Summary information

Study title

Phonological levelling, diffusion and divergence in Liverpool and its hinterland

Creator

Watson, K, Lancaster University

Study number / PID

851183 (UKDA)

10.5255/UKDA-SN-851183 (DOI)

Data access

Restricted

Series

Not available

Abstract

It is widely reported in the UK media that English accents are becoming alike. In 2001 a Guardian article claimed "England's distinctive dialects may be doomed to disappear". Not just media hype, this has also been observed in linguistic research. In fact, this convergence, called 'levelling' by linguists, is attested across the country. However, England’s north-west has been largely ignored. This project will investigate levelling (and its opposite, divergence) in three north-western localities - Liverpool, Skelmersdale and St Helens - which offer a unique vantage point. Liverpool is a major urban centre, so we expect features of Liverpool English to spread. Skelmersdale, once a mining town, was designated a new town in 1961 and saw mass migration from Liverpool, encouraging the adoption of Liverpool features. St Helens, once part of Lancashire, became part of Merseyside in 1974, much to the dismay of its inhabitants who affiliate strongly with Lancashire. This, unlike in Skelmersdale, may block the adoption of Liverpool features. Shedding new light on how levelling works, this project integrates a quantitative analysis of production and perception data with attitudinal and identity-based data, in order to investigate the relationship between linguistic and geographical, social and perceptual factors in language change.

Keywords

Methodology

Data collection period

01/01/2010 - 31/12/2012

Country

United Kingdom

Time dimension

Not available

Analysis unit

Individual

Universe

Not available

Sampling procedure

Not available

Kind of data

Numeric
Audio

Data collection mode

There are three cohorts of speakers from each of three geographical localities: Liverpool, St Helens & Skelmersdale. The three cohorts are (1) archive speakers (born between 1890-1943); (2) older speakers (born between 1918-1952); teen speakers (born between 1992-1994). The methodology for data collection was a loosely structured interview. For the archive cohort the speakers are giving oral history interviews and for the older and teen cohorts the data collection method is based on William Labov’s sociolinguistic interview design. In the archive cohort, the topics in the interviews focus on growing up and working in Liverpool, St Helens and Skelmersdale, mostly from the period around the turn of the 20th century and around the period of the First World War. The audio data, although not the transcript, are stored at the North West Sound Archive, based in Clitheroe Castle. We thank the North West Sound Archive for making these data available for this project. The data in the older and teen cohorts were specifically recorded as part of this project. The interview topics centred on speakers’ impressions of and beliefs about regions of north-west England and the accents spoken there (specifically, Liverpool, St Helens and Skelmersdale). This often includes a discussion of the linguistic features the participants believe are part of the corresponding accents, and the stereotypes which surround them. The submitted dataset, which consists of tab-delimited text files, is sorted first by geographical location (Liverpool / Skelmersdale / St Helens) and then by speaker cohort (Archive / Older / Teen). The number of files in each dataset is as follows: /Liverpool/Archive: 22 files /Liverpool/Older: 6 files /Liverpool/Teen: 11 files /Skelmersdale/Archive: 6 files /Skelmersdale/Older: 6 files /Skelmersdale/Teen: 7 files /St Helens/Archive: 10 items /St Helens/Older: 7 files /St Helens/Teen: 9 files Total number of datafiles: 84 This corresponds to data from the followings numbers of speakers (since some speakers were recorded in pairs or groups of three, the same file may represent the interview data from two or three speakers): /Liverpool/Archive: 22 speakers /Liverpool/Older: 12 speakers /Liverpool/Teen: 20 speakers /Skelmersdale/Archive: 11 speakers /Skelmersdale/Older: 10 speakers /Skelmersdale/Teen: 14 speakers /St Helens/Archive: 12 speakers /St Helens/Older: 11 speakers /St Helens/Teen: 16 speakers Total number of speakers: 128

Funding information

Grant number

RES-061-25-0458

Access

Publisher

UK Data Service

Publication year

2014

Terms of data access

The Data Collection is available for download to users registered with the UK Data Service.

Related publications

Not available