Recent language change in shoshone: structural consequences of language loss

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Publication Type dissertation
School or College College of Humanities
Department Linguistics
Author Matsumoto, Katherine
Title Recent language change in shoshone: structural consequences of language loss
Date 2015-12
Description This dissertation provides a detailed case study of language endangerment-induced language change in the Shoshone community of Duck Valley, a Shoshone and Paiute reservation where the native languages have lost ground to English significantly over the past decades. The analysis incorporates factors from individual speaker backgrounds and sociolinguistic histories in determining language endangerment-induced language change and variation and indicates how these variables show that extensive contact with English and decreasing use of Shoshone have led to structural simplification in the nominal morphological features examined in this study. This dissertation examines structural changes in Shoshone, a language whose community is undergoing language shift. Shoshone is an endangered Uto-Aztecan language with approximately 2,000 speakers spoken in the Great Basin area: Nevada, Utah, Idaho, and Wyoming. There is a large dialect chain of Shoshone speakers over this geographical area. Miller conducted extensive fieldwork throughout the Shoshone-speaking community during the 1960s and 70s. His vast collection of texts and grammatical work, the Wick R. Miller Collection (WRMC), is housed at the University of Utah. The availability of this collection for comparison with present-day data that I collected during a three-week field trip to the reservation provides a picture of language change over a period where the language has gone from relatively viable to extremely endangered. This analysis focuses on nominal morphology motivated by the existence of crosslinguistically marked features, the anecdotal or preliminary observations of changes in progress, and to build on the findings of previous case studies into endangered language nominal morphology. Descriptive analysis of each feature is presented with examples from present-day speakers of various language proficiency levels and compared with the texts from the WRMC. The features discussed are the accusative case allomorphy, number marking and agreement, and proximity indication in demonstrative stems. The analysis of the sociolinguistic data on language use, gender, age, and social network indicates that these factors interact with age being the most relevant factor in retention or innovation in the features presented here.
Type Text
Publisher University of Utah
Subject Language Death; Language Loss; Shoshone
Dissertation Institution University of Utah
Dissertation Name Doctor of Philosophy
Language eng
Rights Management © Katherine Matsumoto
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 27,625 bytes
Identifier etd3/id/4056
ARK ark:/87278/s61g3vm6
Setname ir_etd
ID 197606
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s61g3vm6