Everything about Post-creole Speech Continuum totally explained
Due to the relationship between a
creole language and its superstrate language, that is, a language that's very closely related and whose speakers assert social, political, and economic dominance over speakers of said creole language, a
post-creole continuum (or
creole continuum) may arise. It is a process wherein a creole language will
decreolize and become closer in
phonology,
morphology, and
syntax to the standard of the dominant language but to different degrees depending on a speaker's status and education.
Stratification
William Stewart, in 1965, proposed that the terms
acrolect and
basilect be the sociolinguistic labels for the upper and lower boundaries respectively of a post-creole speech continuum. In the early 1970s
Derek Bickerton popularized these terms (as well as
mesolect for intermediate points in the continuum) to refer to the phenomenon of
code-switching used by some users of
creole languages who also have some fluency in the
standard language upon which the contact language is based.
University of Chicago linguist
Salikoko Mufwene explains the phenomenon of
creole languages as "basilectalization" away from a standard, often European, language among a mixed European and non-European population. In certain speech communities, a continuum exists between speakers of a
creole language and a related
standard language. There are no discrete boundaries between the different varieties and the situation in which such a continuum exists involves considerable social stratification.
The following table (from ) shows the 18 different ways of rendering the phrase
I gave him one in
Guyanese English:
| 1 | aɪ |
geɪv |
hɪm |
wʌn
|
| 2 | wan
|
| 3 | a |
ɪm
|
| 4 | iː
|
| 5 | gɪv |
hɪm
|
| 6 | ɪm
|
| 7 | iː
|
| 8 | dɪd |
gɪv
|
| 9 | dɪ |
gɪ
|
| 10 | dɪd
|
| 11 | dɪ |
giː
|
| 12 | gɪ |
hiː
|
| 13 | mɪ
|
| 14 | iː
|
| 15 | bɪn
|
| 16 | giː
|
| 17 | æm
|
| 18 |
|
The continuum shown has the acrolect form as [aɪgeɪv hɪm wʌn] (which is nearly identical with
Standard English) while the basilect form is [mɪbɪn giː æm wan]. Due to
code-switching, most speakers have a command of a range in the continuum and, depending on social position, occupation, etc can implement the different levels with various levels of skill.
If a society is so stratified as to have little to no contact between groups who speak the creole and those who speak the superstrate (dominant) language, a situation of
diglossia occurs, rather than a continuum. Assigning separate and distinct functions for the two varieties will have the same effect. This is the case in
Haiti with
Haitian Creole and
French.
Use of the terms
acrolect,
mesolect and
basilect avoids the value judgement inherent in earlier terminology, by which the languague spoken by the ruling classes in a capital city was defined as the "correct" or "pure" form while that spoken by the lower classes and inhabitants of outlying provinces was "a dialect" characterised as "incorrect", "impure" or "debased".
Other examples
It has been suggested (; ) that
AAVE is a decreolized form of a slave creole. Once blacks acquired recognition of equality under the law, opportunities for interaction created a strong influence of standard (American) English onto the speech of blacks so that a continuum exists today with Standard English as the acrolect and varieties closest to the original creole as the basilect.
In
Jamaica, a continuum exists between
Jamaican English and
Jamaican Patois.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Post-creole Speech Continuum'.
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