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E-grāmata: Sociolinguistic Market Of Cairo

  • Formāts: 304 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 24-Dec-2021
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781136162695
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  • Formāts: 304 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 24-Dec-2021
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781136162695
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First published in 1997. The field of Arabic sociolinguistics has made rapid strides since the appearance of the first correlation studies in the early 1980s. Up to that point, studies of non-standard Arabic had largely been confined to the field of dialectology, in which the researcher's frame erred on the historical or cultural. Dr. Haeri's work falls into the Labovian sociolinguistic paradigm, with the edition of the awareness of the local social backdrop in her linguistic investigations and how this needs to be integrated into any correlation work, and also being area of the general Arab sociolinguistic frame of reference of which the situation in Cairo forms a part.

First Published in 1997. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
Preface and Acknowledgments xiii
Notes on Transcription xviii
Chapter 1 Introduction
1(18)
Overview of the Sociolinguistic Setting: Ways of Co-Existence
7(3)
The Problem: Gender and "Standard" Varieties
10(2)
A Monolithic "Colloquial"?
12(6)
Footnotes
18(1)
Chapter 2 Methodology
19(24)
Description of the Speech Community
19(4)
Details of Fieldwork: Contacting and Sampling Speakers
23(5)
Details of Fieldwork: General Pattern of the Interviews
28(3)
Experiments
31(2)
Children's Speech and the Use of the Qaf
33(1)
Social Class Distribution in Cairo and in the Sample
34(3)
Sample of Speakers Analyzed for Each Sociolinguistic Variable
37(3)
Footnotes
40(3)
Chapter 3 Palatalization: A Non-classical Stylistic Resource of Cairene Arabic
43(60)
Part I Linguistic Characterization
43(25)
Articulatory Features of Palatalization from a Cross-Linguistic Perspective
45(3)
Spectrographic Analysis
48(2)
Coding Procedure
50(1)
Following environments
51(2)
Results of Statistical Analyses
53(2)
Palatalization of Pharyngeal Segments: Contradictory Processes?
55(2)
Effects of Following Environment
57(4)
Other Linguistic Factors
61(2)
Weak and Strong Palatalization: One Process or Two?
63(5)
Part II An Innovation of Women: Sociolinguistic Characterizations
68(35)
Coding the Social Factors
69(1)
Is Palatalization a Sound Change in Progress?
70(3)
Locating the Innovators: Gender and Social Class
73(10)
Education and Type of School
83(3)
Speakers' Reactions to Palatalization
86(2)
Differential Effects of Interviewers
88(3)
The "Paradox" in Women's Linguistic Behavior: A Critique of Sociolinguistic Theory
91(5)
Varieties of Social Meaning: Individual Portraits of Speakers
96(4)
Summary and Conclusion
100(1)
Footnotes
101(2)
Chapter 4 The Re-appearance of a Classical Sound: The Qaf
103(56)
Part I Diachronic and Synchronic Analyses
103(41)
History of the Glottal Stop and the Qaf
106(6)
Disappearance of the Qaf: A Case of Languages in Contact?
112(3)
Review of the Literature: The Lexical Borrowing Model
115(2)
Review of the Literature: Variationist Studies
117(9)
The Qaf in Cairene Arabic: Linguistic Analysis
126(3)
Borrowing from the Classical Language
129(2)
Types, Tokens, and Morphological Characteristics
131(2)
Quoted Names
133(2)
Phonological Variation in the Ten Most Frequent Nouns
135(2)
Phonological Integration or Segment Substitution?
137(2)
Use of Qaf Lexical Items Among Children: An Experiment
139(5)
Part II In Whose Speech Has the Qaf Re-appeared? Sociolinguistic Considerations
144(15)
The Qaf Index: A Problem of Measurement
144(1)
Differences between Women and Men
145(2)
Education and Social Class
147(7)
Emerging Questions
154(1)
The Re-appearance of a Sound and the Formation of a Sociolinguistic Variable: What Happens to Old Variables in a Diglossic Setting
154(3)
Footnotes
157(2)
Chapter 5 Searching for Explanations: Gender, Class, and Education
159(34)
The Sociolinguistic Market of Cairo: "Standard" Arabic
160(8)
Urban Cairene: A Non-classical "Standard"
168(6)
Explaining Gender Differences: A Matter of Access?
174(9)
Language Change, Linguistic Behavior, and Ideology
183(8)
Footnotes
191(2)
Chapter 6 Language Attitudes and Ideologies
193(33)
Review of the Literature
194(6)
Signs of Ambivalence: Fear, Habit, and Identity
200(20)
Perceptions of Differences in the Speech of Men and Women
220(3)
Footnotes
223(3)
Chapter 7 Conclusion
226(17)
Evaluations and Categorizations of Linguistic Varieties
235(2)
Diglossia Without Contact?
237(2)
Sociolinguistic Variables for Future Research
239(4)
Appendix 1 243(5)
Appendix 2 248(4)
Bibliography 252(15)
Index 267
Niloofar Haeri