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Title: AFRICAN- AMERICAN LANGUAGE SEE ALSO AFRICAN-AMERICAN HUMOR


1
AFRICAN- AMERICAN LANGUAGESEE ALSO
AFRICAN-AMERICAN HUMOR
  • by Don L. F. Nilsen
  • and Alleen Pace Nilsen

2
Attacks on Oakland Unified School Districts
Ebonics
  • No right or wrong expressions, no consistent
    spellings or pronunciations and no discernible
    rules. William Raspberry (Washington Post
    12/26/96)
  • A language for second-class life Ellen
    Goodman (Boston Globe 12/27/96)
  • legitimizing gibberish Mary McGrory
  • It is just as systematic as Standard English,
    though it differs from Standard English in
    significant ways.
  • (Smith Wilhelm 50, 147-149)

3
E. Schuster shows how non-standard dialects are
systematic.
  • Have different verb forms (He brung it to me.)
  • Have double negatives comparatives (He dont
    know nothin.)
  • Have different subject-verb agreement (She go to
    the store.)
  • Have different pronoun conventions (Joe, he can
    really play.)
  • Use adjectives in adverbial contexts (He did
    good.)
  • Have non-standard words (aint, anyways, these
    here)
  • (Smith Wilhelm 52)

4
AAVE AFRICAN AMERICAN VERNACULAR ENGLISH
  • During the slave trade, shippers were careful to
    separate African slaves who spoke the same
    language as they loaded them onto ships, so that
    the language they developed was an English based
    pidgin (business language) which became a creole
    language.
  • Ironically, black wet nurses did much of the
    raising of aristocratic white babies, so many
    Black features can be seen also in white
    Southern dialects.
  • African-American Vernacular English (and much of
    Southern white English) has the following
    features

5
  • this, that, these, those, them, there /d/
  • south, mouth /f/
  • during, more, Paris, star /r-less/
  • help, will /l-less/
  • hood, bed, test, wasp (loss of final consonant)

6
  • thing, ring, sing /ey/
  • r-less so that such pairs as guard-God, nor-gnaw,
    sore-saw, poor-Poe, fort-fought, and court-caught
    are not distinguished.
  • police, Detroit (front-shifted stress)
  • nice, boy (simplified vowels)
  • invariable be (durative)
  • zero copula (non-durative, compare Spanish ser
    and estar)

7
CALLING SOMEONE OUT OF THEIR NAME
  • In her I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, Maya
    Angelou tells about Mrs. Cullinan calling her
    out of her name.
  • Rather than calling her Margaret, she called
    her Mary.
  • Miss Glory says that she too had been called out
    of her name. Her name used to be Hallelujia,
    but her mistress called her Glory, and it
    stuck.
  • (Nilsen Nilsen 15-16)

8
THE N-WORD
  • According to Randall Kennedy, The n-word is
    perhaps the most volatile, derogatory, powerful
    and hurtful ethnic slur in the English language.
  • However, the use of nigger by black rappers and
    comedians has given the term a new currency and
    enhanced cachet such that many young whites yearn
    to use the term like the blacks whom they see as
    heroes and trendsetters.
  • (Kennedy 45)

9
!HIP HOP LANGUAGE
  • What is it?
  • Whats happenin?
  • Whats up?
  • Snoop Dogs -izzle words as in televizzle,
    Americizzle, and in a minitizzle
  • Bro
  • Chillin
  • gangsta rap (or G-rap)

10
!!MORE HIP HOP LANGUAGE
  • to school (teach) someone
  • a trick (sexually manipulative female)
  • to spit (talk to a female)
  • props (proper respect), the opposite of to
    dis(respect) someone
  • Sweet!
  • One One Love Good Bye!
  • I gotta bounce (leave the premises)

11
  • !!!Web Site
  • The Whitest Kids
  • www.whitestkids.com

12
  • References 1
  • Baldwin, James. If Black English Isnt a
    Language, Then Tell Me What It Is. in Living
    Language. Ed. Alleen Pace Nilsen. Boston, MA
    Allyn and Bacon, 1999, 135-139.
  • Campbell, Kermit. Getting Our Groove On. Detroit,
    MI Wayne State University Press, 2005.
  • Clark, Virginia, Paul Eschholz, and Alfred Rosa.
    Language Readings in Language and Culture, 6th
    Edition. New York, NY St. Martins Press, 1998.
  • Crystal, David. Pidgins and Creoles (Clark,
    321-327)
  • DeBose, Charles. The Sociology of African
    American Language. New York, NY
    Palgrave/Macmillan, 2005.

13
  • References 2
  • Elgin, Suzette Haden. Notes on the Ebonics
    Controversy. in Living Language. Ed. Alleen Pace
    Nilsen. Boston, MA Allyn and Bacon, 1999,
    112-117.
  • Eschholz, Paul, Alfred Rosa, and Virginia Clark.
    The Power of the Mass Media. Language
    Awareness Readings for College Writers, Ninth
    Edition. Boston, MA Bedford/St. Martins, 2005,
    349-420.
  • Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman and Nina Hyams.
    An Introduction to Language. New York, NY
    Thomson/Wadsworth, 2007.
  • Gordon, Dexter B. Humor in African American
    Discourse Speaking of Oppression. Journal of
    Black Studies 29.2 (1998) 254-276.
  • Kennedy, Randall. Nigger The Strange Career of a
    Troublesome Word. New York, NY Pantheon Books,
    2002.

14
  • References 3
  • King, Martin Luther, Jr. I Have a Dream
    (Eschholz 244-250).
  • Kitwana, Bakari. The HipHop Generation. New York,
    NY BasicCivitas Books, 2002.
  • Lanehart, Sonja L. Sociocultural and Historical
    Contexts of African American English.
    Philadelphia, PA John Benjamins, 2001.
  • McKissack, Frederick L. Cyberghetto Blacks Are
    Falling Through the Net (Eschholz 528-534).
  • Mey, Jacob L. Pragmatics An Introduction, 2nd
    Edition. Malden, MA Blackwell, 2001.

15
  • References 4
  • Nilsen, Alleen Pace. Living Language. Needham
    Heights, MA, 1999.
  • Nilsen, Alleen Pace, and Don L. F. Nilsen.
    Encyclopedia of 20th Century American Humor.
    Westport, CT Greenwood, 2000.
  • http//www.greenwood.com/catalog/OXHUMOR.aspx
  • Schiffrin, Deborah. Approaches to Discourse.
    Malden, MA Blackwell, 1994.
  • Schuster, E. Breaking the Rules Liberating
    Writers through Innovative Grammar Instruction.
    Portsmouth, NH Heinemann, 2003.
  • Smith, Michael W., and Jeffrey D. Wilhelm.
    Getting It Right Fresh Approaches to Teraching
    Grammar, Usage, and Correctness. New York, NY
    Scholastic, 2007.
  • Smitherman, Geneva It Bees Dat Way Sometime
    Sounds and Structure of Present-Day Black
    English (Clark, 328-354).
  • Staples, Brent. Black Men and Public Spaces
    (Eschholz 255-257).
  • Vaid, Urvashi. Separate and Unequal (Eschholz
    251-254).
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