Mainland Spanish Colonies and Creole Genesis: The Afro-Venezuelan Area Revisited

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2005
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Cascadilla Proceedings Project
Abstract
McWhorter (2000:38) challenges the validity of the limited access model for Creole genesis, noting that "the mainland Spanish colonies put in question a model which is crucial to current Creole genesis." His thesis is that in the Spanish mainland colonies the disproportion between the black and white populations was enough for the emergence of a Creole language in these areas. In this paper, we focus specifically on one colony, Venezuela. We present sociohistorical and linguistic evidence that indicate that blacks had as much or more access to Spanish in Venezuela as they did on islands such as Cuba. The Spanish Crown's monopolization of the Spanish slave trade kept the black-white ratio relatively low in all Spanish colonies until the end of the 18th century. This is a part of the puzzle that has been absent in the discussion of the missing Spanish Creoles.
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Paper presented at the Second Workshop on Spanish Sociolinguistics, March 25-26, 2004, University at Albany, SUNY.
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Díaz-Campos, Manuel and J. Clancy Clements. 2005. Mainland Spanish colonies and creole genesis: The Afro-Venezuelan area revisited. In Selected Proceedings of the second workshop on Spanish sociolinguistics, ed. Lotfi Sayahi and Maurice Westmoreland, 41-53. Somerville, MA: Cascadilla Proceedings Project.
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