The Acquisition of Russian in a Language Contact Situation : A Case Study of a Bilingual Child in Sweden

This case study investigates the acquisition of Russian in a language contact situation. It examines a simultaneous Swedish-Russian bilingual child born and raised in Sweden. Qualitative analysis is provided from age 1;4 to 8;5 focusing especially on the earliest stages (before the end of the critic...

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Main Author: Ringblom, Natalia
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Stockholms universitet, Slaviska institutionen 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-78790
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-87235-00-9
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-su-787902015-06-17T04:50:43ZThe Acquisition of Russian in a Language Contact Situation : A Case Study of a Bilingual Child in SwedenengRingblom, NataliaStockholms universitet, Slaviska institutionenStockholm2012Language acquisitionchildhood bilingualismbilingual first language acquisitionlanguage contactlanguage separationinputdominancemother tongueRussianSwedishweaker languageSwedenThis case study investigates the acquisition of Russian in a language contact situation. It examines a simultaneous Swedish-Russian bilingual child born and raised in Sweden. Qualitative analysis is provided from age 1;4 to 8;5 focusing especially on the earliest stages (before the end of the critical period at 4;5). The aim was to investigate (a) whether the child reaches the same milestones as monolingual children, (b) whether there is evidence that two separate linguistic systems have been developed, (c) whether the child’s grammatical competence in both languages might be qualitatively different from that of monolingual children and (d) whether there is interaction between the languages. The hypothesis tested is that ample input is needed to construct and develop two linguistic systems on a native-speaker level. The main result is that the two linguistic systems do not develop independently from each other; rather, 2L1s develop in permanent interaction where the weaker language – Russian – happens to be influenced by the stronger one – Swedish. The bilingual environment per se might lead to decreased structural complexity in the weaker language. Language dominance is viewed as a major determiner of cross-linguistic effects. This could lead to the development of a new individual variety of Russian (outside Russia).   The results confirm the hypothesis that, even though there was exposure to both languages from birth onwards, the amount of input in the weaker and grammatically more complex language (Russian) received before the cri­tical period was not enough to completely develop full native command of it. The lack of input has an impact on the acquisition of morphology: some morphological categories may have been set randomly or not at all. The structures observed are more ty­pical of L2 than L1 ac­quisition. Morphology may be considered a vulnerable domain since complex mor­phological rules in Russian cannot develop with­out ample input. Doctoral thesis, monographinfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-78790urn:isbn:978-91-87235-00-9Stockholm Slavic studies, 0585-3575 ; 42application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessapplication/epub+zipinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Language acquisition
childhood bilingualism
bilingual first language acquisition
language contact
language separation
input
dominance
mother tongue
Russian
Swedish
weaker language
Sweden
spellingShingle Language acquisition
childhood bilingualism
bilingual first language acquisition
language contact
language separation
input
dominance
mother tongue
Russian
Swedish
weaker language
Sweden
Ringblom, Natalia
The Acquisition of Russian in a Language Contact Situation : A Case Study of a Bilingual Child in Sweden
description This case study investigates the acquisition of Russian in a language contact situation. It examines a simultaneous Swedish-Russian bilingual child born and raised in Sweden. Qualitative analysis is provided from age 1;4 to 8;5 focusing especially on the earliest stages (before the end of the critical period at 4;5). The aim was to investigate (a) whether the child reaches the same milestones as monolingual children, (b) whether there is evidence that two separate linguistic systems have been developed, (c) whether the child’s grammatical competence in both languages might be qualitatively different from that of monolingual children and (d) whether there is interaction between the languages. The hypothesis tested is that ample input is needed to construct and develop two linguistic systems on a native-speaker level. The main result is that the two linguistic systems do not develop independently from each other; rather, 2L1s develop in permanent interaction where the weaker language – Russian – happens to be influenced by the stronger one – Swedish. The bilingual environment per se might lead to decreased structural complexity in the weaker language. Language dominance is viewed as a major determiner of cross-linguistic effects. This could lead to the development of a new individual variety of Russian (outside Russia).   The results confirm the hypothesis that, even though there was exposure to both languages from birth onwards, the amount of input in the weaker and grammatically more complex language (Russian) received before the cri­tical period was not enough to completely develop full native command of it. The lack of input has an impact on the acquisition of morphology: some morphological categories may have been set randomly or not at all. The structures observed are more ty­pical of L2 than L1 ac­quisition. Morphology may be considered a vulnerable domain since complex mor­phological rules in Russian cannot develop with­out ample input.
author Ringblom, Natalia
author_facet Ringblom, Natalia
author_sort Ringblom, Natalia
title The Acquisition of Russian in a Language Contact Situation : A Case Study of a Bilingual Child in Sweden
title_short The Acquisition of Russian in a Language Contact Situation : A Case Study of a Bilingual Child in Sweden
title_full The Acquisition of Russian in a Language Contact Situation : A Case Study of a Bilingual Child in Sweden
title_fullStr The Acquisition of Russian in a Language Contact Situation : A Case Study of a Bilingual Child in Sweden
title_full_unstemmed The Acquisition of Russian in a Language Contact Situation : A Case Study of a Bilingual Child in Sweden
title_sort acquisition of russian in a language contact situation : a case study of a bilingual child in sweden
publisher Stockholms universitet, Slaviska institutionen
publishDate 2012
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-78790
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-87235-00-9
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