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Map 0.1 World map with language families xi
Figure 0.1 IPA consonants xii
Figure 0.2 IPA vowels xii
About the Website xiii
List of Maps and Figures xv
Preface xvii
Part I Linguistic Preliminaries: Approach and Theory
Introductory Note: On Language 1
1 All Languages Were Once Spanglish 3
The Mexican State of Coahuila y Tejas 3
What Is Language? 4
How Many Languages Are There? 6
How and When Did Language Get Started? 9
The Structure of Spanglish 13
Final Note: The Encounter of Spanish and English on Television in the United States 17
Exercises 18
Discussion Questions 20
Notes 20
References 21
Further Reading 21
2 The Language Loop 22
The Australian Walkabout 22
Introducing the Language Loop 23
Language and Cognition 26
Language, the World, and Culture 28
Language and Linguistic Structure 31
Language, Discourse, and Ideology 32
On Major and Minor Languages 33
Final Note: The Contingencies of Time, Place, and Biology 35
Exercises 37
Discussion Questions 37
Notes 38
References 38
Further Reading 39
3 Linguistics and Classification 40
The Role of Sanskrit in Philology 40
Of Linguistics, Philology, Linguists, and Grammarians 42
Genetic Classification 46
Areal Classification 48
Typological Classification 51
Functional Classification 55
Final Note: The Role of Sanskrit in India Today 57
Exercises 58
Discussion Questions 59
Notes 60
References 60
Further Reading 61
Part II Effects of Power
Introductory Note: On Power 63
4 Effects of the Nation-State and the Possibility of Kurdistan 65
Lines Are Drawn in the Sand 65
The Status of Language on the Eve of the Nation-State 66
The Epistemology of the Nation-State 69
The French Revolution, German Romanticism, and Print Capitalism 71
Standardization and the Instilling of Vergonha 75
Language and Individual Identity 76
What's Race Got to Do with It? 78
The Problematic Race-Nation-Language Triad 79
Final Note: The Kurds Today - Different Places, Different Outcomes 84
Language Profile: Kurdî / [Kurdish (Indo-European)] 85
Exercises 90
Discussion Questions 91
Notes 91
References 92
Further Reading 93
5 The Development of Writing in the Litmus of Religion and Politics 94
The Story of the Qur'¿¡n 94
Magico-Religious Interpretations of the Origins of Writing 95
Steps Toward the Representation of Speech 97
Types of Writing Systems 100
Religion and the Spread of Writing Systems 105
The Always Already Intervention of Politics 108
Orality and Literacy 111
Final Note: Azerbaijan Achieves Alphabetic Autonomy 114
Language Profile: [Arabic (Afro-Asiatic)] 114
Exercises 119
Discussion Questions 122
Notes 123
References 124
Further Reading 124
6 Language Planning and Language Law: Shaping the Right to Speak 125
Melting Snow and Protests at the Top of the World 125
Language Academies: The First Enforcers 127
Another Look at Prescriptivism 129
Making Language Official: A Tale of Three Patterns 131
Language Policy and Education: A Similar Tale of Three Patterns 139
Language Planners and Language Police 144
Final Note: Choosing Death or Life 146
Language Profile: [Tibetan (Sino-Tibetan)] 147
Exercises 152
Discussion Questions 153
Notes 154
References 155
Further Reading 156
Part III Effects of Movement
Introductory Note: On Movement 159
7 A Mobile History: Mapping Language Stocks and Families 161
Austronesian Origin Stories 161
Population Genetics and Links to Language 162
A Possible Polynesian Reconstruction 166
Linguistic Reconstructions Revisited 168
Proto-Indo-European and Its Homeland 173
Other Language Stocks and Their Homelands 176
Models of Spread 183
Lost Tracks 186
Final Note: On Density and Diversity 187
Language Profile: 'Olelo Hawai'i [Hawaiian (Austronesian)] 187
Exercises 194
Discussion Questions 195
Notes 195
References 196
Further Reading 197
8 Colonial Consequences: Language Stocks and Families Remapped 198
Eiffel Towers in Vietnam 198
Time-Depths and Terminology 199
The Middle Kingdom: Government-Encouraged Migrations 201
Linguistic Geography: Residual Zones and Spread Zones 203
Spreading Eurasian Empires: The Persians, Mongols, Slavs, and Romans 206
Religions as First Nations and Missionaries as Colonizers 213
English as an Emergent Language Family 215
Final Note: Creoles and the Case of Kreyòl Ayisyen 218
Language Profile: Tiéng Vi¿t [Vietnamese (Austro-Asiatic)] 219
Exercises 223
Discussion Questions 226
Notes 226
References 228
Further Reading 229
9 Postcolonial Complications: Violent Outcomes 230
Tamil Tigers Create New Terrorist Techniques 230
What's in a Name? Burma/Myanmar 232
Modern Sudan: The Clash of Two Colonialisms 235
The Caucasian Quasi-States: Two Types of Conflict 238
Poland's Shifting Borders 242
Terrorism on the Iberian Peninsula: Basque and the ETA 244
