Wednesday, October 2, 2019
A preliminary assessment of the Survey of the Gaelic :: Scottish Gaelic dialectology
Scottish Gaelic dialectology: A preliminary assessment of the Survey of the Gaelic  Dialects of Scotland      Between 1994 and 1997, the transcribed questionnaires of the Survey of the  Gaelic Dialects of Scotland were published as a five-volume series (O Dochartaigh 1994-  97), presenting narrow phonetic transcriptions of over 200 speakers responding to a fortypage  questionnaire. This publication marks the culmination of a project of nearly fifty  yearsââ¬â¢ duration; the main body of the interviews took place between 1950 and 1970  across much of the Scottish mainland as well as the Western Isles. In many cases, some  of the very last Gaelic speakers in a particular region were interviewed, and we thus have  transcribed materialââ¬âand some audio recordingsââ¬âof dialects that are now practically  extinct. Naturally, the historic quality of these transcribed and audio records renders  them all the more valuable for close study.  This paper will assess the current state of Scottish Gaelic dialect study, with a  particular focus on the Surveyââ¬â¢s current and future contributions. Designed in 1950 by  Kenneth Jackson to elicit data informing phonetic and phonological questions of both  regional and historical interest, the original Survey focused on pronunciation variation,  providing limited information on morphology (although see especially O  Maolalaigh1999), and virtually none on syntactic variation or lexical choice. With the  publication of the Surveyââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"raw dataâ⬠ in the form of unanalyzed narrow transcriptions, it  is appropriate now to ascertain what we can learn from the published material.  However, in the approximately 50 years since the fieldwork for the Survey was  begun, methods, goals, and principles of dialect study have changed dramatically (cf.  Kretzschmar 1996); furthermore, advances in media technologies have enabled linguists  to analyze and to present data in compelling new ways (cf. Kretzschmar & Konopka  1996). In recent years there has been an important move towards a discipline-wide  agreement on ââ¬Å"best practicesâ⬠ for dialect study, language data management, and the  presentation of data and analysis (cf. ââ¬Å"Methods XIâ⬠ Conference on Methods in  Dialectology, August 2002, Joensuu, Finland; the E-MELD website and affiliated work;  the Linguistic Data Archiving Project at CNRS, etc). The presentation will conclude  with a discussion of desiderata for Scottish Gaelic dialect study, and for the presentation  and analysis of Gaelic dialect data.  					    
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