Dialectology proper has traditionally focused on the geographic
distribution of language variation as an end in itself and has
remained relatively segregated from other branches of linguistic and
extra-linguistic inquiry. Cross-fertilizing winds have been blowing
through the field for more than a decade, but much work remains for
adequate synthesis. This book seeks to further the interdisciplinary
integration of the field by highlighting, and harnessing, the many
dialectic tensions inherent in language variation research and dialect
definition. Undertaking a broadscale experiment in applied dialectics,
the book demonstrates multiple grounds for insisting on a more robust,
integrational approach to dialectology while simultaneously
demonstrating grounds for defining the Phula languages of China and
Vietnam. The Phula languages belong to the Burmic sub-branch of the
Tibeto-Burman family and are primarily spoken in southeastern Yunnan
Province, China. With origins as early as the ninth century, these
language varieties have been left undefined, and largely unresearched,
for hundreds of years. Based on extensive original fieldwork, the book
identifies 24 synchronic Phula languages descended from three distinct
macro-clades diachronically. This is accomplished by blending
typological-descriptive, historical-comparative and socio-cognitive
perspectives. Diagnostics include both qualitative and quantitative
measurements, and insights from history, geography, ethnology,
language contact, sociolinguistics and more are called on for data
interpretation. This dialogic approach incorporates complexity by
asserting that dialectology itself best flourishes as an
interdependent dialectic - a dynamic synthesis of competing
perspectives.
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Interpreting Phula Variation
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9783110245851
Publisert
2015
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
De Gruyter Mouton
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter