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The Routledge Handbook of Variationist Approaches to Spanish Routledge Spanish Language Handbooks Series

Langue : Anglais

Coordonnateur : Díaz-Campos Manuel

Couverture de l’ouvrage The Routledge Handbook of Variationist Approaches to Spanish

The Routledge Handbook of Variationist Approaches to Spanish provides an up-to-date overview of the latest research examining sociolinguistic approaches to analyzing variation in Spanish.

Divided into three sections, the book includes the most current research conducted in Spanish variationist sociolinguistics. This comprehensive volume covers phonological, morphosyntactic, social, and lexical variation in Spanish. Each section is further divided into subsections focusing on specific areas of language variation, highlighting the most salient and current developments in each subfield of Hispanic sociolinguistics. As such, this Handbook delves further into the details of topics relating to variation and change in Spanish than previous publications, with a focus on the symbolic sociolinguistic value of specific phenomena in the field.

Encouraging readers to think critically about language variation, this book will be of interest to advanced undergraduate and graduate students, as well as researchers seeking to explore lesser-known areas of Hispanic sociolinguistics. The Routledge Handbook of Variationist Approaches to Spanish will be a welcome addition to specialists and students in the fields of linguistics, Hispanic linguistics, sociolinguistics, and linguistic anthropology.

Socio-Phonetics Part 1: Vowels 1. Vocalic Variation: A Sociolinguistic Analysis of Atonic Vowel Raising in Rural Michoacán, Mexico 2. Vocalic Phenomena in Andean Spanish Dialects 3. Sociolinguistic variation of final back vowels in urban Asturian Spanish Part 2: Plosive Consonants 4. Velarization of word-internal syllable coda stops 5. A Usage-Based Analysis of the Variable Production of /k/ and /d/ as Interdental Fricatives 6. Intervocalic /d/ as a Gradual Variable in Caracas Spanish Part 3: Affricate Consonants 7. The Social Stratification of /ʧ/: A Process of Lengthening in Caracas Spanish Part 4: Fricative Consonants 8. The Last Stronghold of Word-final /s/ in Barranquillero Spanish: Prevocalic Word-final /s/ in Cohesive Bigrams 9. Phonetic sensitivity does not condition variant-based social sensitivity: The case of intervocalic /s/ voicing in Costa Rican Spanish 10. Analyzing Andalusian Coronal Fricative Norms (ceceo, seseo, and distinción) Using a Sociophonetic Demerger Index 11. The Diffusion of sheísmo and Perceptions of porteñidad in Buenos Aires Spanish Part 5: Liquids 12. Variationist Analyses of Assibilated (r) in Peruvian Spanish 13. The Sociolinguistic Conditioning of Lateralization of /ɾ/: Variation in Three Puerto Rican Communities 14. A Socio-phonetic Exploration of Coda Liquids and Vocalization in Cibao Dominican Spanish 15. Sociolinguistics of Yeísmo in Madrid: Dynamics of Variation and Change Part 6: Nasals 16. Apparently Real Changes: Revisiting final (-m) in Yucatan Spanish Morphosyntax Part 7: Forms of Address 17. Who are you? A Closer Analysis of tú and vos in Caleño Spanish 18. Vosotros versus Ustedes: Asymmetries in 2PL Pronouns across Spanish Dialects 19. The Spanish Second-person tú and usted as Forms of Address: Grammatical Variation and Cognitive Construction Part 8: Tense and Aspect 20. The Expression of Futurity in Spanish: An Empirical Investigation 21. Variation of the Simple Present and Present Progressive: Peruvian Spanish, Pear Stories and Language Contact, oh my! 22. Concordantia Temporum in Andean Spanish 23. Form-function Asymmetry: An Example from Spanish Past Time Expressions Part 9: Mood 24. A Cross-dialectal Analysis of Variable Mood Use in Spanish Part 10: Pronominal Forms and Clitics 25. Differential Object Marking in Monolingual and Bilingual Spanish 26. Variable Constraints on Spanish clitics: A Cross-dialectal Overview 27. Acquiring Constraints on Variable Morphosyntax: Subject-verb ~ verb-subject Word Order in Child Spanish 28. Overlapping envelopes of variation: The case of lexical noun phrases and subject expression in Spanish Part 11: Other Phenomena 29. No se sabía de que eso iba a pasar: Do Lexical Frequency and Structural Priming Condition dequeísmo? 30. Diatopic Variation in the Alternation of para and pa’ 31. An Agreeable Topic: The Pluralization of Presentational haber 32. Traces of the Past in a Lengthy Change (Still) in Progress: Persistence and Generalization in Prepositional Relative Clauses in Peninsular Spanish Lexical Variation Part 12: Diachronic and Synchronic Perspectives 33. Social Factors Contributing to Semantic Change 34. The Variable Use of qué and cuál Followed by a Noun Phrase in the Spanish of the Americas 35. Sociolinguistic Factors in the Development of usted in the Colombian Southwest During the 20th century: Evolution of its Familiar Usage 36. Lexical Borrowing and Variation: The Case of Amerindian Words in Latin American Spanish 37. Lexical Variation Among Spanish and Bilingual Communities in Mexico 38. Sociolinguistic Factors in the Preference for Direct and Indirect Expression of Sexual Concepts

Postgraduate

Manuel Díaz-Campos is Professor of Hispanic Sociolinguistics at Indiana University, Bloomington, USA.