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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Rajend MesthriePublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.453kg ISBN: 9781138352896ISBN 10: 1138352896 Pages: 346 Publication Date: 25 February 2020 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education , Undergraduate Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsPrologue 1. The Historical Background 2. Dialects in Contact 3. The Socio-Historical Setting of Language Shift 4. Language Contact and Language Change 5. Language Obsolescence. Appendix A: A Skeleton Grammar of Indian Bhojpuri. Appendix B: Samples. Appendix C: QuestionnairesReviewsReviews of the original publication: 'Mesthrie's book is a pioneering study in the history and current status of one of the major Indic vernaculars spoken in South Africa. Aside from showing that much of what is traditionally called 'Hindi' in that country is in fact Bhojpuri, Mesthrie provides a detailed account of the mechanisms by which a vernacular becomes threatened, and eventually in danger of extinction: language-loss among young speakers triggered by contact with higher-status and more useful languages, and a situation in which Indian vernaculars are increasingly restricted to domestic contexts, and suffer attrition because of their loss of function. This excellent study is important both sociolinguistically (as an addition to the increasingly significant literature on language death in contact situations) and descriptively, in giving a rich and detailed account of the language and its history and current use.' Roger Lass, University of Cape Town 'This work is an interesting and well-written contribution to the field of sociolinguistics and, more specifically, to the study of language contact. It presents valuable linguistic information on a previously undocumented variety of the Hindi language, South African Bhojpuri, and sociolinguistic information on its history and current status in South Africa. But the major strength of this work is its detailed account of the development of South African Bhojpuri from its birth to its impending death. This account is in terms of several important sociolinguistic processes which may result from language contact: koineisation, large-scale borrowing, syntactic convergence, pidginisation, simplification, and language attrition.' Jeff Siegel , University of New England Reviews of the original publication: ‘Mesthrie’s book is a pioneering study in the history and current status of one of the major Indic vernaculars spoken in South Africa. Aside from showing that much of what is traditionally called ‘Hindi’ in that country is in fact Bhojpuri, Mesthrie provides a detailed account of the mechanisms by which a vernacular becomes threatened, and eventually in danger of extinction: language-loss among young speakers triggered by contact with higher-status and more useful languages, and a situation in which Indian vernaculars are increasingly restricted to domestic contexts, and suffer attrition because of their loss of function. This excellent study is important both sociolinguistically (as an addition to the increasingly significant literature on language death in contact situations) and descriptively, in giving a rich and detailed account of the language and its history and current use.’ Roger Lass, University of Cape Town ‘This work is an interesting and well-written contribution to the field of sociolinguistics and, more specifically, to the study of language contact. It presents valuable linguistic information on a previously undocumented variety of the Hindi language, South African Bhojpuri, and sociolinguistic information on its history and current status in South Africa. But the major strength of this work is its detailed account of the development of South African Bhojpuri from its birth to its impending death. This account is in terms of several important sociolinguistic processes which may result from language contact: koineisation, large-scale borrowing, syntactic convergence, pidginisation, simplification, and language attrition.’ Jeff Siegel , University of New England Reviews of the original publication: 'Mesthrie's book is a pioneering study in the history and current status of one of the major Indic vernaculars spoken in South Africa. Aside from showing that much of what is traditionally called 'Hindi' in that country is in fact Bhojpuri, Mesthrie provides a detailed account of the mechanisms by which a vernacular becomes threatened, and eventually in danger of extinction: language-loss among young speakers triggered by contact with higher-status and more useful languages, and a situation in which Indian vernaculars are increasingly restricted to domestic contexts, and suffer attrition because of their loss of function. This excellent study is important both sociolinguistically (as an addition to the increasingly significant literature on language death in contact situations) and descriptively, in giving a rich and detailed account of the language and its history and current use.' Roger Lass, University of Cape Town 'This work is an interesting and well-written contribution to the field of sociolinguistics and, more specifically, to the study of language contact. It presents valuable linguistic information on a previously undocumented variety of the Hindi language, South African Bhojpuri, and sociolinguistic information on its history and current status in South Africa. But the major strength of this work is its detailed account of the development of South African Bhojpuri from its birth to its impending death. This account is in terms of several important sociolinguistic processes which may result from language contact: koineisation, large-scale borrowing, syntactic convergence, pidginisation, simplification, and language attrition.' Jeff Siegel , University of New England Author InformationRajend Mesthrie Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |