LINGUIST List 17.3158

Fri Oct 27 2006

Diss: Socioling: Watts: 'Mobility-Induced Dialect Contact: A sociol...'

Editor for this issue: Hannah Morales <hannahlinguistlist.org>


Directory         1.    Hannah Morales, Mobility-Induced Dialect Contact: A sociolinguistic investigation of speech variation in Wilmslow, Cheshire


Message 1: Mobility-Induced Dialect Contact: A sociolinguistic investigation of speech variation in Wilmslow, Cheshire
Date: 27-Oct-2006
From: Hannah Morales <hannahlinguistlist.org>
Subject: Mobility-Induced Dialect Contact: A sociolinguistic investigation of speech variation in Wilmslow, Cheshire


Institution: University of Essex Program: Department of Language and Linguistics Dissertation Status: Completed Degree Date: 2006

Author: Emma Watts

Dissertation Title: Mobility-Induced Dialect Contact: A sociolinguistic investigation of speech variation in Wilmslow, Cheshire

Linguistic Field(s): Sociolinguistics
Dissertation Director:
David Britain
Dissertation Abstract:

This study provides a sociolinguistic account of speech variation in Wilmslow, Cheshire, a town in the northwest of England. This town is home to both a highly mobile and predominantly middle-class commuter population and a traditional working-class overspill estate of residents originally from nearby Manchester. These groups remain maximally segregated until contact occurs in adolescence at the high school. Their lives subsequently diverge again beyond their school years. This study therefore provides theperfect environment in which to investigate the outcomes of mobility-induced dialect contact and the linguistic consequences of isolation and exclusion.

A central component of this research is an investigation into the mechanisms of dialect contact. An important concern is the adoption of innovations from outside as well as the loss or maintenance of existing forms. This study further investigates the extent to which dialect contact processes can be described as typical, universal and ongoing and the extent to which they are locally specific and changing. The analysis reveals that an investigation into such dialect contact processes should be guided by the specificity of the locality in which they are enacted.