LINGUIST List 19.2962
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Tue Sep 30 2008
Diss: Socioling: Ismail: 'Suburbia and the Inner-City: Patterns of ...'
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1. Hanadi
Ismail,
Suburbia and the Inner-City: Patterns of linguistic variation and change in Damascus
Message 1: Suburbia and the Inner-City: Patterns of linguistic variation and change in Damascus
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Date: 29-Sep-2008
From: Hanadi Ismail <hn8 hotmail.com>
Subject: Suburbia and the Inner-City: Patterns of linguistic variation and change in Damascus
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Institution: University of Essex
Program: PhD Linguistics
Dissertation Status: Completed
Degree Date: 2008
Author: Hanadi Ismail
Dissertation Title: Suburbia and the Inner-City: Patterns of linguistic variation and change in Damascus
Linguistic Field(s):
Sociolinguistics
Subject Language(s): Arabic, North Levantine Spoken (apc)
Dissertation Director:
David Britain
Enam Al-Wer
Dissertation Abstract:
This study investigates current patterns of linguistic variation and change in Damascus, the capital city of Syria. The data is elicited from the speech of 59 female and male Damascene speakers from two neighbourhoods in Damascus: inner-city Shaghoor and suburban Dummar. The sample is divided into three age groups: young, middle and old; and two life-modes: life-mode 1 and life-mode 2. Two linguistic variables are investigated: the variable (h) in the 3rd person singular feminine and plural feminine and masculine suffixes /-ha/ and /-hon/; and the variable (r). The data show that the variant Ø, rather than [h], is the favoured form of the pronominal suffix, and that there is no gender or life-mode differentiation in the usage of (h). The statistical analysis, supported by previous descriptions of the dialect, shows that (h) has been in stable variation in the dialect for a long period of time. The geographical distribution of (h) in Syria reveals that the h-less form of the suffix is an urban/city feature, and that it had possibly diffused from the dialects of the coastal cities following the urban hierarchal model. The analysis also shows that the sound /r/ is undergoing a change in progress in the dialect. The change of /r/, signified as [ɹ] in the study, is being led by the young age groups in both neighbourhoods. The distribution of [ɹ] across age groups suggests that the new sound emerged in life-mode 2 (suburban Dummar). In life-mode 1 (Shaghoor), the sound change is being led by the young men in the neighbourhood. It is suggested that it is not contact per se, or contact alone, which facilitates the adoption of [ɹ] amongst the speakers in life-mode 1 (Shaghoor); rather, it is the mode of production as a social practice. An examination of the individual scores among the young women's group reveals that the linguistically innovative members of this group can be categorised as a life-mode within a life-mode on the basis of their economic contribution and the way they are perceived by the rest of the community. These productive women are a minority in the population of Shaghoor as a whole, and their economic contribution is sanctioned by local cultural norms. The relative dominance of men in this age group in terms of productivity may explain the young men's higher score of [ɹ].
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