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Mobilian Jargon: Linguistic And Sociohistorical Aspects Of A Native American Pidgin
Emanuel J. Drechsel

Mobilian Jargon: Linguistic And Sociohistorical Aspects Of A Native American Pidgin

Oxford University Press, USA (Mar 01, 1997)
9780198240334
| Hardcover
412 pages | 6.1 x 9.2 inch
LC Classification PM1855.D74 DRE 1997

Subject

  • Creole & Pidgin Languages
  • Historical (Diachronic) Linguistics
  • Native American Languages - North America
  • Native North American History - Southeastern Tribes
  • Native North American Peoples - Language & Linguistics
  • Sociolinguistics

Plot

Drawing on fieldwork and archival research, Drechsel presents a grammatical, sociolinguistic, and ethnohistorical study of Mobilian Jargon, a Muskogean-based American Indian pidgin of the Mississippi valley. Though linguistic and extralinguistic evidence points to Mobilian Jargon's pre-Columbian origin, it was primarily spoken between 1700 and the mid-twentieth century, when it functioned as a lingua franca among linguistically diverse southeastern Native American groups, and in contact between these groups and non-Indians. Drechsel's study questions the universality of some concepts developed in pidgin and creole linguistics, and carries significant implications for the ethnology of Native American peoples, and for the history of North America.

Personal

Location PM1855.D74 DRE 1997
Index 4375
Added Date Oct 02, 2017 19:57:06
Modified Date Feb 14, 2018 23:59:37