The Italian diaspora throughout the world navigate and negotiate various complex and multidirectional language dynamics. In order to account for the sociolinguistic processes that have taken place, this book provides a detailed observation of these linguistic dynamics from the point of view of the Italian diaspora in Bedford, in the UK.This study on the language behaviour of three generations of Italian residents in Bedford provides empirical data on, and highlights the importance of, the sociolinguistic examination of English in service encounters. What comes to light in most of the cases analysed, is that audience design has a proven influence on the choice of language and repertoire within the speech of the Bedford Italian community. There are not only switches from one language to another, but also style shifts in the linguistic repertoire. Throughout this study, it becomes clear that speakers freely use the two languages available to their speech community, and, thanks to their active and passive repertoire, they apply a range of linguistic resources from both Italian and English. The volume also uncovers some especially interesting traits in 3rd generation speech, involving in particular a rather widespread use of mixed pronunciation. Upon moving past the initial assumption that the adoption of this mixed pronunciation is used to show the younger generations sense of belonging to the BI community, a quite different reason emerges. Closer analysis reveals that, due to an increasing feeling of non-Britishness, this linguistic choice may be linked to a deliberate and conscious attempt on their part not to accommodate to British culture, and in so doing to distance themselves further from it.Preface by David Britain.
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Product Details
Dimensions: 148 x 212mm
Publication Date: 12 Dec 2014
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781443866743
About Siria Guzzo
Siria Guzzo is a Lecturer in English Language and Linguistics at the University of Salerno Italy. She obtained her PhD in English for Special Purposes from the University of Naples Federico II an MA in Sociolinguistics from the University of Essex UK and a BA (Hons) in Modern Languages and Literature from the University of Naples Suor Orsola Benincasa Italy. She has conducted research and published in the fields of sociolinguistics and language variation and change. Her research has concentrated on migration and its effects on identity new dialect/ethnolect formation language contact and its outcomes and first and second language acquisition. Her publications include wide-ranging investigations on the Anglo-Italian community in the UK and a forthcoming volume on the newly-emerging Cook Island variety of English.