Staff and Student Publications

 

Books and Monographs


Schreier, Daniel. forthcoming. Isolation and Language Change: Sociohistorical and Contemporary Evidence from Tristan da Cunha English. Basingstoke: Palgrave/Macmillan.

_____, and Karen Lavarello Schreier. forthcoming. Tristan da Cunha - The Most Remote Island in the World. Oswestry: Anthony Nelson Publishers.

Wolfram, Walt, Clare Dannenberg, Stanley Knick, and Linda Oxendine. forthcoming. Fine in the World: Lumbee Language in Time and Place. Raleigh: NC State Humanity Extension Program/Publications.

Herman, David. 2002. Story Logic: Problems and Possibilities of Narrative. In the Frontiers of Narrative series. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.

Wolfram, Walt, and Erik R. Thomas. 2002. The Development of African American English. Malden/Oxford: Basil Blackwell.

Thomas, Erik R. 2001. An Acoustic Analysis of Vowel Variation in New World English. Publication of the American Dialect Society 85. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

Hazen, Kirk. 2000. Identity and Ethnicity in the Rural South: A Sociolinguistic View Through Past and Present BE. Publications of the American Dialect Society 83. Durham: Duke University Press.

Wolfram, Walt, Kirk Hazen, and Natalie Schilling-Estes. 1999. Dialect Maintenance and Change on the Outer Banks. Publications of the American Dialect Society 81. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press.


Wolfram, Walt, and Natalie Schilling-Estes. 1998. American English: Dialects and Variation. Malden/Oxford: Basil Blackwell.

Wolfram, Walt, and Natalie Schilling-Estes. 1997. Hoi Toide on the Sound Soide: The Story of the Ocracoke Brogue. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.

 

Books Edited


Peyton, Joy, Peg Griffin, Walt Wolfram, and Ralph W. Fasold. 2000. Language in Action: New Studies of Language in Society. Cresshill: Hampton Press.

 

Journal Issue Edited


Herman, David. 2001. "Iris Murdoch." Modern Fiction Studies 47.3: 515-717.

 

Book Reviews

Herman, David. forthcoming. Review of Barbara Johnstone, Discourse Analysis. Southern Journal of Linguistics.

 

Articles 2000 - 2002

Bolonyai, Agnes. forthcoming. Case systems in contact: Syntactic and lexical case in bilingual child language. The Southwest Journal of Linguistics 21.2.

Childs, Becky, Jeffrey Reaser, and Walt Wolfram. forthcoming. Defining ethnic varieties in the Bahamas: Phonological accommodation in black and white enclave communities. In Michael Aceto (ed.), Eastern Caribbean Creoles and Englishes. Philadelphia/Amsterdam: John Benjamins.

Herman, David. forthcoming. Principles and parameters of story logic: Steps toward a transmedial narratology. In Marie-Laure Ryan (ed.), Narrative across Media: The Languages of Storytelling. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.

_____. forthcoming. Cognitive dimensions of narrative fiction. In Bohumil Fort (ed.), A Festschrift for Lubomír Dolezel. Olomouc, Czech Republic: Aluze Publishers.

_____. forthcoming. Rethinking the Ricorso: Reflexivity and recursion in Finnegans Wake. Language and Style.

_____, and Roger Fowler. forthcoming. Literary narrative. In William Frawley (ed.), Oxford International Encyclopedia of Linguistics, 2nd edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Mallinson, Christine. forthcoming. The construction of ethnolinguistic groups: A sociolinguistic case study. In Margaret Bender (ed.), Proceedings of the Southern Anthropological Society 35.

Thomas, Erik R. forthcoming. Sociophonetic applications of speech perception experiments. American Speech 77.

Wolfram, Walt. forthcoming. Speech at the beach: The Outer Banks brogue. In Carmine Prioli and Candy Beal (eds.), Life at the Edge of the Sea: Essays on North Carolina's Coastal Culture. Raleigh, NC: NC State Humanities Program/Publications.

_____. forthcoming. African Americans by the sea. In Carmine Prioli and Candy Beal (eds.), Life at the Edge of the Sea: Essays on North Carolina's Coastal Culture. Raleigh, NC: NC State Humanities Program/Publications.

