Title: Folie 1
1 Typology and the history of languages
Bernd Heine Lyon, 12 May 2008
2Typology and the history of African languages
- A gloomy past
- The history of African linguistics, at least up
until the 1960s, suggests that linguistic
typology has played a role in reconstructing
language history that was not really beneficial.
Consider a few selected examples - (1) Morphological typology was used to justify
not only genetic classifications but also
language evolution.
3Typology and the history of languages
- Carl Meinhof imposed the 19th century typology on
African languages - Isolating languages Sudansprachen
- Agglutinating languages Bantusprachen
- Inflectional languages Hamitensprachen
- Meinhof, Carl 1910. Die moderne
Sprachforschung in Afrika. Berlin.
4- Westermanns (1935) notion Sudansprachen
- A Labial-velars (kp, gb)
- B Lexical tone
- C Structure CV in word stems
- D Lack of morphology, reliance on syntax
- E Preposed objects (SOV), preposed genitive,
postpositions - F Dative expressed by give
- G Widespread S V O word order
- H Nominal plural formed by third person plural
pronoun, also by reduplication - I Lack of grammatical gender, animate vs.
inanimate instead - J Lack of passives
- K Use of plural-forming pronouns i and a
- L Use of a- to form de-verbal nouns.
- Westermann, Diedrich 1935. Charakter und
Einteilung der Sudansprachen. Africa 8, 2
129-48.
5-
- Meinhofs hypothesis was adopted by subsequent
generations of Africanists, but he himself went
even one step further He proposed an
evolutionary scenario according to which Africas
isolating languages constitute the first stage of
linguistic evolution, followed by the
agglutinating stage, and the peak of linguistic
evolution was reached when people were blessed
enough to invent inflection in Africa and
elsewhere. -
- Meinhof, Carl 1910. Die moderne
Sprachforschung in Afrika. Berlin. - ----- 1912. Die Sprachen der Hamiten.
Hamburg.
6- (b) A. N. Tuckers classification of the Kuliak
languages (Ik) as being related to Ancient
Egyptian rested on the basis of typological
similarities in the paradigm of personal
pronouns. - Tucker, A. N. 1967. Erythraic elements and
patternings Some East African findings.
African Language Review 6 17-25.
7- (2) Presence vs. absence of a sex-based gender
system has been taken to suggest questionable
genetic classifications, such as following -
- Carl Meinhofs (1912) classification of Hamitic
languages, where the presence of a gender system
was taken as criterial for membership in this
family. - Meinhof, Carl 1912. Die Sprachen der Hamiten.
Hamburg.
8- (b) Bernhard Struck and Diedrich Westermanns
distinction between Niloto-Sudanic and
Hamito-Sudanic, and subsequently the split by
Tucker and Bryan (1956 1966) between Nilotic
( Western Nilotic) and Paranilotic ( Eastern
and Southern Nilotic). - Westermann, Diedrich 1940. Die Sprachen
Afrikas. In H. Baumann, R. Thurnwald D.
Westermann 1940, Völkerkunde Afrikas. Essen. Pp.
375-453. - Tucker, A. N., Margaret Bryan W. Leslau 1966.
Linguistic analyses. Handbook of African
Languages Oxford University Press.
9- (c) The genetic division between Chado-Hamitic
and Chadic languages by Johannes Lukas was
motivated to quite some extent by the fact that
the former have, while the latter lack a gender
system. - Lukas, Johannes 1939. Die Verbreitung der
Hamiten in Afrika. Scientia 33 108-18.
10A brighter future?
- What then is the present role of language
typology in reconstructing Africas linguistic
history? - One major innovation We are now able to
distinguish between two historical factors
genetic and areal relationship.
11We have a fairly good overview of the genetic
relationship patterns among the languages of
Africa. But what about areal relationship?
Greenberg, J. H. 1963. The languages of Africa.
The Hague Mouton.
12- Previous work (Greenberg 1959 1983 Larochette
1959 Welmers 1974 Gregersen 1977 Meeussen
1975) was characterized by a search for what
following Meeussen (1975) we call Africanisms
(Heine Leyew 2008). With this term we are
referring to properties that satisfy the
following set of criteria - African areal properties according
- to Greenberg (1983 3) are "those
- which are either exclusive to Africa,
- though not found everywhere within it,
- or those which are especially common
- in Africa although not confined to that
- continent. Joseph Greenberg
Greenberg, Joseph H. 1959. Africa as a linguistic
area. In Bascom and Herskovits (eds.) 1959. Pp.
15-27.
13- The questions one may ask relate on the one hand
to a comparison of different kinds of linguistic
relationship - Typology as a diagnostic
- Does typology reflect genetic relationship?
