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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Keith Malcolm Petyt /ˈpɛtɪt/ (born February 1941)[1] is a sociolinguist and historian.

As a native of Bradford, he investigated the speech of West Yorkshire in his early work. His first publication, Emily Brontë and the Haworth Dialect, compared the speech of the servant Joseph in Wuthering Heights with information on the Haworth dialect from two informants, and concluded that Emily Brontë had been accurate with her depictions.[2]

He was one of the first to apply Labovian methods in Britain with his research in 1970–1 on the speech of Bradford, Halifax and Huddersfield. He concluded that the speech detailed in most of dialectology (e.g. A. J. Ellis, the Survey of English Dialects) had virtually disappeared, having found only one speaker out of his sample of 106 speakers who regularly used dialect. However, he found that differences in speech persisted as an indicator of social class, age and gender. This PhD dissertation was later adapted into a book, Dialect and Accent in Industrial West Yorkshire.[3] The work was criticised by Graham Shorrocks on the grounds that the sociolinguistic methods used were inappropriate for recording the traditional vernacular and that there was an inadequate basis for comparison with earlier dialect studies in West Yorkshire.[4] In a review in Language in Society, Joan Beal was scathing about Petyt's decision to categorise the social class of women according to their husband's occupation.[5]

His 1980 book The study of dialect: an introduction to dialectology was a critical history of dialect studies.[6] He also wrote a generally positive review of the very successful textbook Accents of English by John C. Wells.[7] In Spring 1982, he was a co-presenter of the BBC Radio 4 series Locally Speaking.[8]

Having spent most of his career lecturing at and working at the University of Reading, he published the book The Growth of Reading in 1993.[9]

He retired to the Yorkshire Dales and wrote a review of dialect studies in the Sedbergh area in 2014, which he donated to both the Sedbergh and District History Society and the Yorkshire Dialect Society.[10] He is currently the Yorkshire Dales National Park's Member Champion for Recreation Management and is a vice president and former Chairman of the Yorkshire Dales Society.[11]

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References

  1. ^ "Keith Malcolm PETYT". Companies House. Retrieved 4 February 2020.
  2. ^ Petyt, K. M. (1970). Emily Bronte and the Haworth Dialect. Yorkshire Dialect Society. ISBN 978-0950171005.
  3. ^ Petyt, K. M. (1985). Dialect and Accent in Industrial West Yorkshire. John Benjamins Publishing. ISBN 9789027248640.
  4. ^ Shorrocks, Graham (1999). A Grammar of the Dialect of the Bolton Area. Pt. 2: Morphology and Syntax. Bamberger Beiträge zur englischen Sprachwissenschaft; Bd. 41. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang. pp. 19–20. ISBN 3-631-33066-9.
  5. ^ Beal, Joan (1989). "K. M. Petyt, Dialect and accent in industrial West Yorkshire. (Varieties of English around the World. General Series, 6.) Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins, 1985". Language in Society. 18 (3): 443–448. doi:10.1017/S0047404500013798.
  6. ^ Petyt, K. M. (1980). The study of dialect: an introduction to dialectology. Boulder, USA: Westview Press. ISBN 9780865310605.
  7. ^ Petyt, K. M. (1982). "Reviews: J. C. Wells: Accents of English". Journal of the International Phonetic Association. Cambridge. 12 (2): 104–112. doi:10.1017/S0025100300002516. S2CID 146349564. Retrieved 6 January 2013.
  8. ^ Recordings of the programme are included under his name at the British Library.
  9. ^ Petyt, K. M. (1993). The Growth of Reading. Stroud, UK: Sutton Publishing Ltd. ISBN 978-0750903301.
  10. ^ Petyt, K.M (2014). "A survey of dialect studies in the area of the Sedbergh & District History Society" (PDF). Retrieved 17 October 2020.
  11. ^ "Yorkshire Dales Society website".
This page was last edited on 10 February 2024, at 15:07
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