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Generation and Spanish Language Use in the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas (Report)

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eBook details

  • Title: Generation and Spanish Language Use in the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas (Report)
  • Author : Southwest Journal of Linguistics
  • Release Date : January 01, 2005
  • Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines,Books,Professional & Technical,Education,
  • Pages : * pages
  • Size : 209 KB

Description

ABSTRACT. This article presents preliminary results from two long-term, mixed design qualitative and quantitative studies of Spanish language usage in the Lower Rio Grande Valley of South Texas. In these two research series, interview data were collected and the use of Spanish was analyzed using critical discourse analysis. In order to better understand the patterns of language maintenance and shift in this region, an expanded model of the GENERATION construct is presented. The analyzed data are then discussed employing the expanded generation model. The Spanish of first through fifth generation consultants is described, as they move away from the immigration experience. Although results are preliminary, clear distinctions among the five generations are observed. Further research and analyses are subsequently suggested. * INTRODUCTION. Research on the contact situation between Spanish and English in the U.S. has consistently documented an intergenerational shift from the former to the latter (see e.g. Lopez 1978, Veltman 1988, Bills 1989, Sole 1990, Pease-Alvarez 1993, Bills, Hernandez-Chavez, & Hudson 1995 and Rivera-Mills 2001, inter alia). In general terms, researchers have documented the unidirectional shift to English in this nation for many populations from various regions around the world, often between the second and third generation. However, societal language shift away from Spanish to English does not appear to follow the traditional three generation pattern in the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas (LRGV), perhaps due in part to the large Spanish speaking population encountered there, which continually increases as a result of the arrival of first generation immigrants (cf. 2000 U.S. Census and updates at www.census.gov). Studies such as those of Mejias, Anderson-Mejias and Carlson (2002, 2003) have supported this change in the pattern of shift. Thus, the continuum paradigm suggested in works by Kouritzin (1999) and Wong Fillmore (1991), in which intergenerational language loss occurs subtly over a long period of time, may account for this slowed loss.


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