_____. forthcoming. The evolving language of the Outer Banks people. Wright Brothers' Symposium.

_____. forthcoming. The sociolinguistic construction of remnant dialects. In Carmen Fought (ed.), Identities and Place: Sociolinguistic Approaches. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

_____. forthcoming. Social varieties of American English. In Edward Finegan and John R. Rickford (eds.), Language in the USA. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

_____. forthcoming. The supra-regional development of African American Vernacular English. In Arthur K. Spears, James de Jongh, Carole M. Berotte Joseph (eds.), Language and African Diaspora Culture.

_____. forthcoming. Dialect enclaves in the South. In Stephen Nagle and Sara Sanders (eds.), Language in the New South.

_____. forthcoming. Sociolinguistics and speech and language pathology. In Sociolinguistics: An International Handbook of the Science of Language and Society. Hague: Mouton de Gruyter.

_____, and Natalie Schilling-Estes. forthcoming. Dialectology and linguistic diffusion. In Richard D. Janda and Brian D. Joseph (eds.), Handbook of Historical Linguistics. Malden/Oxford: Basil Blackwell.

_____, and _____. forthcoming. Remnant dialects in the Coastal United States. In Raymond Hickey (ed.), The Legacy of Colonial English. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Bolonyai, Agnes, and Lida Dutkova-Cope. 2002. L1 attrition of verbal morphology in bilingual children and adults. In Xenia Bonch-Bruevich, William J. Crawford, John Hellermann, Christina Higgins, and Hanh Nguyen (eds.), The Past, Present, and Future of Second Language Research: Selected Proceedings of the 2000 Second Language Research Forum. Somerville, MA: Cascadilla Press. 104-23.

Fleming, Caroline, and Jaclyn Ocumpaugh. 2002. "What do you mean when you say that?": Remnant ideologies in courtroom discourse about rape. LAUD Series A: General and Theoretical Papers. Paper No. 563.

Herman, David. 2002. A la recherche du sens perdu. Poetics Today 23.2: 327-50.

_____. 2002. Roland Barthes. In Joseph Natoli and Hans Bertens (eds.), Postmodernism: The Key Figures. Maldon/Oxford: Basil Blackwell. 38-45.

Mallinson, Christine, and Walt Wolfram. 2002. Dialect accommodation in a bi-ethnic mountain enclave community: More evidence on the development of African American Vernacular English. Language in Society 31.

Reaser, Jeffrey. 2002. Copula absence in Bahamian speech: Evidence from ethnically contrastive enclaves, Abaco Island, Bahamas. In The Proceedings of 14th Biennial Conference of the Society for Caribbean Linguistics.

Schreier, Daniel. 2002. 1,400 miles from anywhere … English on the world's loneliest island.
Newsletter of the College of Humanities and Social Sciences, North Carolina State University 2.1.

_____. 2002. Past be in Tristan da Cunha: The rise and fall of categoricality in language change. American Speech 77.1: 70-91.

_____. 2002. Terra incognita in the Anglophone world: Tristan da Cunha, South Atlantic Ocean. English World-Wide 23.1: 1-29.

_____. 2002. Dynamic mixing or archaic retention? The ambiguous case of 'completive done' in Tristan da Cunha English. Diachronica 19.1.

_____. 2002. English transported to the South Atlantic Ocean: Tristan da Cunha. In Raymond Hickey (ed.), Transplanted Dialects: The Legacy of Colonial English. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

_____. 2002. Tracing the history of dialect transplantation in post-colonial English:
The case of 3rd person singular zero on Tristan da Cunha. Folia Linguistica Historica, XXVI/1-2.


Thomas, Erik R. 2002. Instrumental phonetics. In. J. K. Chambers, Peter Trudgill, and Natalie Schilling-Estes (eds.), The Handbook of Language Variation and Change. Malden/Oxford: Basil Blackwell. 168-200.

Trudgill, Peter, Daniel Schreier, Daniel Long, and Jeff Williams. 2002. On the reversibility of mergers: /w/, /v/ and evidence from lesser-known Englishes. Folia Linguistica Historica, XXVI/1-2.

