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Urban Youth Style or Emergent Urban Vernacular? The Rise of Namibia's Kasietaal

Stell, G. (2020). Urban Youth Style or Emergent Urban Vernacular? The Rise of Namibia's Kasietaal. Language Matters, 51(2), 49-67. https://doi.org/10.1080/10228195.2020.1794018

 

Abstract

This study discusses Kasietaal, a continuum of language practices associated with youth in the low-income areas of Windhoek, the capital of Namibia. To what extent does Kasietaal fit the description of an urban youth speech style or of a new lingua franca? To answer this question, this study discusses sociolinguistic perceptions of younger and older residents of Katutura, Windhoek's historically Black neighbourhood. It also uses linguistic materials produced by a Kasietaal performance elicited from a subset of the younger informants. The data suggest that Kasietaal is a post-independence phenomenon, with a manipulated lexicon of diverse origins as its most salient feature. But Kasietaal is not just a “floating lexicon” like South Africa's Tsotsitaal: It is tied to an Afrikaans variety with low-status lingua franca functions, with which it is likely to be co-evolving for want of other linguistic options for projecting urban inter-ethnic solidarity.

FH_23Link to publication in Taylor & Francis Online

FH_23Link to publication in Scopus

 

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