Michael B. Montgomery
Distinguished Professor Emeritus
Office: Humanities Office Building
(803) 777-2300
ullans@yahoo.com
Education
Ph.D., University of Florida, 1979
Research Area(s)
The history and development of American English, especially
in the American South, from colonial times to the present. I have published
extensively on many varieties of Southern American English, white and
black.
The Irish and Scottish contributions to American English.
Ulster Scots and Ulster English.
The grammar and vocabulary of Appalachian English. I have edited a comprehensive
dictionary of Southern Appalachian English. I have also prepared an extensive
annotated bibliography of work in this field (http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/IUSSUS/AppEngBibliography.html)
Recent Publications
Books:
In progress. The Grammar of Smoky Mountain English. Varieties of English
around the World Series, ed. by Edgar W. Schneider. Amsterdam: Benjamins.
In progress. The Academic Study of Ulster Scots: Essays for and by Robert
J. Gregg (edited with Philip S. Robinson and Anne Smyth)
In progress. Ulster-Scots Language Yesterday and Today. Dublin: Four
Courts Press.
In progress. Language in the American South. Co-edited with Ellen Johnson,
(forming the second edition of the Encyclopedia of Souther Culture) under
the auspices of the University of Mississippi Center for the Study of
Southern Culture and published by the University of North Carolina Press.
In press. From Ulster to America: The Scotch-Irish Heritage of American
English. Belfast: Ulster Historical Foundation.
2004. The Dictionary of Smoky Mountain English. Knoxville: University
of Tennessee Press. (with Joseph S. Hall).
2004. From Ulster to America: The Scotch-Irish Heritage of American English.
Belfast: Ulster Historical Foundation.
2003. A Blad of Ulster-Scotch frae Ullans: Ulster-Scots Culture, Language
and Writing. Belfast: Ullans Press. (edited with Anne Smyth)
2003. The Knaresborough Workhouse Daybook: Life and Language in an 18th-Century
Yorkshire Town. Yorkshire Dialect Society. (with María F. García-Bermejo
Giner)
Major Articles and Chapters:
In press. Eighteenth-Century Emigrants from Ireland to Tennessee: A Report
Using First Families of Tennessee Files. Journal of East Tennessee History.
2004. The History of American English. Needed Research in American English,
ed. by Dennis Preston. Publication of the American Dialect Society 88:
1-23.
2004. Emigrants from Ulster Meet the Observer's Paradox: A Typology of
Emigrant Letter Writers. Journal of Scotch-Irish Studies 1.4.10-18.
2004. Solving Kurath's Puzzle: Establishing the Antecedents of the American
Midland Dialect Region. The Legacy of Colonial English: The Study of Transported
Dialects, ed. by Raymond Hickey, 410-25. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press.
2004. Ulster Scots: Lost or Submerged? Ulster and Scotland, History,
Language, and Identity, 1600=2000, ed. by William Kelly and John Young,
121-32. Dublin: Four Courts.
2004. The English Language. High Mountains Rising, ed. by Richard Straw
and Tyler Blethen, 47-64. Champaign: University of Illinois Press.
2004. Historical Perspectives on the pen/pin Merger in Southern American
English. Studies in the History of the English Language II: Conversations
between Past and Present, ed. by Anne Curzan and Kim Emmons, 429-49. Berlin:
Mouton de Gruyter. (with Connie Eble)
2004. Grammar of Appalachian English. Handbook of Varieties of English:
Volume 3, ed. by Bernt Kortmann and Edgar W. Schneider, 37-72. Berlin:
Mouton de Gruyter.
2004. How the Montgomeries Lost the Scots Language. Doonsin' Emerauds:
New Scrieves anent Scots and Gaelic / New Studies in Scots and Gaelic,
ed. by J. Derrick McClure, 43-59. Belfast Studies in Language, Culture
and Politics 11. Belfast: Clo Ollscoil na Banriona.
