Let’s talk about your book!

Simply fill out the form below to select a date & time for your no obligation consultation
to see if self-publishing with Outskirts Press is right for you.

I agree to the Privacy, Age & General Data Protection Terms

By providing a mobile number, you grant Outskirts Press consent to send text message communications for promotional purposes. Consent is not a condition of purchase. Message frequency varies and data rates may apply. Reply "STOP" to unsubscribe at any time. We do not share your information with anyone (see our Privacy Policy).

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

CREOLE COUNTRY

TransAtlantic Kindred Grammars

by Merelyn Bates-Mims

Hardback

Retail Price: $36.95

Buy 1-9 copies: $33.26 each save 10%
Buy 10 or more: $18.48 each save 50 %
Cost: $33.26
You save: 10%
Book Details: Scroll below for more information about this book, provided directly by the author.

Product description...

Pre-Historic Obama Migration: Creole Louisiana Zydeco

An examination of the grammatical structure of Ancient Egyptian provides clues to the grammatical structure of Proto-African and all of its descendant languages. This volume, entitled Creole Country, gives a unique account of the languages called Creoles and Pidgins, their history and origins based in Africa human cognition, by an author who is a resident speaker of Louisiana English Creole (LCE). A native of New Iberia of Hot Sauce fame, Merelyn Bates-Mims is a descendant of slaves, her Papa Ed Bates, born in 1860s Virginia, being a force in her early years. Concerning the “I be” common to the regions and peoples of her birth, the quest for identifying the protolithic cognition, the DNA of such languages, became the focus of her doctoral research. This book on linguistics is exceptional in that it renders a full scope of the culture, language, and history that encompasses the proposition called ‘creole’. The Fulbright Research award provided the support for proving her thesis, ultimately revealing Ancient Egyptian as the 'proto' imprint of inter-continental creoles, pidgins, and Black English.

Product details...

Hardback
Format: 6 x 9 Black & White Dust-Jacketed Hardback, 248 pages
Publisher: Outskirts Press (Nov 30, 2019)
ISBN10: 1977212689
ISBN13: 9781977212689
Genre: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social

Author Information...

Merelyn Bates-MimsMerelyn B. Bates-Mims, Ph.D, is a university-trained Comparative-Historical linguist who grew up in Southwest Louisiana, in the heart of Creole country, speaking Louisiana Creole English (LCE). She received a Fulbright Scholarship enabling linguistic research and inquiry by consulting with scholars of language and culture at four universities in Africa: the University of Yaoundé; Université de Côte d’Ivoire; Fourah Bay College-University of Sierra Leone; and the Université de Dakar. Owing to the broad perception that Creoles and Pidgins are ‘deviant substrate versions of superstrate European languages,’ i.e., French and English, her curiosity about the origins of Creole and ‘Black English’ led her to seek the Fulbright during her PhD studies at the University of Cincinnati in Ohio. “What language could be said to be the Proto of Africa-descendant languages like Gullah, Creole, Krio, Pidgin, and Black English?” Seeking answers, she was allowed first-hand immersion in the cultures, the ethnographies of various Africa-Continent peoples and nations: Their beliefs, customs, practices, and social behaviors—collecting comparative language samples and many books on language, culture and history as she went along, gratefully living in the intimacy of various families, homes, and communities—an unforgettable experience for which she is eternally grateful. Rather than by means of ‘translations’, it is through ‘transliteration’, i.e., up-down/horizontal word-to-word matchings that ‘proto’ cognition is made evident—out of which descendant families of language forms emerge. Transliteration methodology reveals semantic constructs or word-meaning matches between (among) languages. It is the visual method widely used in this publication to reveal the proto-Africa forms apparent to origins of creole/pidgin languages: TransAtlantic Africa grammars. To avoid future performances of the errors indicative of the 2019 SAT scandal, the linguistic paradigms of Standard Textbook English—beginning with the basic ability for correct sentence matchings of subjects and verbs coupled with mastering the language of mathematics—must be in the firm grasp of every student by the end of 6th grade—before students reach their final years of compulsory education. Community churches, historical bulwarks for establishing education systems, e.g., HBCUs, for black communities across the nation, should also join in singing ‘Teaching of Textbook English’ refrain.
Visit the author's webpage at
https://outskirtspress.com/creolecountry
for more information.

Many author webpages include:
ebook editions
sample text
audio excerpts and videos