Major life events as drivers of perceived linguistic change across adulthood

Mason Wirtz, Simon Pickl

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelPeer-reviewed

Abstract

This article is the first to quantify the interindividual effects of different major life events (MLEs) on retrospective perceptions of individual-level linguistic change across the adult lifespan. In this cross-sectional study, 701 German-speaking participants from Austria completed an online survey measuring the extent to which MLEs in the educational, occupational, and personal domain are associated with perceived changes in productive and affective-attitudinal aspects of the sociolinguistic repertoire. Bayesian modeling revealed that events such as beginning a tertiary degree, entry into the workforce, and retirement were perceived to impact participants’ varietal use. Overall, however, affective-attitudinal factors such as dialect identity appear to be more readily susceptible to perceived MLE-related change. These results help pave a new path for variationist agendas that approach lifespan linguistic change not as a result of chronological age, but rather as a phenomenon influenced by individual experiential factors complexly intertwined with the process of aging.
OriginalspracheEnglisch
FachzeitschriftLanguage Variation and Change
PublikationsstatusAngenommen/Im Druck - 2024

Systematik der Wissenschaftszweige 2012

  • 602 Sprach- und Literaturwissenschaften

Dieses zitieren