Spanish 597A: Research in Spanish language variation (Fall
2006)
Instructor: John Lipski
Office: Burrowes N-348
Telephone: 865-6583; dept. 865-4252
Office Hours: MWF 1:000-2:00 and by appointment
E-mail: jlipski@psu.edu
Home page: http://www.personal.psu.edu/jml34/
Textbook: Paolillo, Analyzing linguistic variation (ALV)
Books on library reserve:
Lastra de Suárez, Sociolingüística para
hispanoamericanos (SPH)
Milroy, Language and social networks (LSN)
Milroy and Gordon, Sociolinguistics: method and interpretation (SMI)
Moreno Fernández, Metodología sociolingüística
(MS)
Silva-Corvalán, Sociolingüística y pragmática del español (SPE)
This course will focus on research methods in the study of variation in the Spanish language worldwide, regionally and socially. Taking as a point of departure traditional Spanish dialectology and following a brief overview of the main trends in Spanish language variation, the class will discuss the delimitation of a research project, data collection methods, quantitative analysis (particularly the VARBRUL/GOLDVARB package designed for linguistics), the special case of language contact environments, ethics and pitfalls of field research, and the application of contemporary linguistic theories to the study of Spanish language variation. Several completed research projects will be discussed in detail as exemplars of the topics under discussion (e.g. in Central America, Panama, Equatorial Guinea, Philippines), while research projects in progress (Bolivia, Paraguay, Chile, Uruguay) will provide a forum for refining and expanding the methods being studied. Students will undertake a qualitative and quantitative analysis of variation in Spanish, based on available recorded or written corpora. This will include practice with preparing, interpreting, and analyzing GOLDVARB/VARBRUL files as well as identification of relevant linguistic variables and a critique of data collection and corpus preparation.
Assignments:
·
A
sample social network analysis, based on individually conducted interviews with
8-10 individuals who routinely interact linguistically and socially.
·
Preparation
of a coded VARBRUL/GOLDVARB token set and sample run.
·
Class
presentation of an article in which Ibero-Romance
variation data are analyzed and interpreted using VARBRUL/GOLDVARB.
·
A
final project involving a qualitative and quantitative analysis of an available
Spanish-language corpus (written or oral), including identification of relevant
variables, coding techniques, GOLDVARB token files, GOLDVARB runs, and
interpretation of results. Further
details will be given later in the semester.
Grade breakdown:
Sample social network: 15%
GOLDVARB token set: 15%
In-class report on reading: 15%
Final project: 40%
Class participation: 15%
ACADEMIC INTEGRITY
The
DISABILITY ACCESS STATEMENT
The
Tentative schedule of
assignments
Week #1 (September 6): Introduction—the
domains of sociolinguistics.
Sociolinguistic variation in Spanish..
Week #2 (September 11): Speech
communities. Case studies of multilingual/multidialectal
speech communities.
Week #3 (September 18): Social
networks and language behavior.
Week #4 (September 25): Phonetic/phonological
variation.
Sample social network analysis due September 27.
Week #5 (October 2): Morphosyntactic
variation.
Week #6 (October 9): Variation in language contact/bilingual
communities.
Week #7 (October 16): Delimiting
a sociolinguistic/variation research project.
Week #8 (October 23): Research
design and data collection. Software tools for recording,
processing, and analyzing data.
Week #9 (October 30): Field
methods; research with small, isolated, or problematic speech communities.
Corpus
chosen for final project/ research variables submitted for approval October 30.
Week #10 (November 6): Preliminary
qualitative analysis of research data.
Week #11 (November 13): Using GOLDVARB (VARBRUL) and similar
packages. Readings: GOLDVARB
manual and sample examples; ALV, chap. 4.
Article
title for class presentation submitted for approval November 13
GOLDVARB for Windows can be downloaded from: http://www.york.ac.uk/depts/lang/webstuff/goldvarb/
GOLDVARB for Macintosh is available from: http://www.crm.umontreal.ca/~sankoff/GoldVarb_Eng.html
Additional information on GOLDVARB is at: http://www.unh.edu/linguistics/lab/goldvarb.html The GOLDVARB manual can be downloaded from: http://www.york.ac.uk/depts/lang/webstuff/goldvarb/manual/manualOct2001.html
Week #12 (November 20): Practice
with GOLDVARB data sets.
Week #13 (November 27): Interpretation
of GOLDVARB results.
Week #14 (December 4): Case studies of sociolinguistic language
variation.
Week #15 (December 11): Presentation
of final projects to the class.
Final project due: MONday, DECEMBER 18, 4:00 p. m.
Some useful web sites:
http://lef.colmex.mx/Socioling%FC%EDstica/Sitios%20de%20inter%E9s/Sitios%20de%20inter%E9s%20en%20socioling%FC%EDstica.htm {some Spanish sociolinguistics sites}
http://www-nlp.stanford.edu/~manning/courses/ling236/handouts/ling236-ass7.html (a good walk-through of a GOLDVARB analysis for beginners}
http://www.bds.usc.es/ {base de datos sintácticos}
http://www.corpusdelespanol.org/
{corpus del español}
http://glossa.fltr.ucl.ac.be/ {GlossaNet; multi-lingual newspaper database}
http://corp.hum.ou.dk/corpustop.html
{multilingual corpora}