Title: Art in Society
1Art in Society
Venus of Willendorf
Aboriginal Art Van Goghs
Cypresses
2What is Art?
- Art is very difficult to define, but it generally
refers to the manifestations of human creativity
through which people express themselves in dance,
music, song, painting, sculpture, pottery, cloth,
story telling, verse, prose, drama, and comedy. - At least 28,000 years old
This photo, taken in Berlin, Germany, illustrates
art within art. In the background, the
experimental artist Christo has wrapped the
Reichstag. Another man has wrapped himself and
is now posing in front.
3Body Decoration and Adornment
- Perhaps one of the oldest forms of art
- Ranges from permanent (tatoos, piercings, scars,
change in skeleton) to temporary (paint, objects,
clothing) - Aesthetic and social - can represent rank, sex,
occupation, identity, religion - Drawing attention
- Females - makeup, earrings, necklace, belt,
clothing - Males - beards, tatoos, clothing
- Change in status (usually puberty)
4Variation in Art
- Visual Art
- mirroring environment
- differential use of natural materials
- relationship between art and culture
- repetition, space, symmetry, enclosure
- Music
- song style varies with cultural complexity
- importance of a regular rhythm
- Folklore
- urban legends (www.urbanlegends.com or
www.snopes.com) - North Carolina ghost stories
5Art in Other Cultures
- Civilized and Primitive Art
- timelessness
- ethnocentrism
- communal works
- tourist art
- Culture Contact
- with Europeans (Australia)
- with other groups (Native Americans)
- scholars
6Art and Religion
- Definitions of both art and religion focus on the
more than ordinary aspects of each with regard to
how they are different from the ordinary and
profane/secular. - A lot of Western and non-Western art has been
created in association with religion, but it is
important to remember that not all non-Western
art has ritual or religious importance. - Art and religion both have formal (museums and
churches, temples) and informal (parks, homes,
and regular gathering places) venues of
expression. - State-level societies have permanent structures
for religion and art. - Nonstate-level societies lack permanent
structures for religion and art.
7Language and Communication
Proto-Indo-European Linguistic Family Tree
8Introduction
- Language is our primary means of communication.
- Language is transmitted through learning, as part
of enculturation. - Language is based on arbitrary, learned
associations between words and the things they
represent. - Only humans have the linguistic capacity to
discuss the past and future in addition to the
present. - Language serves to convey all the complex,
elaborate behavior that constitutes our culture. - Anthropologists study language in its social and
cultural context.
9Communication
- We communicate by agreeing to call an object,
movement, or abstract concept by a common name in
our spoken language. - Other forms of communication
- Direct facial expression, body stance, gesture,
tone of voice - Indirect writing, algebra, music, painting,
signs - Non-linguistic communication
10Nonhuman Communication
- Systems of communication are not unique to
humans. - Animals communicate through sounds, odors, or
body movements. - Some animal communication systems are symbolic,
which means that even when the referent is not
present, the communication has meaning. - Example Vervet monkeys in Africa
- Closed versus open communication systems
11Call Systems
- Call systems consist of a limited number of
sounds that are produced in response to specific
stimuli (e.g. food or danger) - Calls cannot be combined to produce new calls.
- Calls are reflexive in that they are automatic
responses to specific stimuli. - Although primates use call systems, their vocal
tract is not suitable for speech.
Apes, such as these Congo chimpanzees, use call
systems to communicate in the wild
12Call Systems
Contrasts between human language and a primate
call system
13Sign Language
- A few nonhuman primates have been able to learn
to use American Sign Language (ASL). - Washoe, a chimpanzee, eventually acquired a
vocabulary of over 100 ASL signs. - Koko, a gorilla, regularly uses 400 ASL signs and
has used 700 at least once. - Sherman and Austin--both chimps--were trained on
computer keyboards. Sherman and Austin began
communicating with each other via computers. - Kanzi, another chimp, has come closest to having
a primitive English grammar.
14Sign Language
- These nonhuman primates have displayed some
human-like capacities with ASL. - Joking and lying
- Cultural transmission they have tried to teach
ASL to other animals - Productivity they have combined two or more
signs to create a new expressions - Displacement the ability to talk about things
that are not present
15The Origin of Language
- The human capacity for language developed over
hundreds of thousands of years, as call systems
were transformed into language. - Language is a uniquely effective vehicle for
learning that enables humans to adapt more
rapidly to new stimuli than other primates. - First real language usage probably began 100,000
years ago with early Homo sapiens, or as late as
40,000 years ago. - Language center in the human brain increased.
16The Origin of Language
- By studying creoles and childrens acquisition of
language, we can try to reconstruct how humans
first learned language. - Creoles
- pidgin - simplified version of a language,
generally lacking prepositions and auxiliary
verbs - creole - incorporates vocabulary from two
languages but has a grammar that differs from the
new and native languages - Childrens Acquisition of Language
- a child can learn any language, any grammar
- children around the world learn to speak at the
same general age - childrens speech patterns are the same in
different languages - errors children make are consistent with creoles
17Descriptive or Structural Linguistics
- In human language, meaningful sounds and
sequences are combined without conscious
knowledge of the rules of a language. - Language rules are those that refer to patterns
of speaking that are discoverable in actual
speech. - Grammar includes the unconscious principles that
predict how most people talk. - Descriptive (or structural) linguistics tries to
discover the rules of phonology--the patterning
of sounds morphology--the patterning of sound
sequences to form meaningful units and
syntax--the patterning of phrases and sentences
that predict how most speakers of a language talk.
