El español en contacto con otras lenguas is the first comprehensive
historical, social, and linguistic overview of Spanish in contact with
other languages in all of its major contexts--in Spain, the United
States, and Latin America. In this significant contribution to the field
of Hispanic linguistics, Carol A. Klee and Andrew Lynch explore the
historical and social factors that have shaped contact varieties of the
Spanish language, synthesizing the principle arguments and theories
about language contact, and examining linguistic changes in Spanish
phonology, morphology and syntax, and pragmatics.
Individual chapters analyze particular contact situations: in Spain,
contact with Basque, Catalan, Valencian, and Galician; in Mexico,
Central, and South America, contact with Nahuatl, Maya, Quechua, Aimara,
and Guarani; in the Southern Cone, contact with other principle European
languages such as Portuguese, Italian, English, German, and Danish; in
the United States, contact with English. A separate chapter explores
issues of creolization in the Philippines and the Americas and
highlights the historical influence of African languages on Spanish,
primarily in the Caribbean and Equatorial Guinea.
Written in Spanish, this detailed synthesis of wide-ranging research
will be a valuable resource for scholars of Hispanic linguistics,
language contact, and sociolinguistics.