Wolfram, Walt. 2002. Language death and dying. In J.K. Chambers, Peter Trudgill, and Natalie Schilling-Estes (eds.), Handbook of Language Change and Variation. Malden/Oxford: Basil Blackwell. 764-87.

_____. 2002. The significance of Lumbee dialect. North Carolina Indian Voice, (January)21, 2002.

_____. 2002. Ralph W. Fasold. Concise Encyclopedia of Sociolinguistics. Oxford: Elsevier. 863.

Myers-Scotton, Carol, and Agnes Bolonyai. 2001. Calculating speakers: Codeswitching in a rational choice model. Language in Society 30.1: 1-28.

Herman, David. 2001. Introduction: Approaches to Murdoch. Modern Fiction Studies 47.3: 551-57.

_____. 2001. Spatial reference in narrative domains. TEXT 21.4: 515-41.

_____. 2001. Re-effectuating Joyce. Modern Fiction Studies 47.2: 458-63.

_____. 2001. Sciences of the text. Postmodern Culture <http://www.iath.virginia.edu/pmc/text-only/issue.501/11.3herman.txt>.

_____. 2001. Poetika a politika v Praze. Ceská Literatura 49: 85-94. English-language version published as Poetics and politics in Prague, in Semiotica 139 1/4 (2002): 315-25.

_____. 2001. Story logic in conversational and literary narratives. Narrative 9.2: 130-37.

_____. 2001. Style-shifting in Edith Wharton's The House of Mirth. Language and Literature 10.1: 61-77.

Schreier, Daniel. 2001. The world's loneliest dialect. The Language Magazine of Communication and Education 1.2: 28-31.

Torbert, Benjamin. 2001. Tracing Native American language history through consonant cluster reduction: The case of Lumbee English. American Speech 76: 361-87.
Wolfram, Walt. 2001. On constructing vernacular dialect norms. In Arika Okrent and John Boyle (eds.), Chicago Linguistic Society 36, The Panels. Chicago: University of Chicago. 335-58.

_____. 2001. Reconsidering the sociolinguistic agenda for African-American English. In Sonja Lanehart (ed.), Sociocultural and Historical Contexts of African American Vernacular. Philadelphia/Amsterdam: John Benjamins. 309-40.

_____. 2001. From the brickhouse to the swamp. American Language Review 5.4: 34-38.

_____. 2001. Sociolinguistics of sign languages. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. xv-xvi.
_____. 2001. From definition to policy: The ideological struggle of African American Vernacular English. In James E. Alatis and Ai-Hui Tan (eds), Georgetown University Roundtable on Language and Linguistics. Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press. 292-313.

_____. 2001. African Americans by the sea. The Mullet Wrapper 5.2: 6-7.

_____. 2001. "Y'all." In Joseph M. Flora and Lucinda MacKethan (eds.), The Companion to Southern Literature: Themes, Genres, Places, People, Movement and Motifs. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.

Adger, Carolyn, and Walt Wolfram. 2000. Demythologizing the home/school dichotomy: Sociolinguistic reality and instructional practice. In Joy Peyton, Peg Griffin, Walt Wolfram, and Ralph W. Fasold (eds.), Language in Action: New Studies of Language in Society. Hampton Press. 391-407.

Bolonyai, Agnes. 2000. 'Elective affinities': Language contact in the abstract lexicon and its structural consequences. In Carol Myers-Scotton and Janice Jake (eds.), Special Issue: 'Testing a model of morpheme classification with language contact data,' The International Journal of Bilingualism 4.1: 81-106.

Childs, Becky, and Benjamin Torbert. 2000. Tracing language history through consonant cluster reduction: Comparative evidence from isolated dialects. MIT Working Papers in Linguistics 38.

Herman, David. 2000. Narratology as a cognitive science. Image (&) Narrative 1.1 <http://millennium.arts.kuleuven.ac.be/Narrative/articles.cfm>. A different version of this essay, retitled Narrative theory and the cognitive sciences, was published in Narrative Inquiry 11.1 (2001): 1-34.