2003. The Scots Language Abroad, Edinburgh Companion to Scots, ed. by
John Corbett et al., 233-50. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
2003. The Structural History of Y'all, You All, and You'uns. Southern
Journal of Linguistics 3.19-27.
2002. Introduction to reprint of Lorenzo Dow Turner, Africanisms in the
Gullah Dialect. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, xi-lvii.
(with Katherine Wyly Mille)
2001. "My Mother, Whenever She Passed Away, She Had Pneumonia":
The History and Function of Punctual whenever. Journal of English Linguistics
29.234-49. (with John M. Kirk)
2001. On the Trail of Early Nonstandard Grammar: An Electronic Corpus
of Southern U.S. Antebellum Overseers' Letters. American Speech 79.388-409
(with Edgar W. Schneider).
2001. Trans-Atlantic Connections for Variable Grammatical Features. Penn
Working Papers in Linguistics 7.3.205-24.
2001. Yorkshire English Two Centuries Ago. Journal of English Linguistics
29.348-62. (with Maria F Garcia-Bermejo Giner)
2001. Ulster Scots: A Language of Scotch-Irish Emigrants. Journal of
Scotch-Irish Studies 2.125-37.
2001. Eighteenth-Century Nomenclature for Ulster Emigrants. Journal of
Scotch-Irish Studies 2.1-6.
2001. British and Irish Antecedents. Cambridge History of the English
Language, Volume 6: English in North America, edited by John Algeo, 86-153.
Cambridge University Press.
2001. On the Trail of Ulster Emigrant Letters. Atlantic Crossroads: Historical
Connections between Scotland, Ulster and North America, ed. by Steve Ickringill
and Patrick Fitzgerald, 13-26. Newtownards, Northern Ireland: Colourpoint.
2000. Isolation as a Linguistic Construct. Southern Journal of Linguistics
1.25-36.
2000. The Problem of Persistence: Ulster-Scot-American Missing Links.
Journal of Scotch-Irish Studies 1.105-19.
2000. Ulster: A Linguistic Bridge across the North Atlantic. Journal
of Scotch-Irish Studies 1.40-60. (with Philip Robinson)
2000. The Idea of Appalachian Isolation. Appalachian Heritage 28.2.20-31.
2000. The Celtic Element in American English. Celtic Englishes II, ed.
by Hildegard Tristram, 231-64. Heidelberg: Winter.
2000. The Many Faces of the Scotch-Irish. Familia 16.24-40.
1999. A Superlative Complex in Appalachian English. Southeastern Journal
of Linguistics 23.1-14.
1999. Sierra Leone Settler English: Another Exported Variety of African
American English. English World-Wide 20.1-34.
1999. "He Bes Took up with a Yankee Girl and Moved up North":
The Verb Bes in the Carolinas and Its History. American Speech 75.1-42.
(with Margaret Mishoe)
1999. The Position of Ulster Scots. Ulster Folklife 45.85-104. Special
issue on language diversity in Ulster, ed. by James Mallory.
Editing and Consulting Work:
Section Editor for Language for the Encyclopedia of Appalachia, author
of section overview, and contributor of six entries.
Consulting Editor for Languages and Dialects, Encyclopedia of Southern
Culture. Project headquartered at the Center for the Study of Southern
Culture, University of Mississippi and volume published by University
of North Carolina Press.
Associate Editor, American Speech, 1996- .
Editorial Board, English World-Wide, 1997- .
Member of Advisory Committee, Museum of East Tennessee History, 2002-
.
Member of Advisory Committee, Ulster-American Folk Park, 2002- .
Honors and Offices:
Lifetime Achievement Award, Carolina TESOL, April 1997
Honorary President, Forum for the Study of the Languages of Scotland
and Ulster, 1997- .
Honorary President, Ulster-Scots Language Society, 2000- .
President, American Dialect Society, 2003-04 (Vice-President, 2001-02).
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