Isleños’ Spanish language preservation in Saint Bernard Parish: a case study in the voices of Joseph ‘Chelito’ Campo, Irvan Perez and Allen Perez

This qualitative case study examines Isleño Spanish language attrition and preservation in Saint Bernard Parish, New Orleans, when this linguistic variety was approaching extinction. It identifies levels of language maintenance in severely limited social communicative domains and studies language at...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Fabiola Varela-García
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria 2020-05-01
Series:Philologica Canariensia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojsspdc.ulpgc.es/ojs/index.php/PhilCan/article/view/1256
id doaj-ca335edc78034c5c8733e8af28a5a949
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ca335edc78034c5c8733e8af28a5a9492020-11-25T03:22:09ZspaUniversidad de Las Palmas de Gran CanariaPhilologica Canariensia1136-31692386-86352020-05-012680118https://doi.org/10.20420/Phil.Can.2020.305Isleños’ Spanish language preservation in Saint Bernard Parish: a case study in the voices of Joseph ‘Chelito’ Campo, Irvan Perez and Allen PerezFabiola Varela-García0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0230-3606University of Wisconsin–Eau ClaireThis qualitative case study examines Isleño Spanish language attrition and preservation in Saint Bernard Parish, New Orleans, when this linguistic variety was approaching extinction. It identifies levels of language maintenance in severely limited social communicative domains and studies language attitudes. The main aim is to compare Isleño Spanish with the 18th century Canary Spanish variety from which it originated. Using a panel study, the last of the Isleños speakers were followed over a fifty-year period analyzing their language in real time to report how the oldest and last fluent speakers had kept their Canary Island linguistic heritage. This dialectal research attests to extraordinary linguistic preservation in a handful of old speakers right before Hurricane Katrina forced the dismantling of the community in 2005. https://ojsspdc.ulpgc.es/ojs/index.php/PhilCan/article/view/1256isleño spanishattritionlanguage loyaltylanguage maintenancepanel study
collection DOAJ
language Spanish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fabiola Varela-García
spellingShingle Fabiola Varela-García
Isleños’ Spanish language preservation in Saint Bernard Parish: a case study in the voices of Joseph ‘Chelito’ Campo, Irvan Perez and Allen Perez
Philologica Canariensia
isleño spanish
attrition
language loyalty
language maintenance
panel study
author_facet Fabiola Varela-García
author_sort Fabiola Varela-García
title Isleños’ Spanish language preservation in Saint Bernard Parish: a case study in the voices of Joseph ‘Chelito’ Campo, Irvan Perez and Allen Perez
title_short Isleños’ Spanish language preservation in Saint Bernard Parish: a case study in the voices of Joseph ‘Chelito’ Campo, Irvan Perez and Allen Perez
title_full Isleños’ Spanish language preservation in Saint Bernard Parish: a case study in the voices of Joseph ‘Chelito’ Campo, Irvan Perez and Allen Perez
title_fullStr Isleños’ Spanish language preservation in Saint Bernard Parish: a case study in the voices of Joseph ‘Chelito’ Campo, Irvan Perez and Allen Perez
title_full_unstemmed Isleños’ Spanish language preservation in Saint Bernard Parish: a case study in the voices of Joseph ‘Chelito’ Campo, Irvan Perez and Allen Perez
title_sort isleños’ spanish language preservation in saint bernard parish: a case study in the voices of joseph ‘chelito’ campo, irvan perez and allen perez
publisher Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
series Philologica Canariensia
issn 1136-3169
2386-8635
publishDate 2020-05-01
description This qualitative case study examines Isleño Spanish language attrition and preservation in Saint Bernard Parish, New Orleans, when this linguistic variety was approaching extinction. It identifies levels of language maintenance in severely limited social communicative domains and studies language attitudes. The main aim is to compare Isleño Spanish with the 18th century Canary Spanish variety from which it originated. Using a panel study, the last of the Isleños speakers were followed over a fifty-year period analyzing their language in real time to report how the oldest and last fluent speakers had kept their Canary Island linguistic heritage. This dialectal research attests to extraordinary linguistic preservation in a handful of old speakers right before Hurricane Katrina forced the dismantling of the community in 2005.
topic isleño spanish
attrition
language loyalty
language maintenance
panel study
url https://ojsspdc.ulpgc.es/ojs/index.php/PhilCan/article/view/1256
work_keys_str_mv AT fabiolavarelagarcia islenosspanishlanguagepreservationinsaintbernardparishacasestudyinthevoicesofjosephchelitocampoirvanperezandallenperez
_version_ 1724610848744275968