Pennsylvania Dutch a language with merit

Pennsylvania Dutch: The Story of an American Language.
Mark L. Louden. Johns Hopkins University Press, 2016, 475 pages.

June 1, 2016 | Artbeat | Volume 20 Issue 12
Books & Resources Editor

Pennsylvania Dutch has often been ridiculed and viewed as a corrupted German dialect with a mishmash of English words, but author Mark Louden argues that it is actually a distinct language with a proud heritage. The fact that it continues to be spoken, living for hundreds of years within an English-language society, makes it quite remarkable.

Louden is unequivocal in declaring that Pennsylvania Dutch originated in the German Palatinate, along the Rhine River. The Mennonites and other German immigrants brought their German dialect to Pennsylvania in the 1700s and it was widely used in eastern Pennsylvania not only by the Mennonites and Amish, but also by Lutherans and those in the Reformed tradition. Today, it has all but died out, except in traditionalist Mennonite and Amish communities, where it is thriving.

Two of the reasons Louden considers Pennsylvania Dutch a separate language are that it is quite different from European German and its vocabulary has changed over the centuries. Although the Mennonites and Amish have borrowed a number of English words, he argues that they are mostly ideas for which there was no word in 18th-century Palatine German.

“Pennsylvania Dutch is not ‘watered down’ by the borrowing of such words, but enhanced both in terms of the overall size of its vocabulary and the range of meanings its words can express,” he writes. Since the grammatical structure has not been changed, he argues that the language is not affected by the selective adoption of English words. Of course, these words are pronounced in a German way.

Louden differentiates between two groups that have used the Pennsylvania Dutch language. The Mennonites and Amish, whom he refers to as sectarians, generally have used it only as a spoken language. The non-sectarians, the non-Mennonite Pennsylvania Dutch speakers, had much more written material, some of which appeared in local eastern Pennsylvania newspapers. They also developed folklore societies in which they enjoyed poetry readings, songs and skits in Pennsylvania Dutch. A number of these poems and writings are included.

With the rise of tourism in Pennsylvania Amish country came the stereotype that speakers of Pennsylvania Dutch could not speak proper English and they used phrases such as “Throw the cow over the fence some hay.” Louden explains how this false stereotype emerged in the early 20th century and points out that the Mennonites and Amish have borrowed English words, but never confused the sentence structures of the two languages.

Since Pennsylvania Dutch was my first language, I found the book fascinating. Reading a scholarly account of its origins and development made me very sorry that I have lost fluency. I found the poems and writings very difficult to read and tended to skip to the English translation, confirming Louden’s comment that Mennonites are not accustomed to reading this language.

Although this is an academic book, and the casual reader may want to skim through parts of it, it is written in a very accessible style and provides good information about the Pennsylvania Dutch language.

See also:

Old Order Mennonite groups in Ontario are growing
The ‘simple’ life in raising an Amish family
History surprises
Customs vary among Ontario Amish

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Comments

I have a strong Pa. Dutch upbringing. Where and how can I get a copy of this book. Thanks CB

You can contact the publisher, Johns Hopkins University Press, or order the book through your local bookstore. This website has more information about the book: http://padutch.net/

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