_____. 2000. Existentialist roots of narrative actants. Studies in Twentieth-Century Literature 24.2: 257-69.

_____. 2000. Lateral reflexivity: Levels, versions, and the logic of paraphrase. Style [special issue on "Concepts of Narrative"] 34.2: 293-306.

_____. 2000. Pragmatic constraints on narrative processing: Actants and anaphora resolution in a corpus of North Carolina ghost stories. Journal of Pragmatics 32.7: 959-1001.

Thomas, Erik R. 2000. Applying phonetic methods to language variation. American Speech 75: 368-70.

_____. 2000. Reevaluating and refining peripherality. ERIC Document ED452711.

_____. 2000. Spectral differences in /ai/ offsets conditioned by voicing of the following consonant. Journal of Phonetics 28: 1-25.

Wolfram, Walt. 2000. Issues in reconstructing Earlier African American English. World Englishes 19: 39-58.

_____. 2000. Endangered dialects and social commitment. In Joy Peyton, Peg Griffin, Walt Wolfram, and Ralph W. Fasold (eds.), Language in Action: New Studies of Language in Society. Cresshill: Hampton Press. 19-39.

_____. 2000. The changing scope of dialect variation: A transcontinental perspective. Te Reo 41(1998): 45-61.

_____. 2000. Everybody has a dialect. Teaching Tolerance 18(fall): 18-23.

_____. 2000. Dialects and the public interest. American Speech 75: 58-60.

_____. 2000. Dialect in danger. American Language Review 4.6: 21-24.

_____. 2000. Reconstructing the history of AAVE: New data on an old theme. Berkeley Linguistics Society 26. Berkeley: University of California at Berkeley. 333-48.

_____, and Dan Beckett. 2000. The role of individual differences in Earlier African American Vernacular English. American Speech 75: 1-30.

_____, and Natalie Schilling-Estes. 2000. Language evolution or dying traditions: The state of American dialects. American Language Review 4.3: 13-17.

_____, Becky Childs, and Benjamin Torbert. 2000. Tracing language history through consonant cluster reduction: Evidence from isolated dialects. Southern Journal of Linguistics 24:17-40.

_____, Erik R.Thomas, and Elaine W. Green. 2000. The regional context of Earlier African-American speech: Reconstructing the development of African-American Vernacular English. Language in Society 29:315-55.

 

Articles 1997 - 2000

Anderson, Bridget L. 1999. Source-language transfer and vowel accommodation in the patterning of Cherokee English /ai/ and /oi/. American Speech 74:339-368.

Anderson, Bridget L. 1997. Adaptive sociophonetic strategies and dialect accommodation: /ay/ monophthongization in Cherokee English. University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics 4:185-202.

Childs, Becky, Jeffrey Reaser, and Walt Wolfram. forthcoming. Defining ethnic varieties in the Bahamas: Phonological accommodation in black and white enclave communities. In Michael Aceto (ed.), Eastern Caribbean Creoles and Englishes. Philadelp hia/Amsterdam: John Benjamins)
Dannenberg, Clare J. forthcoming. Apparent time in dialect studies. American Speech.

Dannenberg, Clare J. 1999. Grammatical and phonological manifestations of null copula in a tri-ethnic contact situation. Journal of English Linguistics 27:356-374.

Dannenberg, Clare J., and Walt Wolfram. 1998. Ethnic identity and grammatical restructuring: Be(s) in Lumbee English. American Speech 73:139-159.

Hazen, Kirk. forthcoming. The family. In Jack Chambers, Peter Trudgill, and Natalie Schilling-Estes (eds.), The Handbook of Language Variation and Change. Malden/Oxford: Basil Blackwell.

Hazen, Kirk. forthcoming. The role of researcher identity in conducting sociolinguistic research: A reflective case study. The Southern Journal of Linguistics.

Hazen, Kirk. forthcoming. Better science , better science education. American Speech.

Hazen, Kirk. 2000. A methodological suggestion on /aj/ Ungliding. 2000. American Speech 75.2:221-224.

Hazen, Kirk. 2000. Subject-verb concord in a postinsular dialect: The gradual persistence of dialect patterning. Journal of English Linguistics 28:127-144.

