Microcontact is aimed at understanding language change in contact, through examining the development of 8 Italo-Romance languages in contact with other Romance languages (and English) in North and South America..The project aims at drawing a theory of language change in...
Microcontact is aimed at understanding language change in contact, through examining the development of 8 Italo-Romance languages in contact with other Romance languages (and English) in North and South America..
The project aims at drawing a theory of language change in contact that allows us to predict what will happen to a language in contact with another when some given conditions are met. At the actual state of our knowledge, we are unable to predict the causality of any change in contact.
The documentation of heritage Italo-Romance varieties has not been attempted before. There are several studies targeting Italian emigrant communities abroad, especially in the United States. However, following the development of at least eight Italo-Romance varieties in contact with three Romance languages and English, as well as Italian in Italy, is a completely new enterprise. This means that we have no archives, recordings, or previous studies to refer to: one of the aims of the projects is to document these varieties and leave an archive of recordings that can be used by other scholars, from different disciplines.
The project includes a large data crowdsourcing part, during which younger members of heritage communities are asked to uplod recordings of elderly speakers.
The project includes a very large amount of very different language data from Italo-Romance varieties in contact. This poses two main problems. The first one is that these data need to be recorded, handled, classified, and accurately described, but the language competence to try and decipher them is not always there.
The second problem is to identify the communities where these Italo-Romance languages are still spoken. When the project started, we had very little information about these languages in the Americas. While a lot is done on the US Italian communities (and that is one of the reasons why we included American English, especially from New York and Boston), Argentina and Brazil, and to a certain extent Canada, are almost completely untouched.
Furthermore, the fact that data need to be collected outside the EU poses an additional problem with respect to data protection protocol. So far, we managed to work on schedule, despite some inevitable delays, due to the issues just mentioned.
We projected and designed a data crowdsourcing atlas, with the help of the Digital Humanities Lab of Utrecht University. The atlas required a lot of reworking, to be made as user friendly as possible while at the same time conveying as much information as possible. The atlas is now online, has a considerable traffic and contains about 300 spontaneous speech recordings. It can be found here: https://microcontact.hum.uu.nl/. We also developed an app that can be downloaded from Google Play Store (https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=uu.microcontact). So far, it counts 131 unique downloads and installations.
The atlas and the app were quite successful in capturing the attention of the Italo-Romance speakers in Italy, but less so in helping us identify the speakers’ communities in Argentina, Brazil and Canada. To attract their attention, we contacted local associations, Italian Institutes of culture, and colleagues at various universities, establishing a very large network on which we relied for our fieldwork.
Fieldwork was performed in Argentina, Brazil and Canada, yielding 51 full interviews in Brazil, 36 in Canada, and 106 in Argentina.
In the case of Argentina, where we could not find many contacts, one of our members went on a pre-fieldwork.
Fieldwork in Brazil proved also particularly difficult: the researcher often experienced problems with plugging in the pc, and reported a very strong feeling of unsafety when traveling to remote areas with relatively costly recorders and computers. Nevertheless, fieldwork was successful, also in terms of empirical findings.
We managed to achieve two important sets of information, regarding the sociolinguistics of the speaker communities in the Americas and the empirical findings.
As for the sociolinguistics aspects: we have a much more informed overall view of the status of the Italian communities in the countries under investigation. This information, unavailable before our fieldwork, can be useful not only for future fieldworkers in linguistics but also for historians and sociologists, and anyone working on migration.
From a theoretical viewpoint, we made some interesting discoveries, as the data collected show significant deviation from what is commonly assumed about heritage languages. The most important difference we found regards the expression of the grammatical subject in heritage northern varieties, in particular in Argentina. Previous studies have shown that L2 (2nd language) learners tend to pronounce the subjects in sentences that would require a null subject, independent of the contact languages.
We expected to find this in our data, but what we found is instead a spreading of the null subjects, especially for 1st person subjects (singular and plural). Not only do heritage speakers of Friulian, a northern variety, omit the full subject when they speak Friulian: they even drop it when this is not allowed by the baseline (original Friulian) grammar.
It seems that this
As stated above, we developed a crowdsourcing database for data collection, targeted at elderly generations. This was not attempted before. Linguistics experiment targeting the elderly are also quite rare: we developed a protocol and some guidelines for those who wish to attempt a similar research. We documented varieties that were completely underdocumented before. Finally, we discovered data generalizations that contradict what is known about heritage languages, which will force the field to reopen the discussion about parametric variation and heritage language grammars.
More info: https://microcontact.sites.uu.nl/.