@incollection{Dueck2020, author = {Katharina D{\"u}ck}, title = {Language Contact and Language Attitudes of Caucasian Germans in Today’s Caucasus and Germany}, series = {VARIATIONist Linguistics meets CONTACT Linguistics}, editor = {Alexandra N. Lenz and Mateusz Maselko}, publisher = {V\&R unipress}, address = {G{\"o}ttingen}, isbn = {978-3-7370-1144-0}, doi = {10.14220/9783737011440.25}, url = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:bsz:mh39-100702}, pages = {25 -- 49}, year = {2020}, abstract = {This article examines the language contact situation as well as the language attitudes of the Caucasian Germans, descendants of German-born inhabitants of the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union who emigrated in 1816/17 to areas of Transcaucasia. After deportations and migrations, the group of Caucasian Germans now consists of those who have since emigrated to Germany and those who still live in the South Caucasus. It’s the first time that sociolinguistic methods have been used to record data from the generation who experienced living in the South Caucasus and in Germany as well as from two succeeding generations. Initial results will be presented below with a focus on the language contact constellations of German varieties as well as on consequences of language contact and language repression, which both affect language attitudes.}, language = {en} }