
Journal of Multicultural Discourses
Editor Shi-xu Zhejiang University, China Reviews Editors: Doreen Wu, Polytechnic University of Hong Kong, China Sharon Harvey, Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand

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Volume: 3 Number: 1 Page: 5368
doi:10.2167/md060.0
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Who You Tink You, Talkin Propah? Hawaiian Pidgin Demarginalised
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Mikaela Marlow and Howard Giles
University of California, Santa Barbara, CA, USA
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Communication accommodation, ethnolinguistic vitality and markedness model assumptions are applied to language ideologies and practices among Standard English and Hawaii Creole English (Pidgin) speakers in Hawaii. Respondents reported that Standard English should be spoken in most employment or scholastic interactions with tourists, teachers or mainlanders (Haoles). However, Pidgin maintains widespread covert prestige and has resisted marginalisation in social, workplace and educational exchanges. Narrative accounts verified that language enhances group solidarity and shapes routine interactions, providing further support for the models that frame this research.
Keywords: Hawaiian Pidgin language, ethnolinguistic vitality, communication accommodation
© 2008 M. Marlow & H. Giles


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