Title: Historical Sociolinguistics
1Historical Sociolinguistics
So how bad is bad data really? Some examples from
historical language death research 18th October
venue TBC Remco Knooihuizen. University of
Edinburgh
2Saussurian semiology/structualism
- The system in of it self
- Self-contained wholes, inner logic
- Systematic relations
- Relationships determine the character of the
system not the qualities of the elements - Language is the prototypical system
- Analogy for other sign systems (culture)
3Drawbacks of Saussure
- Bi-polar structures appear everywhere you look
- Is that because were looking for them?
- Implicit assumptions of boundaries/borders
- All performance is epiphenomenal
- Real life just gets in the way
- Emphasis on system ignores subjects/persons
- Time and change seem a bit of an afterthought
- Synchrony is privileged over diachrony
4Boasian semiotics of languaculture
- Franz Boas, Ruth Benedict, Edward Sapir, Margaret
Mead, Gregory Bateson - B. L. Whorf
- C. S. Peirce
5Culture
- Language is a part of culture, not separate
- Cultures without borders
- Things fit together
- A Culture has a natural logic but all grammars
leak - Every description is from a point of view
6Charles Sanders Peirce (1839-1914)
- Not many pages to read next week because I expect
you will need to read every page twice!
7Triadic components of the sign
8Intersubjectivity
9Photograph from Plate XIV, Types of Koryak Men
(Jochelson 1908).
10Photograph of anthropologist in the field (Photo
V. Yatylkut).
11Flag of the Koryak Autonomous Okrug
12Masthead of Narodovlastie
13Fractal possibilities of Peircean signs
14Culture, tradition, and language
Language as code (system) Does not necessarily
coincide with culture Culture as semiotic
relations includes language Language is subset
of particular class of signs
15Koryak greetings
16Competence and Performance
- Cant ignore usage as Saussure would have us do
- Indexical function one of the most powerful
aspects of language and totally ignored by
Saussurian structuralism (Chomsky)
17Synthesis of Saussure and Peirce
- Interpretant is understanding of a sign, both
part of it and beyond it - No boundaries in Peirce
- Elements of sign system are internal and external
- Three requisites of any semiotic system
- Finite repertoire (lexicon), rules of
combination, a discursive context