Argument Structure in Language Shift: Morphosyntactic Variation and Grammatical Resilience in Modern Chukchi

Despite the growing interest in endangered languages, relatively little attention has been paid to the ways in which the structure of these languages is conditioned by the language shift setting, even among conservative older speakers. This thesis investigates how the social circumstances of languag...

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Main Author: Kantarovich, Jessica
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: The University of Chicago 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.6082/uchicago.2623
http://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/2623
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spelling ftunichicagoknow:oai:uchicago.tind.io:2623 2024-09-15T18:01:57+00:00 Argument Structure in Language Shift: Morphosyntactic Variation and Grammatical Resilience in Modern Chukchi Kantarovich, Jessica 2020-09-10T21:14:03Z https://doi.org/10.6082/uchicago.2623 http://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/2623 en eng The University of Chicago https://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/2623/files/Kantarovich_uchicago_0330D_15408.pdf doi:10.6082/uchicago.2623 http://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/2623 http://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/2623 Text 2020 ftunichicagoknow https://doi.org/10.6082/uchicago.2623 2024-08-05T14:08:09Z Despite the growing interest in endangered languages, relatively little attention has been paid to the ways in which the structure of these languages is conditioned by the language shift setting, even among conservative older speakers. This thesis investigates how the social circumstances of language endangerment---which include disrupted intergenerational transmission, loss of a cohesive speech community, pressure to master a new dominant language, and stigmatization of the traditional language---can have significant grammatical effects. I investigate morphosyntactic variation among different groups of speakers of the highly endangered polysynthetic indigenous language Chukchi, which is spoken in northeastern Russia. Following a series of disruptive social and educational policies implemented in the mid-20th century, speakers of Chukchi rapidly shifted to Russian; today, virtually all speakers are bilingual in Russian and transmission of Chukchi to children has ceased entirely. In order to systematically compare linguistic patterns among speakers of different backgrounds (proficient older speakers, attriting speakers, and young L2 or heritage learners), I utilize a combination of traditional fieldwork techniques and controlled experimental production tasks. I focus on several distinct reflexes of the encoding of argument structure, which cuts across multiple morphosyntactic domains and thus affords us the opportunity to examine not only individual grammatical changes due to language shift, but also system-wide grammatical restructuring that can only be seen as a direct result of the modern sociolinguistic setting. Modern Chukchi speakers evidence variation across the following domains: agreement marking, morphological and syntactic ergativity, valency-changing derivational morphology, verbal and nominal incorporation, and argument drop. While older, highly proficient speakers display patterns that are largely consistent with existing grammatical descriptions, attriting speakers and L2 speakers show deviations ... Text Chukchi Knowledge@UChicago (University of Chicago)
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collection Knowledge@UChicago (University of Chicago)
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description Despite the growing interest in endangered languages, relatively little attention has been paid to the ways in which the structure of these languages is conditioned by the language shift setting, even among conservative older speakers. This thesis investigates how the social circumstances of language endangerment---which include disrupted intergenerational transmission, loss of a cohesive speech community, pressure to master a new dominant language, and stigmatization of the traditional language---can have significant grammatical effects. I investigate morphosyntactic variation among different groups of speakers of the highly endangered polysynthetic indigenous language Chukchi, which is spoken in northeastern Russia. Following a series of disruptive social and educational policies implemented in the mid-20th century, speakers of Chukchi rapidly shifted to Russian; today, virtually all speakers are bilingual in Russian and transmission of Chukchi to children has ceased entirely. In order to systematically compare linguistic patterns among speakers of different backgrounds (proficient older speakers, attriting speakers, and young L2 or heritage learners), I utilize a combination of traditional fieldwork techniques and controlled experimental production tasks. I focus on several distinct reflexes of the encoding of argument structure, which cuts across multiple morphosyntactic domains and thus affords us the opportunity to examine not only individual grammatical changes due to language shift, but also system-wide grammatical restructuring that can only be seen as a direct result of the modern sociolinguistic setting. Modern Chukchi speakers evidence variation across the following domains: agreement marking, morphological and syntactic ergativity, valency-changing derivational morphology, verbal and nominal incorporation, and argument drop. While older, highly proficient speakers display patterns that are largely consistent with existing grammatical descriptions, attriting speakers and L2 speakers show deviations ...
format Text
author Kantarovich, Jessica
spellingShingle Kantarovich, Jessica
Argument Structure in Language Shift: Morphosyntactic Variation and Grammatical Resilience in Modern Chukchi
author_facet Kantarovich, Jessica
author_sort Kantarovich, Jessica
title Argument Structure in Language Shift: Morphosyntactic Variation and Grammatical Resilience in Modern Chukchi
title_short Argument Structure in Language Shift: Morphosyntactic Variation and Grammatical Resilience in Modern Chukchi
title_full Argument Structure in Language Shift: Morphosyntactic Variation and Grammatical Resilience in Modern Chukchi
title_fullStr Argument Structure in Language Shift: Morphosyntactic Variation and Grammatical Resilience in Modern Chukchi
title_full_unstemmed Argument Structure in Language Shift: Morphosyntactic Variation and Grammatical Resilience in Modern Chukchi
title_sort argument structure in language shift: morphosyntactic variation and grammatical resilience in modern chukchi
publisher The University of Chicago
publishDate 2020
url https://doi.org/10.6082/uchicago.2623
http://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/2623
genre Chukchi
genre_facet Chukchi
op_source http://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/2623
op_relation https://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/2623/files/Kantarovich_uchicago_0330D_15408.pdf
doi:10.6082/uchicago.2623
http://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/2623
op_doi https://doi.org/10.6082/uchicago.2623
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