Gragoatá (Apr 2019)

Why did creolization happen in the Caribbean and not in Brazil? Social conditionings

  • Dante Lucchesi

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 48
pp. 227 – 255

Abstract

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Based on socioeconomic data, this paper seeks to explain why creolization occurred broadly in the Caribbean and did not occur in a representative and lasting way in Brazil. From this perspective, the paper seeks to make some generalizations about the historical formation of the so-called Creoles of the Atlantic and about the very conception of the creole languages. The position that guides this analysis is that, in order for creolization to occur, there must be a rupture in linguistic transmission, which allows a strong reduction and deep restructuring of a second language variety, a pidgin. This pidgin becomes a native language and then gives origin to the Creole language. In order for pidginization to take place, it is necessary that the community of speakers that will develop the pidgin be subjected to a violent process of segregation and isolation, as it happened in the Caribbean, and, apparently, did not happen in Brazil, due to the greater complexity and social arrangements observed in the structure of Brazil when the country was a Portuguese colony. At the end, the paper makes a brief description of linguistics features which distinguish creolization from more slight processes of irregular linguistic transmission, as it happened in Brazil.

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