- Sometimes yes, sometimes no.
- - Does typology reflect areal relationship?
Sometimes yes, sometimes no.
14- Typology as a methodological tool
- - Can typology be of help in discovering genetic
relationship? The answer is flatly no typology
is more of an obstacle than a useful tool for
genetic reconstruction. - Can typology be of help in discovering areal
relationship? Yes, it is the most important tool
for the reconstruction of areal relationship. -
- BUT There is no one-to-one relationship between
typological and areal structuring.
15- Typology and areal classification
16- Characterization of a linguistic area
(sprachbund) - a There are a number of languages spoken in one
and the same general area. - b The languages share a set of linguistic
features whose presence can be explained with
reference to neither genetic relationship, drift,
universal constraints on language structure or
language development, nor to chance. - c This set of features is not found in languages
outside the area. - d On account of (b), the presence of these
features must be the result of language
contact. - Heine, Bernd and Derek Nurse (eds.)
2008. A linguistic geography of Africa.
Cambridge Cambidge University Press.
17- Widely recognized sprachbund-like units
- - the Balkans (for convenient summaries, see
e.g. Joseph 1992 Feuillet 2001), - - Meso-America (Campbell et al. 1986),
- - Ethiopia (Ferguson 1976 for a critical
review, see Tosco 2000), - - South Asia (Masica 1976 Emeneau 1980 Ebert
2001), - - the East Arnhem Land (Heath 1978 1981),
- - the Amerindian Pacific Northwest Coast (Jacobs
1954 Sherzer 1976 Beck 2000), - - the Vaupés basin of northwest Amazonia
(Aikhenvald 1996 2002 2003), - - Standard Average European (Haspelmath 1998
2001), - - and the Daly River area of Australia (Dixon
2002 674-9).
18- Linguistic areas in Africa?
19Phonological zones in Africa (Clements Rialland
2008)
20The Macro-Sudan Belt labial-velar consonants
(Güldemann 2008)
21- The marked-nominative languages of Africa
(König 2008)
22The Tanzanian Rift Valley area (Kießling, Mous
and Nurse 2008)
23- Problems notoriously associated with sprachbunds
- The isoglosses that make up sprachbunds do not
all coincide. Which isoglosses should be included
or excluded is a matter of much dispute. - Sprachbunds are hypothesized to be the product of
events in the past. Unlike genetic groupings,
however, their potential for reconstructing
history is limited hardly any one of them has
contributed significantly to a better
understanding of the history of the area
concerned. - Their contribution to synchronic linguistics has
also been moderate.
24- MetatypyAn ideal linguistic area would be one
having in particular the following
characteristics - (a) The languages making up the area share the
same organization of semantic structure. - (b) They also share the same patterns in which
morphemes are concatenated to form sentences,
phrases, and words. - (c) The grammatical constructions are equivalent
across the languages of the area.
25- (d) What distinguishes the languages is that each
uses different forms but, on account of (a) and
(b), each form has an exact structural and
semantic equivalent in the other languages. - (e) Accordingly, the languages are
intertranslatable to the extent that the task of
the translator or language learner is simply
confined to inserting the appropriate lexical and
grammatical forms to move from one language of
the area to another. - (f) The linguistic area is the result of language
contact, that is, of a clearly definable
historical process of linguistic assimilation.
26- Linguistic communities that are said to have
undergone metatypy (Ross 1997 146) - The Indian village Kupwar (Gumperz Wilson 1971)
- Northwestern New Britain, New Guinea (Thurston
1987 1982) - The Gangou dialect of Chinese and the Mongolic
language Minhe Monguor (Yongzhong, Chuluu,
Slater, Stuart 1997) - Arvanítika, the Albanian dialects spoken in
central Greece, and Greek (Sasse 1985) - The Oceanic language Takia and the Papuan
language Waskia of Papua New Guinea (Ross 1996
2001).
27- Metatypy situations compared to sprachbunds
- (1) Metatypic situations are characterized by a
much more pervasive degree of structural
isomorphism. - (2) They usually consist of a severely limited
number of languages, sometimes no more than two
(even though there is no theoretical limit as to
how many languages are required). - (3) There usually is fairly detailed information
on the sociolinguistic and historical factors
that contributed to the rise of metatypy. - (4) While directionality in linguistic diffusion
is frequently a controversial issue in the case
of sprachbunds, in most cases of metatypy there
is solid information on the patterns and
directionality of linguistic transfer across
languages.
28- Resumé
- Many situations in Africa are suggestive of
metatypy but, to my knowledge, no clear case has
been documented so far.
29Any questions?