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This Handbook provides a comprehensive, state-of-the-art overview of theoretical and descriptive research in contemporary Hispanic sociolinguistics.
Offers the first authoritative collection exploring research strands in the emerging and fast-moving field of Spanish sociolinguistics
Highlights the contributions that Spanish Sociolinguistics has offered to general linguistic theory
Brings together a team of the top researchers in the field to present the very latest perspectives and discussions of key issues
Covers a wealth of topics including: variationist approaches, Spanish and its importance in the U.S., language planning, and other topics focused on the social aspects of Spanish
Includes several varieties of Spanish, reflecting the rich diversity of dialects spoken in the Americas and Spain
1 Laboratory approaches to sound variation and change 9 Laura Colantoni
2 V ariationist Approaches: External Factors Conditioning Variation in Spanish Phonology 36 Antonio Medina–Rivera
3 Internal Factors Conditioning Variation in Spanish Phonology 54 Francisco Moreno–Fernández
4 Socio–phonological variation in Latin American Spanish 72 John M. Lipski
5 Sociophonological variation and change in Spain 98 José Antonio Samper Padilla
II Morphosyntactic variation 121
6 Variationist Approaches to Spanish Morphosyntax: Internal and External Factors 123 Scott A. Schwenter
7 Variation and grammaticalization 148 Rena Torres Cacoullos
8 Morphosyntactic variation in Spanish–speaking Latin America 168 Paola Bentivoglio and Mercedes Sedano
9 Morphosyntactic variation in Spain 187 María José Serrano
III Language, the individual, and the society 205
10 Aging, Age, and Sociolinguistics 207 Richard Cameron
11 Gender and variation: Word–final /s/ in men s and women s speech in Puerto Rico s western highlands 230 Jonathan Holmquist
12 Forms of address: The effect of the context 244 Diane R. Uber
13 Becoming a member of the speech community: Learning Socio–phonetic Variation in child language 263 Manuel Díaz–Campos
14 The relationship between historical linguistics and sociolinguistics 283 Donald N. Tuten and Fernando Tejedo–Herrero
15 The acquisition of variation in second language Spanish: How to identify and catch a moving target 303 Kimberly Geeslin
IV Spanish in Contact 321
16 Spanish in Contact with Quechua 323 Anna María Escobar
17 Spanish in Contact with Guaraní 353 Shaw n. Gynan
18 Spanish in Contact with Catalan 374 José Luis Blas Arroyo
19 Spanish in Contact with Portuguese: the Case of Barranquenho 395 J. Clancy Clements, Patrícia Amaral, and Ana R. Luís
20 Spanish in Contact with Haitian Creole 418 Luis A. Ortiz López
21 Palenque (Colombia): Multilingualism in an Extraordinary Social and Historical Context 446 Armin Schwegler
22 Spanish in Contact with Arabic 473 Lotfi Sayahi
V Spanish in the United States, Heritage Language, L2 Spanish 491
23 Spanish in the United States: Bilingual Discourse Markers 493 Lourdes Torres
24 Functional Adaptation and Conceptual Convergence in the Analysis of Language Contact in the Spanish of Bilingual Communities in New York 504 Ricardo Otheguy
25 Code–switching among US Latinos 530 Almeida Jacqueline Toribio
26 Language and Social Meaning in Bilingual Mexico and the United States 553 Norma Mendoza–Denton and Bryan James Gordon
27 Intrafamilial Dialect Contact 579 Kim Potowski
28 Heritage Language Students: The Case of Spanish 598 Guadalupe Valdés and Michelle Geoffrion–Vinci
29 Language Maintenance and Language Shift among US Latinos 623 Jorge Porcel
30 Mockery and Appropriation of Spanish in White Spaces: Perceptions of Latinos in the United States 646 Adam Schwartz
VI Language Policy/Planning, Language Attitudes and Ideology 665
31 Planning Spanish: Nationalizing, Minoritizing and Globalizing Performances 667 Ofelia García
32 Bilingual Education in Latin America 686 Serafín M. Coronel–Molina and Megan Solon
33 V ariation and Identity in Spain 704 Juan Manuel Hernández–Campoy
34 V ariation and Identity in the Americas 728 Mercedes Niño–Murcia
35 Linguistic Imperialism: Who Owns Global Spanish? 747 Clare Mar–Molinero and Darren Paffey