Stripped of their ancestral languages generations ago, the Lumbee Indians of Robeson Count, North Carolina, carved out a unique dialect of English to maintain their linguistic identity.
She has published articles on Lumbee culture and history and is co-author of Hail to UNCP!: A 125-Year History of the University of North Carolina at Pembroke..
Oxendine (Lumbee) is Professor Emeritus at UNC Pembroke.
Linda E.
His publications include Along the Trail: A Reader About Native Americans and The Lumbee in Context: Toward an Understanding.
Stanley Knick is the former Director of the Museum of the Southeast American Indian at UNC Pembroke.
She is the author of Sociolinguistic Constructs of Ethnic Identity: The Syntactic Delineation of a Native American English Variety.
Clare Dannenberg is an Associate Professor at the University of Alaska Anchorage.
His books include Hoi Toide on the Outer Banks: The Story of the Ocracoke Brogue, Talkin\' Tar Heel: Voices of North Carolina, and The Development of African American Language: From Infancy to Adulthood.
He has pioneered research on social and ethnic dialects since the 1960s and has published twenty-three books, eight edited collections, and more than 300 articles.
Friday Distinguished Professor at NC State University and Director of The Language and Life Project.
About author(s): Walt Wolfram is William C.
The story of Lumbee English is one of the most remarkable narratives of linguistic adaptability and cultural perseverance ever documented in the history of American English dialects.
Stripped of their ancestral languages generations ago, the Lumbee Indians of Robeson Count, North Carolina, carved out a unique dialect of English to maintain their linguistic identity