Tag: Creole

Vodou Haitian Creole Religion

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Free Download Vodou: Haitian Creole Religion: Rituals of the Houngan and Mambo Priest and Priestess through the Spirits and Healing of Lwa Papa Legba, Ezili Dantor, … by Diohka Aesden
English | September 2, 2024 | ISBN: N/A | ASIN: B0DFMVYCW1 | 570 pages | EPUB | 9.07 Mb
VODOU: HAITIAN CREOLE RELIGION[/center]
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Codeswitching on the Web English and Jamaican Creole in E-mail Communication


Free Download Lars Hinrichs, "Codeswitching on the Web: English and Jamaican Creole in E-mail Communication"
English | 2006 | pages: 318 | ISBN: 9027253900 | PDF | 2,8 mb
Based on a corpus of private email from Jamaican university students, this study explores the discourse functions of Jamaican Creole in computer-mediated communication. From this participant-centered perspective, it contributes to the longstanding theoretical debates in creole studies about the creole continuum. The book will likewise be useful to students of computer-mediated communication, the use and development of non-standardized languages, language ecology, and codeswitching.

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The Acquisition of Creole Languages How Children Surpass their Input


Free Download Dany Adone, "The Acquisition of Creole Languages: How Children Surpass their Input"
English | 2012 | ISBN: 1107499852, 0521199654 | PDF | pages: 245 | 1.9 mb
How do children acquire a Creole as their first language? This relatively underexplored question is the starting point for this first book of its kind; it also asks how first language acquisition of a Creole differs from that of a non-Creole language. Dany Adone reveals that in the absence of a conventional language model, Creole children acquire language and go beyond the input they receive. This study discusses the role of input, a hotly debated issue in the field of first language acquisition, and provides support for the nativist approach in the debate between nativism and input-based models. The Acquisition of Creole Languages will be essential reading for those in the fields of first language acquisition and Creole studies. Adone takes an interdisciplinary approach, using insights from non-verbal language acquisition, which makes this of great interest to those in the field of sign linguistics.

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Creole Societies in the Portuguese Colonial Empire


Free Download Philip J. Havik, "Creole Societies in the Portuguese Colonial Empire"
English | ISBN: 1443880272 | 2015 | 255 pages | PDF | 1016 KB
In 2004, a conference was held at King’s College London to commemorate the centenary of the birth of Charles Boxer. The theme of the conference was the development of the culturally mixed ‘Portuguese’ societies in Asia, Africa and America, which reflected Boxer’s own interest in the social history of Portugal’s overseas empire. Although the conference papers were published by Bristol University, this volume is long out of print and the outstanding quality of many of the contributions has made it necessary for this collection to be republished. Portuguese overseas expansion over a period of five centuries led to the formation of many mixed or creole communities which drew culturally not only on Portugal, but also on indigenous societies. This cross-cultural interaction gave rise to a creole ‘Portuguese’ identity that in many cases outlasted the formal empire itself. Reflecting upon the main tenets of Boxer’s work, this collection provides a broad geographical perspective upon areas of Portuguese presence in Guinea, Cape Verde, Angola, Sao Tome, Brazil and Goa. The chapters cover a wide range of social strata, including plantation slave and maroon communities, private settler-traders and pirates, indigenous trade-diasporas, and Luso-African, Luso-Brazilian and Afro-Brazilian groups, as well as the formation of Creole elites against the background of shifting racial, gender, ethnic, linguistic and religious boundaries. As such, this collection represents an exercise in ‘subaltern’ history which shows that the informal social relations were often more important in the long term than the formal structures of empire.

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A History of Creole Trinidad, 1956-2010 Ariel and Caliban in the Isle of Noises


Free Download Raymond Ramcharitar, "A History of Creole Trinidad, 1956-2010: Ariel and Caliban in the Isle of Noises"
English | ISBN: 3030756335 | 2021 | 358 pages | PDF | 6 MB
This book offers a history of post-Independence Trinidad and Tobago. It explores how culture and politics have operated in tandem to shape the society. Drawing on a wide range of sources, including literature, government reports, official statistics, the press and the Carnival, it critically analyses the popular conception of creolization as the driving force in modern Trinidad and Tobago. Ultimately, the book examines the way in which Trinidad and Tobago’s unique ethnic and political ecosystems contribute to its national character.

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Creole Noise Early Caribbean Dialect Literature and Performance


Free Download Belinda Edmondson, "Creole Noise: Early Caribbean Dialect Literature and Performance"
English | ISBN: 0192856839 | 2022 | 208 pages | EPUB, PDF | 2 MB + 4 MB
Creole Noise is a history of Creole, or ‘dialect’, literature and performance in the English-speaking Caribbean, from the late eighteenth century to the early twentieth century. By emphasizing multiracial origins, transnational influences, and musical performance alongside often violent historical events of the nineteenth century – slavery, Emancipation, the Morant Bay Rebellion, the era of blackface minstrelsy, indentureship and immigration – it revises the common view that literary dialect in the Caribbean was a relatively modern, twentieth-century phenomenon, associated with regional anti-colonial or black-affirming nationalist projects. It explores both the lives and the literary texts of a number of early progenitors, among these a number of pro-slavery white creoles as well as the first black author of literary dialect in the English-speaking Caribbean.

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