Talk:Creolization

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This article was the subject of a Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment, between 19 August 2019 and 25 November 2019. Further details are available on the course page. Student editor(s): Dantmcclendon, Aphonopelma. Peer reviewers: Xramire, Joannavel22, Lukedinkel, Mf1331, Asab99.

Above undated message substituted from Template:Dashboard.wikiedu.org assignment by PrimeBOT (talk) 18:38, 16 January 2022 (UTC)

Untitled
There is no link to the set of Creole languages articles etc. . There seems to be a communication problem due to different spelling (the "z" vs "s" dilemma).

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creole_language & http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creole


 * As it is, creolisation redirects to creole language and the creolization article as it stands here is not very enlightening. Eklir (talk) 18:56, 20 August 2008 (UTC)

External links modified
Hello fellow Wikipedians,

I have just modified 1 one external link on Creolization. Please take a moment to review my edit. If you have any questions, or need the bot to ignore the links, or the page altogether, please visit this simple FaQ for additional information. I made the following changes:
 * Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20131004215319/http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/sociology/rsw/current/cscs/working_papers/creolization_and_cultural_globalization_the_soft_sounds_of_fugitive_power.pdf to http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/sociology/rsw/current/cscs/working_papers/creolization_and_cultural_globalization_the_soft_sounds_of_fugitive_power.pdf

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Cheers.— InternetArchiveBot  (Report bug) 02:03, 1 December 2016 (UTC)

Edit revert
Hi - Re: edit revert of my links to Creolisation as a model used for researching and interpreting identity in the Roman Empire. Could you elaborate on how this is off-topic - it is literally an application of the model onto a different culture, pertinent to the encyclopedia. I'd suggest one may come to the subject from this cross-cultural perspective. Thought I'd be better to discuss it out here rather just edit-war the thing. Zakhx150 (talk) 11:09, 25 February 2018 (UTC)
 * Sure. Occasionally, people will include content in an article simply because the same term is used when the topics are different. That's what's going on here. The topic of this page is creole languages and language contact. What you included has much more to do with intercultural contact. They're related, and the subject matter is certainly encyclopedic, but that doesn't make this article the place to put it.
 * A quick Jstor link will find hundreds of anthropology, archaeology, and sociology articles that use the term creolization. It seems that this is more than just a quick analogy or model used occasionally by researchers as a full-fledged social sciences concept. If there isn't already a similar page, we might be due for a creolization (anthropology) article. — Æµ§œš¹  [lɛts b̥iː pʰəˈlaɪˀt] 14:54, 25 February 2018 (UTC)