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LANGUAGE AND CULTURAL MEANING

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How do members of different cultures express their worldviews? ... Cultural focus: cultural priorities: Horse versus chipmunk. Transformative: gun and bow ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: LANGUAGE AND CULTURAL MEANING


1
LANGUAGE AND CULTURAL MEANING
  • Cultural behavior is not essentially different
    from other forms of learned behavior it is a
    consequence of the dynamic of social living over
    many generations, while individual members of the
    social system are replaced (Foley, 1997 12)

2
Questions
  • How do members of different cultures express
    their worldviews?
  • How do members of different cultures express
    events, experiences, and intentions through
    language?
  • How do speakers express their way of being in the
    world through a particular use of their
    languages?

3
By the way a speaker frames intentions and
activities through language
  • Usage of contrasting words (Blue/white, good/bad)
  • Grammatical forms (Example the structuring
    properties of sentences)

4
The framing of intentions and activities
  • English I must go there.
  • English I make the horse run.
  • Navajo It is only good that I shall go.
  • Navajo The horse is running for me.

5
Language expresses and reflects worldviews
  • Cultural models shared cultural attitudes
  • Language key for transmitting cultural models
  • Language ----Proverbs, stories, etc.
  • -- conveying a way of being in the world
  • --guiding human thought and action
  • -- provides moral lessons

6
Dime con quien andas y te dire quien eres.
7
Concrete and symbolic meanings
  • The horse is running for me
  • concrete object (horse)
  • Dont cry over spilt milk
  • symbolic meaning, metaphorical

8
Why do we study language?
  • To identify cultural models
  • Understand the relationship between language and
    environment
  • language and society

9
The Foundations of Linguistic Anthropology
  • Edward Sapir (18841939) and his student Benjamin
    Whorf (18971941)
  • Linguistic research among Native Americans
  • Sapir lexicon or vocabulary
  • Whorf Grammatical structures

10
Edward Sapir
  • physical environment and social environment
    through the use of language
  • Elements of vocabulary influence speakers
    perceptions
  • Different experience of our world
  • The Paiute utilize unique words for valuable
    geographical locations

11
Sand flat, semicircular valley or hollow, spot
for level ground in mountains surrounded by
ridges.
12
Benjamin Whorf
  • Influences on though and behaviour
  • Grammatical structures of language
  • Grammatical structure and conceptualization of
    time, number, duration

13
Whorf studies among the Hopi
  • Time, number and duration fundamental for Hopi
    culture
  • Hopi Emphasis continuity, cyclicity and
    intensity
  • English Emphasis on boundedness and
    objectification
  • Morning
  • While morning-phase is occurring

14
Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis
  • Language influences peoples perception of the
    world
  • Weak version
  • Strong version

15
Lexical and Cultural Categories
  • Taxonomic systems The classification system that
    orders things in a logical hierarchical way, a
    system that orders by indicating natural
    relationships
  • Semantic domains a summative of words (words put
    together). All sharing a core meaning, related to
    a specific topic Example Kinship terms,
    body-parts words, or colours

16
Language expresses
  • Cultural focus cultural priorities Horse versus
    chipmunk
  • Transformative gun and bow
  • Not static changes over time

17
Why are semantic domains important in the study
of culture?
18
Semantic domains are important because
  • Speakers perception of his/her cultural universe
  • Degree of cultural interest
  • innovation, extension of semantic domains
  • Shows how language and meaning changes over time

19
Lexical (vocabulary) components
  • Kinship terminology comparison
  • Peoples priorities in social relations
  • Usage of words to name relatives
  • Mother, father, son, daughter, etc

20
The analysis of these contrasts reveals that
  • First there is a distinction between generations
    grandmother/mother, father/son
  • Two there is a distinction of sex
    father/mother, son/daughter
  • Third there is also a distinction between direct
    and collateral relatives mother/aunt, son/nephew

21
Componential analysis
  • Determines significance of contrast by isolating
    components of meanings
  • Example kinship terminology
  • ---Younger generation-female-lineal daughter
  • ---Older generation-male-lineal grandfather

22
Kinship terminology not a universal
  • (Seneca ) Iroquoian languages (Quebec, Ontario,
    and New York)
  • My Grandmother and her sister (s) one word
  • My Grandfather and his brother (s) one word
  • My Mother and her sister (s) one word
  • My Father and hiss brother (s) one word

23
Seneca Kinship Terminology
  • Different terms for for older and younger
    siblings
  • My mothers sisters daughter sister
  • My mothers sisters son brother
  • My Fathers brothers daughter sister
  • My fathers brothers son brother

24
Lexical classifications
  • Classification of words to make sense of speech
  • Degrees of complexity
  • Ambiguity Whale fish or mammal
  • Classification indicates
  • cultural interest
  • discrimination

25
Ethnoscience
  • A classification system in a given domain that
    organizes peoples knowledge of aspects of their
    universe, as, for example, botanical or
    zoological terminologies. Ethnoscientific systems
    are based on taxonomic hierarchies of similarity
    and contrast.

26
The classification of words is culturally specific
  • Papagos (Arizona)
  • Life is divided living things and plants
  • Word for living animals
  • Animals are the prototype (best example) of
    living things among the Papagos

27
Focal points and prototypes
  • Focal point of a word is its central sense, its
    best example, agreed upon by culture
  • Prototype idealized, internalized
    conceptualization of an object, quality or
    activity, needs to be understood in the context
    of culture

28
Cultural Presuppositions
  • . Cultural presupposition is the notion that
    participants in speech interactions come to
    interactive situations with certain cultural
    knowledge.
  • . Transmitted language
  • . Some more complex symbolic, rhetorical

29
Summary
  • Members of different cultures express different
    worldviews through a particular use of their
    languages (language frames)
  • Cultural models are expressed and reflected
    primarily through language
  • Proverb
  • The early bird catches the worm.
  • Worldviews are expressed through language use
  • Language frames intentions and activities
  • Framing accomplished through contrasting of
    words, classification of words

30
Discussion Question
  • How do cultural models provide frameworks for
    understanding the physical and social world we
    live in?
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