Alim H. , Samy.2009. Translocal style communities: Hip hop youth as cultural theorists of style, language, and globalization. Pragmatics19(1). 103-128.
2.
Auer, Peter & Frans Hinskens.2005. The role of interpersonal accommodation in a theory of language change. In Peter Auer, Frans Hinskens, & Paul Kerswill (eds.), Dialect change: Convergence and divergence in European languages, 335-357. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
3.
Becker, Kara.2009. Is c [?] ffee t[?]lk l [?]st? BOUGHT-raising on Manhattan's Lower East Side. Ottawa, ON: New Ways of Analyzing Variation 38 paper.
4.
Bell, Allan.1984. Language style as audience design. Language in Society13(2). 145-204.
5.
Bell, Allan.2001. Back in style: Reworking audience design. In Penelope Eckert & John Rickford (eds.), Style and sociolinguistic variation, 139-169 . Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
6.
Chambers, Jack & Peter Trudgill.1980. Dialectology. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
7.
Coggshall, Elizabeth & Kara Becker.2010. The vowel phonologies of African American and white New York City residents. In Malcah Yaeger-Dror & Erik Thomas (eds.), African American English speakers and their participation in local sound change: A comparative study, 101-128. Raleigh, NC : Duke University Press.
8.
Coupland, Nikolas.1984. Accommodation at work: Some phonological data and their implications. International Journal of the Sociology of Language46. 49-70.
9.
Eckert, Penelope.1989. Jocks and burnouts: Social identity in the high school . New York: Teachers College Press .
10.
Eckert, Penelope.2000. Linguistic variation as social practice. Oxford, UK: Blackwell.
11.
Feagin, Crawford.1990. The dynamics of a sound change in southern states English: From rless to rful in three generations. In Jerold A.Edmonton, Crawford Feagin, & Peter Mühlhäusler (eds.), Development and diversity: Linguistic variation across time and space, 129-145 . Arlington: University of Texas at Arlington.
12.
Flood, Connie.2002. Unconstricted /r/ in the SSE and AAVE of Lee County, Alabama . Columbus: Ohio State University master’s thesis.
13.
Giles, Howard.1973. Accent mobility: A model and some data. Anthropological Linguistics15. 87-109.
14.
Giles, Howard, Justine Coupland , & Nikolas Coupland (eds.) 1991. Contexts of accommodation: Developments in applied sociolinguistics . Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
15.
Goffman, Erving.1971. Relations in public. New York : Basic Books.
16.
Labov, William, Paul Cohen, Clarence Robins, & John Lewis.1968. A study of the non-standard English of Negro and Puerto Rican speakers in New York City. Report on Cooperative Research Project 3288. New York, NY: Columbia University.
17.
Llamas, Carmen, Dominic Watt, & Daniel Ezra Johnson. 2009. Linguistic accommodation and the salience of national identity markers in a border town. Journal of Language and Social Psychology28(4). 381-407.
18.
Majors, Tivoli & Matthew Gordon.2008. The [+spread] of the Northern Cities Shift. University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics 14. 110-120. http://repository.upenn.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1061&context=pwpl (15 November 2009).
19.
Milroy, Lesley. [ 1980] 1987. Language and social networks . Oxford, UK: Blackwell.
Schegloff, Emanuel, Gail Jefferson, & Harvey Sacks.1977. Preference for agreement in the organization of repair in conversation. Language53(2). 361-382.
22.
Thibault, Pierrette.1983. Équivalence et grammaticalisation. Montreal: University of Montreal dissertation.
23.
Thibault, Pierrette.2003. Compte-rendu de Eckert, P. Linguistic variation and social practice: The linguistic construction of identity in Belten High School. Canadian Journal of Linguistics48. 106-109.
24.
Wolfram, Walt.2007. Sociolinguistic folklore in the study of African American English. Language and Linguistics Compass1. 292-313.
25.
Wroblewski, Michael, Thea R. Strand, & Sylvie Dubois .2010. Mapping a dialect "mixtury": Vowel phonology of African American and white men in rural southern Louisiana . In Malcah Yaeger-Dror & Erik R. Thomas (eds.), African American English speakers and their participation in local sound change: A comparative study, PADS 94, 48-72. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
26.
Yaeger-Dror, Malcah & Erik Thomas.2010. Introduction. In Malcah Yaeger-Dror & Erik R. Thomas (eds.), African American English speakers and their participation in local sound change: A comparative study, PADS 94, 1-20. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
27.
Yaeger-Dror, Malcah & Thomas Purnell.2010. Accommodation to the locally dominant norm: A special issue. American Speech85(2). 115-120.