Language change vs. stability in conservative language communities. A case study of Icelandic.

This dissertation is a study in language stability. Icelandic, which is regarded by many as a prime example of a stable language, is chosen as a vehicle for an examination of this field. A study, which involves a number of alleged ongoing changes in modern Icelandic, is conducted in order to determi...

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Main Author: Friðriksson, Finnur
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2077/18713
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spelling ftunivgoeteborg:oai:gupea.ub.gu.se:2077/18713 2023-10-29T02:37:27+01:00 Language change vs. stability in conservative language communities. A case study of Icelandic. Friðriksson, Finnur 2008-11-19T08:54:52Z application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2077/18713 eng eng Gothenburg monographs in linguistics 37 978-91-977196-3-6 0346-6248 http://hdl.handle.net/2077/18713 language stability attitudes to language linguistic nationalism language planning social networks Icelandic ‘dative sickness’ case inflections ‘new passive’ ‘am-to-frenzy’ Text Doctoral thesis Doctor of Philosophy 2008 ftunivgoeteborg 2023-10-04T21:11:01Z This dissertation is a study in language stability. Icelandic, which is regarded by many as a prime example of a stable language, is chosen as a vehicle for an examination of this field. A study, which involves a number of alleged ongoing changes in modern Icelandic, is conducted in order to determine whether or not the language can still be characterized as stable and, if the answer is positive, to identify the conditions which support this stability. The data used, which have been collected from a total of 108 informants chosen on the basis of a set of social criteria, consist primarily of informal group conversations which were analysed with respect to the relevant linguistic variables. 52 of the informants also submitted written material, not produced specifically for the purpose of the thesis, and this was analysed in the same way. Furthermore, all informants were interviewed to obtain information on their social background, the structure of their social networks, and on their attitudes towards and awareness of the alleged changes. The results regarding language use indicate that Icelandic can still be characterized as a stable language. Thus, examples of the alleged changes appeared quite infrequently in the data and their distribution amongst the age groups included is indicative of stable variation rather than change in progress. With respect to attitudes and awareness, the informants generally display both a high level of awareness of the alleged changes and a high level of negativity towards them. Furthermore, a pattern emerges which indicates a relationship between attitudes and usage, such that an informant’s negative attitude towards a given non-standard form decreases his or her likelihood of using it. The results also indicate that other factors, such as strong linguistic nationalism and a stability-oriented language policy, are instrumental in creating the sociolinguistic conditions in Iceland which support language stability, and it is argued that these conditions will generally result in ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Iceland University of Gothenburg: GUPEA (Gothenburg University Publications Electronic Archive)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Gothenburg: GUPEA (Gothenburg University Publications Electronic Archive)
op_collection_id ftunivgoeteborg
language English
topic language stability
attitudes to language
linguistic nationalism
language planning
social networks
Icelandic
‘dative sickness’
case inflections
‘new passive’
‘am-to-frenzy’
spellingShingle language stability
attitudes to language
linguistic nationalism
language planning
social networks
Icelandic
‘dative sickness’
case inflections
‘new passive’
‘am-to-frenzy’
Friðriksson, Finnur
Language change vs. stability in conservative language communities. A case study of Icelandic.
topic_facet language stability
attitudes to language
linguistic nationalism
language planning
social networks
Icelandic
‘dative sickness’
case inflections
‘new passive’
‘am-to-frenzy’
description This dissertation is a study in language stability. Icelandic, which is regarded by many as a prime example of a stable language, is chosen as a vehicle for an examination of this field. A study, which involves a number of alleged ongoing changes in modern Icelandic, is conducted in order to determine whether or not the language can still be characterized as stable and, if the answer is positive, to identify the conditions which support this stability. The data used, which have been collected from a total of 108 informants chosen on the basis of a set of social criteria, consist primarily of informal group conversations which were analysed with respect to the relevant linguistic variables. 52 of the informants also submitted written material, not produced specifically for the purpose of the thesis, and this was analysed in the same way. Furthermore, all informants were interviewed to obtain information on their social background, the structure of their social networks, and on their attitudes towards and awareness of the alleged changes. The results regarding language use indicate that Icelandic can still be characterized as a stable language. Thus, examples of the alleged changes appeared quite infrequently in the data and their distribution amongst the age groups included is indicative of stable variation rather than change in progress. With respect to attitudes and awareness, the informants generally display both a high level of awareness of the alleged changes and a high level of negativity towards them. Furthermore, a pattern emerges which indicates a relationship between attitudes and usage, such that an informant’s negative attitude towards a given non-standard form decreases his or her likelihood of using it. The results also indicate that other factors, such as strong linguistic nationalism and a stability-oriented language policy, are instrumental in creating the sociolinguistic conditions in Iceland which support language stability, and it is argued that these conditions will generally result in ...
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Friðriksson, Finnur
author_facet Friðriksson, Finnur
author_sort Friðriksson, Finnur
title Language change vs. stability in conservative language communities. A case study of Icelandic.
title_short Language change vs. stability in conservative language communities. A case study of Icelandic.
title_full Language change vs. stability in conservative language communities. A case study of Icelandic.
title_fullStr Language change vs. stability in conservative language communities. A case study of Icelandic.
title_full_unstemmed Language change vs. stability in conservative language communities. A case study of Icelandic.
title_sort language change vs. stability in conservative language communities. a case study of icelandic.
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2077/18713
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation Gothenburg monographs in linguistics
37
978-91-977196-3-6
0346-6248
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/18713
_version_ 1781062218171809792