18Phonology
- There is a huge number of phones (different
sounds) that the human vocal tract can make each
language uses only some of these. - Hard to learn a foreign language and the sounds.
- Phones might take different positions (e.g. ng
sound) - Alphabet can represent phones differently
- Example Ghoti Fish (tough, women, position)
- English has 26 letters but 40 distinct sounds
- Phoneme sound or set of sounds that makes a
difference in meaning in the language - ways of pronouncing sounds a (ay, ah), the
(thee, thu)
19Morphology
- Morpheme is the smallest unit of language that
has meaning could be one word, could be a
prefix, could be a signifying syllable. - Examples dog (word), indefinite (prefix),
boldly (adverb sig) - A lexicon consists of words and morphs and their
meanings a dictionary approximates the lexicon
of a language. - Meanings can depend on order (English, French, or
Spanish) or changing morphemes (usually called a
declension, as in Latin, Russian, or Greek). - Some languages have gendered words (Romance
languages, German, Greek, Old English, etc.).
20Syntax
- The rules of syntax may be partly learned in
school, but most children know many of them as
soon as they learn the language. - Example Lewis Carrolls Through the Looking
Glass - Twas brillig, and the slithy toves
- Did gyre and gimble in the wabe.
- All mimsy were the borogoves,And the mome
raths outgrabe. - Which words are adjectives? Verbs? Singular
noun? Plural noun?
21Historical Linguistics
- Historical linguistics focuses on how language
changes over time. - Compare the following works from Old, Middle, and
Modern English - Beowulf (Old English)
Lo, praise of the prowess of people-kings of
spear-armed Danes, in days long sped,we have
heard, and what honor the athelings won!Oft
Scyld the Scefing from squadroned foes, from many
a tribe, the mead-bench tore,awing the earls.
Hwæt! We Gardena in geardagum, þeodcyninga, þrym
gefrunon, hu ða æþelingas ellen fremedon. Oft
Scyld Scefing sceaþena þreatum, monegum mægþum,
meodosetla ofteah, egsode eorlas.
22Historical Linguistics
- The Canterbury Tales (Middle English)
- This worthy lymytour, this noble Frere,
- He made alwey a maner louryng chiere
- Upon the Somonour, but for honestee
- No vileyns word as yet to hym spak he.
- This worthy limiter, this noble friar, He turned
always a lowering face, and dire, Upon the
summoner, but for courtesy No rude and insolent
word as yet spoke he.
23Historical Linguistics
- Hamlet (Early Modern English)
- For who would bear the whips and scorns of
time,The oppressor's wrong, the proud man's
contumely1,The pangs of despised love, the law's
delay,The insolence of office and the
spurnsThat patient merit of the unworthy
takes,When he himself might his quietus2
makeWith a bare bodkin3? Who would fardels4
bear,To grunt and sweat under a weary life,But
that the dread of something after death,The
undiscover'd country from whose bourn5No
traveller returns, puzzles the willAnd makes us
rather bear those ills we haveThan fly to others
that we know not of?
1 Haughtiness and contempt 2 Death 3 Dagger 4
Burden 5 Destination
24Historical Linguistics
- Historical linguistics also studies the long-term
variation of speech by studying protolanguages
and daughter languages. - Anthropologists are interested in historical
linguistics because cultural features sometimes
correlate with the distribution of language
families. - Linguists can reconstruct changes that have
occurred by comparing contemporary languages that
are similar these usually derive from a common,
ancestral language. - Proto-Indo-European
- Sino-Tibetan
- Borrowing
25Proto-Indo-European
- 50 of the worlds populations speak an
Indo-European language - Many rules uncovered by Jones and Grimm
- In Germanic, d of Romance switched to t, as in
duo to two - The p of Romance switched to f, as in pater to
father. - Cognates - words that are similar in sound and
meaning
26Sino-Tibetan
- Another major language family, spoken by more
than a billion people, is Sino-Tibetan.
27Linguistic Divergence
- Gradual change
- Natural boundaries
- Social boundaries
- Borrowing
- Change by force
- Military means
28Language and Culture
- Explaining the diversity of language can help
explain the interaction between language and
other parts of culture. - Culture influencing language
- Berlin and Kays color word study
- simple societies will have few color words
(white/black) - complex societies will have numerous color
words (red, green, blue, yellow . . . To colors
found in a J. Crew catalogue) - All languages have a core vocab of about the same
size. - Language influencing culture
- Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis suggested that language is
a force in its own right and it affects how
individuals in a society perceive and conceive of
reality.
29Ethnography of Speaking
- Sociolinguistics is concerned with the
ethnography of speaking--with cultural and
subcultural patterns of speech variation in
different social contexts. - Examples
- A non-native speaker might know all the rules of
English but is unsure what to say in social
situations--is it more proper to talk about the
weather, or about personal finances? - Social status and speech
- Higher class tends to have more homogeneous
speech - Honorifics (in German and in English)
- Gender differences - will talk about on 7/17
- Multilingualism and Codeswitching
- Interethnic communication - will talk about on
7/17