In: Pfadenhauer, Katrin ; Rüdiger, Sofia ; Serreli, Valentina
(Hrsg.):
Global and local perspectives on language contact. -
Berlin
: Language Science Press
,
2024
. - S. 183-214
. - (Contact and Multilingualism
; 7
)
ISBN 978-3-96110-431-4
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10497381
Angaben zu Projekten
Projekttitel: |
Offizieller Projekttitel Projekt-ID Afrikaner*innen im Rhein-Main-Gebiet: Ein afrikalinguistisches Forschungsprojekt zu sprachlicher Integration Ohne Angabe |
---|---|
Projektfinanzierung: |
Andere Rhein-Main Universitäten (RMU-Initiativfonds Forschung) |
Abstract
Migration is one of the sources of individual multilingualism. Patterns of mobility are typically more complex than a simple move from an original home to a new residence; they can involve trajectories including internal, rural–urban, south–south, south–north, and circular migration. An individual’s experience of migration is reflected in their linguistic repertoire. Migrants commonly acquire new linguistic resources, expanding their repertoire throughout their itinerary. This is especially true of mobile people from West Africa, where urban and rural multilingualism is common in many regions.
In our project entitled “African people in the Rhine-Main region – a project on linguistic integration”, we study language repertoires of speakers from different African countries. Through multimodal methods, including the collection of language portraits, accompanying narratives, and interviews, we get to know mobile people’s biographies and their histories of language acquisition. The data can also be analysed with a view to contact phenomena.
In this chapter, we take a close look at the use of German during an extended interview conversation with one speaker, Kajatu, a woman born in Guinea. We focus on three examples from different tiers of language structure: the semantics of the spatial preposition in, morphosyntactic properties of genitive constructions, and phonetic–phonological details of nasalization processes. In all three, we find evidence that the speaker draws on her entire linguistic repertoire, marked by several West African and European languages. Differences between Kajatu’s use of German and standard norms cannot simply be attributed to ‘automatic’ processes of native language interference. Instead, individual usage patterns emerge and stabilize that can sometimes be traced back to one of the various other languages in her repertoire. In this sense, the linguistic forms on the levels of phonetics, morphosyntax, and (lexical) semantics index the individual’s biography and identity.
Weitere Angaben
Publikationsform: | Aufsatz in einem Buch |
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Begutachteter Beitrag: | Ja |
Keywords: | Language and Migration; Language contact; West African Languages in the diaspora |
Fachklassifikationen: | African Linguistics |
Institutionen der Universität: | Fakultäten > Sprach- und Literaturwissenschaftliche Fakultät Fakultäten > Sprach- und Literaturwissenschaftliche Fakultät > Lehrstuhl Afrikanistik I Fakultäten |
Titel an der UBT entstanden: | Ja |
Themengebiete aus DDC: | 400 Sprache 400 Sprache > 410 Linguistik 400 Sprache > 490 Andere Sprachen |
Eingestellt am: | 20 Mär 2024 08:26 |
Letzte Änderung: | 20 Mär 2024 08:26 |
URI: | https://eref.uni-bayreuth.de/id/eprint/88948 |