Québécois Consciousness and the Turbulent 1960s 245
The Zapatista Uprising and Indigenous Languages in Chiapas 247
Final Note: The Parsley Massacre in the Dominican Republic 249
Language Profile: Tamil (Dravidian) 250
Exercises 254
Discussion Questions 255
Notes 256
References 257
Further Reading 257
Part IV Effects of Time
Introductory Note: On Time 259
10 The Remote Past: Language Becomes Embodied 261
Look There! 261
Seeking Linguistic Bedrock 262
The Primate Body and Human Adaptations to Language 263
Evolution in Four Dimensions 269
The Genetic Story 270
Grammatical Categories and Deep-Time Linguistics 275
Complexity and the Arrow of Time 279
Final Note: The Last Stone Age Man in North America 282
Language Profile: !Xóõ [Taa (Khoisan)] 283
Exercises 288
Discussion Questions 288
Notes 289
References 290
Further Reading 291
11 The Recorded Past: 'Catching Up to Conditions' Made Visible 292
Mongolian Horses 292
Chapter 3: The Invariable Word in English 294
Chapter 4: The Shift to Head-Marking in French 295
Chapter 5: Writing and e-Arabic 299
Chapter 6: Mongolian Cases 301
Chapter 7: Reformulating Hawaiian Identity 304
Chapter 8: Varieties of Chinese - Yesterday and Today 306
Chapter 9: Juba Arabic Pidgin, Nubi, and Other African Creoles 310
Final Note: Language Change in Progress 313
Language Profile: [Mongolian (Mongolic)] 315
Exercises 320
Discussion Questions 321
Notes 322
References 323
Further Reading 323
12 The Imagined Future: Globalization and the Fate of Endangered Languages 324
Gold in the Mayan Highlands 324
Beyond the Nation-State: The Globalized New Economy 325
Money Talks: What Language Does It Speak? 327
When the Language Loop Unravels 329
Language Hotspots 332
Rethinking Endangerment 334
Technology to the Rescue 336
Anishinaabemowin Revitalization in Wisconsin 339
What Is Choice? 341
Final Note: Our Advocacies 342
Language Profile: K'iche' [Quiché (Mayan)] 342
Exercises 347
Discussion Questions 349
Notes 350
References 350
Glossary 353
Subject Index 359
Language Index 373
This book began with a simple phone call. In the Fall Semester of 2010, Julie was in Durham, North Carolina, where she is a Professor of Linguistics and Cultural Anthropology at Duke University. Phillip was living in Los Angeles, where he was a Postdoctoral Fellow in the Linguistics Department at the University of Southern California. We were on the phone to speak about the pleasures and challenges of teaching a course called Languages of the World. We found ourselves in familiar conversational territory: lamenting the lack of materials for teaching the course in the interdisciplinary approach developed at Duke. "Well," Phillip said, "we could write our own book." Julie laughed, imagining the amount of work required to pull together a project of the magnitude necessary to capture the dynamics of the pedagogical approach she had helped to create. But the seed had been planted. Only one question remained: Could we do it?
Beginning in the mid-1990s, Julie had been teaching Languages of the World taught at Duke, which was pioneered by Professor Edna Andrews in the Department of Slavic and Eurasian Studies. They wanted their students to have a broad understanding of language. Thus, they balanced the traditional content of such a course - review of the language families of the world, emphasis on linguistic structures, historical reconstruction - with the many rich nonlinguistic contexts in which languages are actually used. So, as students learned about the case and aspectual systems of Russian, for example, they also learned about the history of the Slavic language family, Cyrillic writing, Russian folk songs, and more. This approach required a great deal of work on the part of the instructor, since no materials systematically crossing linguistic structural information with historical, sociocultural, and political contexts existed in one place.
Over time, the course became a resounding success with students, not only among Linguistics Majors, for whom it is a core course requirement, but also with students from across the Arts and Sciences and even Engineering. The students came for what they heard would be a perspective-shifting and challenging experience. In retrospect, it is easy to understand why this course was so compelling to so many of our students. Our approach does not abstract language away from speakers, but rather situates it around them. It does not abandon experience and affect but makes space to acknowledge that experience and affect are fundamental to understanding why speakers make the choices they make about language. Simply put, students found themselves in the conversations the course made possible.
