ABSTRACT

This innovative book contributes to a paradigm shift in the study of creole languages, forging new empirical frameworks for understanding language and culture in sociohistorical contact. The authors bring together archival sources to challenge dominant linguistic theory and practice and engage issues of power, positioning marginalized indigenous peoples as the center of, and vital agents in, these languages’ formation and development. Students in language contact, pidgins and creoles, Caribbean studies, and postcolonial studies courses—and scholars across many disciplines—will benefit from this book and be convinced of the importance of understanding creoles and creolization.

chapter 1|13 pages

Introduction

Post-Colonial Linguistics and Post-Creole Creolistics

chapter 2|18 pages

A Subaltern Overview of Early Colonial Contact in the Afro-Atlantic

Renegades, Maroons and the Sugar Story 1

chapter 5|29 pages

‘Arawak’, ‘Carib’ and ‘Garifuna’

Indigenous Trans-/Pluri-linguality versus Imperial Myth-Making in the Afro-Atlantic