Hazen, Kirk . 1998. The birth of a variant: Evidence for a tripartite negative past be paradigm. Language Variation and Change 10: 221-244.

Mallinson, Christine and Walt Wolfram. 2002. Dialect accomodation in a bi-ethinic mountain enclave community: More evidence on the earlier development of African American English. Language in Society 31.
Schilling-Estes, Natalie. forthcoming. Exploring intertextuality in the sociolinguistic interview. In Carmen Fought, et al (eds.), Methods in Sociolinguistics: Papers in Honor of Ronald Macaulay.

Schilling-Estes, Natalie. forthcoming. Style in variation studies. In Jack Chambers, Peter Trudgill, and Natalie Schilling-Estes (eds.), The Handbook of Language Variation and Change. Malden/Oxford: Basil Blackwell.

Schilling-Estes, Natalie. 1999. Reshaping economies, reshaping identities: Gender-based patterns of language variation in Ocracoke English. Proceedings of the Fifth Berkeley Women and Language Conference. Berkeley, CA: Berkeley Women and Languag e Group. 509-520.

Schilling-Estes, Natalie. 1998. Investigating "self-conscious" speech: The performance register in Ocracoke English. Language in Society 27:53-83.

Schilling-Estes, Natalie. 1997. Accommodation vs. concentration: dialect death in two post-insular island communities. American Speech 72:12-32.

Schilling-Estes, Natalie, and Walt Wolfram. 1999. Alternative models of dialect death: Dissipation vs. concentration. Language 75:486-521.

Schilling-Estes, Natalie, and Walt Wolfram. 1997. Symbolic identity and language change: A comparative analysis of post-insular /ay/ and /aw/. Penn Working Papers in Linguistics 4:83-109.

Wolfram, Walt and Dan Beckett. 2000. The role of individual differences in Earlier African American Vernacular English. American Speech 75:1-30.

Wolfram, Walt and Natalie Schilling-Estes. 2000. Language evolution or dying traditions: The state of American dialects. American Language Review May/June 4(3): 13-17.

Wolfram, Walt, Erik Thomas, and Elaine Green. 2000. The regional context of Earlier African-American Speech: Reconstructing the development of African-American Vernacular English. Language in Society 29:315-355.

Wolfram, Walt, and Natalie Schilling-Estes. forthcoming. Dialectology and linguistic diffusion. In Richard D. Janda and Brian D. Joseph (eds.), Handbook of Historical Linguistics. Malden/Oxford: Blackwell.

Wolfram, Walt , and Natalie Schilling-Estes. forthcoming. Remnant dialects in the Coastal United States. In Raymond Hickey (ed.), The Legacy of Colonial English. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Wolfram, Walt, Becky Childs, and Benjamin Torbert. forthcoming. Tracing language history through consonant cluster reduction: Evidence from isolated dialects Southern Journal of Linguistics 24.

Wolfram, Walt , and Clare Dannenberg. 1999. Dialect identity in a tri-ethnic context: The case of Lumbee American Indian English. English World-Wide 20:79-116.

Wolfram, Walt, and Jason Sellers. 1999. Ethnolinguistic marking of past be in Lumbee Vernacular English. Journal of English Linguistics 27:94-114.

Wolfram, Walt, and Jason Sellers. 1998. The Carolina connection in Cherokee sound. North Carolina Literary Review 7:86-87.

Wolfram, Walt, and Natalie Schilling-Estes. 1998. Endangered dialects: A neglected situation in the endangerment canon. Southwest Journal of Linguistic 14:117-131.

Wolfram, Walt, Kirk Hazen, and Jennifer Ruff Tamburro. 1997. Isolation within isolation: A solitary century of African America Vernacular English. Journal of Sociolinguistics 1:7-38.

Wolfram, Walt, Natalie Schilling-Estes, Kirk Hazen, and Chris Craig. 1997. The sociolinguistic complexity of quasi-isolated southern coastal communities. In Cynthia Bernstein, Tom Nunnally, and Robin Sabino (eds.), Language Variety in the South Revi sited. University, AL: University of Alabama Press, 173-187.