Once committed to writing our own materials Julie and Phillip agreed to meet in New York City in the Fall Semester 2011 when Julie was teaching the Duke in New York Arts and Media program. We went to work on a book proposal. The next summer, we found ourselves in a part of the world inspiring to both of us: Eastern Europe, with Julie in Romania and Phillip in Poland. We began to outline the book in Krakow, Poland where Phillip was attending Polish Language School, and we began writing the manuscript in Ukraine on a long train ride from Kiev to L'viv. Our research and writing continued nonstop for the next two and a half years, and our project went where we went: Bucharest, Romania; Durham, North Carolina; Los Angeles; Miami; Madrid, Spain; New York City; Saigon, Vietnam; Ulan Baatar, Mongolia.
During these years of writing, we have endeavored to stretch intellectually as far beyond our own experiences as possible. Nevertheless, our personal experiences are clearly reflected in the pages of our book. The most obvious example is that we have written about the languages we know and have studied, which include English, French, German, Mongolian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Spanish, Swahili, and Vietnamese. In addition to being professional linguists, we are committed to language learning, and our knowledge of other languages has given us wide canvases to paint on. For instance, the Language Profiles on Vietnamese in Chapter 8 and Mongolian in Chapter 11 are the direct result of Julie's experience living and studying in Vietnam and Mongolia during the writing of this book.
We are also committed to interdisciplinarity, and our approach to linguistics is informed by a range of disciplines, all of which figure in Languages in the World: anthropology and anthropological linguistics, evolutionary theory, historical linguistics, history and philosophy of linguistics, genetics, language variation and change, poststructuralist approaches to critical theory, race and gender studies, and sociolinguistics. Our interdisciplinary commitment is reflected in our diverse intellectual interlocutors. Though you will not find explicit reference to all of the following names in our book, ripples of their thinking are nevertheless evident in our writing: anthropologist Stuart Hall; general scientists Jared Diamond, Charles Darwin, Francisco Varela, William James, and Humberto Maturana; historian Benedict Anderson; linguists (dialectologists, historical linguists, sociolinguists, and psycholinguists) Norman Faircloth, Charles Ferguson, Joshua Fishman, Joseph Greenberg, Jacob Grimm, Roman Jakobson, William Labov, Stephen Levinson, Johanna Nichols, Michael Silverstein, Michael Tomasello, Uriel and Max Weinreich, Walt Wolfram, and William Dwight Whitney; philosophers Judith Butler, Michel Foucault, Antonio Gramsci, Julia Kristéva, and Giyathri Spivak; and sociologists Pierre Bourdieu and Irving Goffman. All of these researchers share a general commitment to understanding the context, the situatedness, of humans in their psychosocial and sociopolitical worlds. In an effort to unburden our readers from excessive citations, we have tried to minimize references to these scholars throughout the book and acknowledge our debt to them here.
The familiar questions of a book addressing languages of the world are: What are the language families of the world? and What are the major structural characteristics of the languages in those families? These are, indeed, significant questions. We, too, want to address them here, and we also ask two more questions: Why does the current map of the languages of the world look the way it does? and How did it get to be that way? In order to answer these further questions, we need not only to broaden our perspective but also to create a new organizational framework. First, we acknowledge that the linguistic world goes around on the day-to-day interactions between individuals. Second, we see that the answers to the additional questions we are asking require our approach to focus less on the microdynamics of individual interactions and more on macroconcerns organized by the topics of power, movement, and time. Our extralinguistic attention in this book is thus given to political struggles, population movements both large and small, the spread of religious beliefs, and the ever-present effects of economics.
By organizing our presentation around the topics of power, movement, and time, we are able:
We have written this book with several audiences in mind. To undergraduate linguistics majors and minors, we intend for this book to complement the information presented in your introductory course, where you learned disciplinary metalanguage and reviewed the subdisciplines of linguistics. To undergraduate majors in other social sciences, we want to invite you into the world of language. To graduate students in linguistics who might not have always considered the historical and sociopolitical dynamics of language on a world scale, we hope the information provided here will be new and perhaps eye-opening, just as we hope it will be to graduate students in other disciplines who might not have always been aware of the importance of language in the areas they study. To professional linguists using this book as a teaching resource, we have worked to make a framework generous enough so that you can enrich our chapter discussions and end-of-chapter exercises with your specialties. To professional linguists using this book as a reference, we have endeavored to provide the widest and most diverse archive possible and hope that you find our approach promising. To general readers, we hope to have answered your burning questions about human language. To all of our readers, we have tried to make this sprawling story of the languages of the world as lively as possible.
We acknowledge from the outset that our book will be challenging to many readers in many ways. First, our historical scope is large and extends back at times...
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