Review published In:
Creole Language in Creole Literatures
Edited by Susanne Mühleisen
[Journal of Pidgin and Creole Languages 20:1] 2005
► pp. 189194
References (9)
References
Bickerton, D. (1975). Dynamics of a creole system. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
(1988). Creole language and the bioprogram. In F. Newmeyer (Ed.), Linguistics. The Cambridge survey. Volume 21: Linguistic theory: Extensions and implications (pp. 268–284). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
(1999). How to acquire language without positive evidence: What acquisitionists can learn from creoles. In M. DeGraff (Ed.), Language creation and language change (pp. 49–74). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
DeGraff, M. (2001). Morphology in creole genesis: Linguistics and ideology. In M. Kenstowicz (Ed.), Ken Hale: A life in language (pp. 53–121). Cambridge: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Lefebvre, C. (1993). The role of relexification and syntactic reanalysis in Haitian Creole: Methodological aspects of a research program. In S. Mufwene (Ed.), Africanisms in Afro-American language varieties (pp. 254–279). Athens: University of Georgia Press.Google Scholar
McWhorter, J. (1998). Identifying the creole prototype: Vindicating a typological class. Language, 741, 788–818. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Mufwene, S. (1986). The universalist and substrate hypotheses complement one another. In P. Muysken & N. Smith (Eds.), Substrata versus universals in creole genesis (pp. 129–162). Amsterdam: John Benjamins. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
(2001). The ecology of language evolution. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar