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A Linguistic Geography of Africa (Cambridge Approaches to Language Contact)

A Linguistic Geography of Africa (Cambridge Approaches to Language Contact)

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Derek Nurse Edited by Bernd Heine
Cambridge University Press, 12/13/2007
EAN 9780521876117, ISBN10: 0521876117

Hardcover, 390 pages, 23 x 16 x 2.9 cm
Language: English

More than forty years ago it was demonstrated that the African continent can be divided into four distinct language families. Research on African languages has accordingly been preoccupied with reconstructing and understanding similarities across these families. This has meant that an interest in other kinds of linguistic relationship, such as whether structural similarities and dissimilarities among African languages are the result of contact between these languages, has never been the subject of major research. This book shows that such similarities across African languages are more common than is widely believed. It provides a broad perspective on Africa as a linguistic area, as well as an analysis of specific linguistic regions. In order to have a better understanding of African languages, their structures, and their history, more information on these contact-induced relationships is essential to understanding Africa's linguistic geography, and to reconstructing its history and prehistory.

1. Introduction Bernd Heine and Derek Nurse
2. Is Africa a linguistic area? Bernd Heine and Zelealem Leyew
3. Africa as a phonological area Nick Clements and Annie Rialland
4. Africa as a morphosyntactic area Denis Creissels, Gerrit J. Dimmendaal, Zygmunt Frajzyngier and Christa König
5. The Macro-Sudan belt Tom Güldemann
6. The Tanzanian Rift Valley area Roland Kießling, Maarten Mous and Derek Nurse
7. Ethiopia Joachim Crass and Ronny Meyer
8. The marked-nominative languages of eastern Africa Christa König
9. Africa's verb-final languages Gerrit J. Dimmendaal.

'... it is a data-driven volume written by experienced Africanists with expertise spanning the continent. ... the volume as a whole has the potential to encourage linguists working with apparent genetic units in Africa to consider how areal features contribute to our conceptualisation of 'relatedness' and to re-assess the importance of genetic units in accounting for similarities across languages within a particular geographical area where contact is attested or historically likely.' Journal of Linguistics