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creole language |
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creole languageAny pidgin language that has ceased to be simply a trade jargon in ports and markets and has become the mother tongue of a particular community, such as the French dialects of the New Orleans area. Many creoles have developed into distinct languages with literatures of their own; for example, Jamaican Creole, Haitian Creole, Krio in Sierra Leone, and Tok Pisin, now the official language of Papua New Guinea. The name creole derives through French from Spanish and Portuguese, in which it originally referred both to children of European background born in tropical colonies and to house slaves on colonial plantations. The implication is that such groups picked up the pidgin forms of colonists' languages (Portuguese, Spanish, Dutch, French, and English) as they were used in and around the Caribbean, in parts of Africa, and in island communities in the Indian and Pacific Oceans. According to circumstance, in such places as Jamaica, Haiti, Mauritius, and West Africa, there may be a ‘creole continuum’ of usage between the strongest forms of a creole and the standard version of the language with which the creole is associated. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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Salsa is a creolization of culture, sound, and expression and continues to invite new sources of inspiration to share the floor. Individual contributions include The Peopling of North America, Creolization in the French and Spanish Colonies, Archaeology and the African Diaspora on the Atlantic Seabord, Labor and Class in the American West, and more. Glissant privileges creolization as a site of resistance in a certain kind of center-periphery relationship: a nation's colonial or neocolonial relationship with its (former) colonizers. |
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