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-List Of Titles -Mississippi and Teche Creole: a demographic and linguistic case for separate genesis in Louisiana

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/144503

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Title
Mississippi and Teche Creole: a demographic and linguistic case for separate genesis in Louisiana
Title
Demographic and linguistic case for separate genesis in Louisiana
Publisher
Auckland : The University of Auckland
Date
1994
Author/Creator
Speedy, Karin Elizabeth
Description
Submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in French, University of Auckland, 1994.
Description
Thesis (MA--French)--University of Auckland, 1994.
Description
Bibliography: p. 173-183.
Description
The first explorations -- European settlement -- Linguistic implications of the European settlement of Louisiana -- The slave trade to Louisiana -- Mississippi and Tèche Creole - two separate starting points for Creole in Louisiana? -- A comparison of relative clauses in Pointe Coupée (Mississippi) and Breaux Bridge (Tèche) Creoles -- Relative clauses in nineteenth century Louisiana Creole -- Conclusion.
Description
This study presents a detailed examination of the early socio-demographic history of Louisiana with particular focus on European and slave settlement in the French and Spanish periods. On the basis of these demographics as well as some textual evidence it is argued that despite theoretical predictions to the contrary, a Creole language did emerge and 'jell' in situ in the period 1719-1770. Instrumental in the creation of this language, which was spoken in settlements along the Mississippi River, were those African slaves who had arrived 1719-1731. Demographics also sugges that the Creole spoken to the west of the Atchafalaya River, unsettled until the 1760s, was the product of a semi-separate genesis. An examination of the relativization strategies of modern representatives of the two Creoles (PC and BB) in addition to the number of differences noted by Klingler (1992) suggest that this was indeed the case.
Description
Mode of access: World Wide Web.
Description
xi, 183 p. map
Subject Keyword
Creole dialects, French -- Louisiana
Subject Keyword
Linguistic demography -- Louisiana
Subject Keyword
African Americans -- Louisiana -- Languages
Subject Keyword
French language -- Dialects -- Louisiana
Subject Keyword
Louisiana -- History
Subject Keyword
Louisiana -- Languages
Resource Type
Thesis non-Macquarie
Organisation
University of Auckland

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/144503
Identifier
1556814
Language
eng
Rights
Copyright Karin Elizabeth Speedy 1994.
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