Table of contents
Introduction: The persistence of language: Constructing and confronting the past and the present in the voices of Jane H. Hill
Section 1. Approaches to the study of the indigenous languages of the Americas
The diachrony of Ute case-marking
Language contact as an inhibitor of sound change: An Athabaskan example
Stress in Yucatec Maya: Syncretism in loan word incorporation as evidence for stress patterns
The phonetic correlates of Southern Ute stress
Revisiting Tohono O’odham high vowels
Head-marking inflection and the architecture of grammatical theory: Evidence from reduplication and compounding in Hiaki (Yaqui)
A case-study in grass roots development of web resources for language workers: The Coeur d’Alene Archive and Online Language Resources (CAOLR)
Section 2. Approaches to the study of voices and ideologies
Language contact, shift, and endangerment – implications for policy
Spanish in contact with indigenous tongues: Changing the tide in favor of the heritage languages
How can a language with 7 million speakers be endangered?
A documentary ethnography of a Blackfoot language course: Patterns of variationism and standard in the “organization of diversity”
Syncretic speech, linguistic ideology, and intertextuality: (Re)Presenting the Spanish translation of ‘Speaking Mexicano’ in Tlaxcala, Mexico
Racism in discourse – analyses of practice
Narrative discriminations in Central California’s indigenous narrative traditions: Relativism or (covert) racism?
The voice of (White) reason: Enunciations of difference, authorship, interpellation, and jokes
Double-voicing in the everyday language of Brazilian black activism
Uptake (un)limited: The mediatization of register shifting and the maintenance of standard in U.S. public discourse
The silken cord: An essay in honor of Jane Hill
Afterword: Jane Hill’s current work
Language index
Subject index
This article is available free of charge.