Posted on 04/04/2012 12:09:31 AM PDT by Theoria
Theres been a good bit of discussion and hand-wringing lately over whether the American public is becoming more and more politically polarized and what this all means for the future of our democracy. You may have wrung your own hands over the issue. But even if you have, chances are youre not losing sleep over the fact that Americans are very clearly becoming more polarized linguistically.
It may seem surprising, but in this age where geographic mobility and instant communication have increased our exposure to people outside of our neighborhoods or towns, American regional dialects are pulling further apart from each other, rather than moving closer together. And renowned linguist William Labov thinks theres a connection between political and linguistic segregation.
Dialect regions as defined by the Atlas of North American English
In the final volume of his seminal book series Principles of Linguistic Change, Labov spends a great deal of time discussing a riveting linguistic change thats occurring in the northern region of the U.S. clustering around the Great Lakes. This dialect region is called the Inland North, and runs from just west of Albany to Milwaukee, loops down to St. Louis, and traces a line to the south of Chicago, Toledo, and Cleveland.
Thirty-four million speakers in this region are in the midst of a modern-day re-arrangement of their vowel system. Labov thinks it all started in the early 1800′s when the linguistic ancestors of this new dialect began to pronounce a in a distinct way: the pronunciation of man began to lean towards mee-an, at least some of the time. But it wasnt until the 1960s that this sound change began to trigger a real domino effect.
For many speakers of the northern cities, there were now no English words being pronounced with the original, now abandoned a sound. Since vowels evidently abhor a vacuum, this empty slot was eventually filled by the o sound, so that pod came to be pronounced like pad used to be. What ensued next was much like a free-for-all game of musical chairs involving vowels: desk has ended up being pronounced kind of like the former dusk, head like had, bus like boss, and bit like erstwhile bet. (You can listen to some examples here.)
This rearrangement, called the Northern Cities Vowel Shift, is the result of a chain reaction of vowel changes on an epic scale similar to the process that transformed vowels from Middle English to Modern English between 1400 and 1600. (Ever wonder why a word like beet perversely uses the same letter for its vowel sound as the word bed? The two words used to be pronounced with essentially the same vowel sound). The Northern Cities Vowel Shift is thought to be both spreading and accelerating.
But one of the puzzles about this vowel shift is why it has spread through an area of 88 thousand square miles only to stop cold south of Cleveland and west of Milwaukee. And this is where things get political.
Linguists have long known that mere exposure to new speech patterns isnt always enough to cause people to adapt their own speech accordingly. Often, a buy-in is required; your own speech may shift depending on how much social affinity you feel for the speakers of these new patterns. This explains why, even within the Inland North Region, the spread hasnt been uniform. For instance, African American speakers in the same regionor rural speakers for that matterhavent really warmed to the new-fangled vowels. But why is it that white city folk in Cleveland sound a whole lot like white people in Syracuse and Milwaukee, but a whole lot unlike their fellow Ohioans in Columbus, a short distance away?
Labov points out that the residents of the Inland North have long-standing differences with their neighbors to the south, who speak whats known as the Midland dialect. The two groups originated from distinct groups of settlers; the Inland Northerners migrated west from New England, while the Midlanders originated in Pennsylvania via the Appalachian region. Historically, the two settlement streams typically found themselves with sharply diverging political views and voting habits, with the northerners generally being more liberal.
Labov suggests that its these deep-seated political disagreements that create an invisible borderline barring the encroachment of Northern Cities Vowels. When he looked at the relationship between voting patterns by county over the last three Presidential elections and the degree to which speakers in these counties shifted their vowels, he found a tight correlation between the two. And the states that have participated in the vowel shift have also tended to resist implementing the death penalty.
Do vowel-shifters sound more liberal to modern ears? Yes, at least to some extent. Labov had students in Bloomington, Indiana, listen to a vowel-shifting speaker from Detroit and a non-vowel-shifter from Indianapolis. The students rated both speakers as equal in probable intelligence, education and trustworthiness. They also didnt think they would have different attitudes about abortion (both speakers were female). But they did think the vowel-shifting speaker was more likely to be in favor of gun control and affirmative action.
Are we moving toward an era where Americans will speak discernibly red versus blue accents? Its hard to say. Social identities are complex, and can be defined along a number of different dimensions like class, race, or ethnicity. Not everyone feels that politics are a part of their core identity. But I suspect that political ideology may become an anchor for accents to the extent that large social groups collectively identify themselves by their political beliefs. According to Bill Bishop, author of The Big Sort, this is happening more and more as Americans voluntarily cluster themselves into homogenous, politically like-minded communities.
So perhaps its not surprising that George W. Bush acquired a distinct Texan accent, despite having abundant exposure to people from the Northeast, or why Barack Obama sprouted a mild set of Chicago vowels, even though he was fully an adult before ever living there. Whether consciously or not, these politicians may be flying their partisan flags every time they speak. And if accent becomes routinely melded with political affiliation in peoples minds, it may come to play an even stronger part in how people respond to political candidates.
No doubt were already seeing the politicization of pronunciation in candidates speech. For instance, in 2008, Republican strategist Alex Castellanos remarked about Sarah Palins Western accent: We really havent heard this kind of accent before. This is an original voice that doesnt sound like Washington, doesnt sound like an insider, doesnt sound at all like what we have. I think it sounds outsider. I suppose if you want to market someone as a maverick candidate, shed best sound like one.
And I suppose that in the near future at least, any candidate with a claim to being a true conservative had best have speech thats scrubbed clean of Northern City vowels, regardless of where he or she comes from.
What American accent do you have? Your Result: The South
That's a Southern accent you've got there. You may love it, you may hate it, you may swear you don't have it, but whatever the case, we can hear it. |
I look at the map and I’m reminded of the bio-chemical warfare map in The Andromeda Strain (the original, not the horrible remake).
Also something become "sun'in". It's like listening to complete illiterates. I correct my sons all the time. They picked up from their peers.
I have a Midland accent which makes sense cause I grew up and live here.
Maybe I'm being a bit picky but it really sounds odd to me.
*bump*
Where’s the locus of ebonics, geographically and politically.
Living now, 40 miles south of the city in a rural area, there is none of that going on. To the point that people from Buffalo are much more easily identified by their speech than even a decade ago. Fascinating.
And, yes, Buffalonians are overwhelmingly Democrats. Down here registration is about 60-70% Republican.
been a good bit of discussion and hand-wringing lately over whether the American public is becoming more and more politically polarized and what this all means for the future of our democracy
The test confuses proper Manhattenite with Inland North. I suppose that both are influenced by English and Dutch and are district from Brooklynese, but no one takes me for a upstate hayseed.
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