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ANTHROPOLOGY AND THE STUDY OF LANGUAGE

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Title: LANGUAGE IN CULTURE Author: Steve Ferzacca Last modified by: U of L Created Date: 8/1/2002 8:52:59 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ANTHROPOLOGY AND THE STUDY OF LANGUAGE


1
ANTHROPOLOGY AND THE STUDY OF LANGUAGE
  • Linguistic Anthropology
  • reconstructing ancient languages by comparing to
    contemporary descendants-historical linguistics
  • how universal features of all languages says
    something about the human brain
  • how language differences reflect world view
  • how speech reflects social relations

2
Language is a System of Symbols
  • symbols are objects, events, speech sounds,
    written forms, gestures, which humans attach
    meaning
  • Symbols operate in changing fields of social
    relationships
  • symbols are multivocal -- enables a wide range of
    groups individuals to relate to the same symbol
    in a variety of ways

3
LINGUISTIC ANTHROPOLOGY
  • Descriptive Linguistics or FORMAL LINGUISTICS
  • study language as a formal system of rules
  • a set of rules that can be studied apart from its
    context
  • Historical Linguistics
  • Ethnolinguistics

4
Language in its Social Cultural Settings
  • Does language influence the perception of reality
    and cultural behavior?
  • Does language reflect reality in a culture?
  • Or, is it both?

5
LINGUISTIC RELATIVISM and DETERMINISM
  • Edward Sapir/Benjamin Lee Whorf the
    Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis
  • language culture intrinsically linked
  • "language is a guide to social reality... it
    powerfully conditions all our thinking about
    social problems and processes."

6
Language and Thought
  • Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
  • Language predisposes people to see the world in a
    certain way guiding behavior
  • Language reflects reality
  • Rich vocabulary reflects a cultural focus

7
GRAMMAR AND CONSCIOUSNESS
  • linguistic conditioning of behavior linguistic
    determinism
  • language is not simply a way of voicing ideas,
    but the very thing which shapes those ideas

8
Lexicon and Focal Vocabulary
  • lexicon a vocabulary a dictionary of terms
  • focal vocabulary -- specialized set of terms
    distinctions that are particularly important to a
    certain group
  • tell us something about world view, historical
    events, ideas, influences, perceptions important
    to a particular group
  • Inuit terms for snow skiers terms for snow

9
Ethnolinguistics/Ethnoscience/Ethnosemantics
  • the new ethnography (1960s)
  • emics and etics
  • maps of a lexicon and its focal vocabularies
  • method of studying parts (domains) of a culture
    primarily on the basis of how they are lexically
    encoded by native speakers

10
SOCIOLINGUISTICS AND ETHNOGRAPHY OF COMMUNICATION
  • Trace connections among linguistic and social
    variables
  • speech the way people use a language
  • Linguistic features as markers of class divisions
    in society
  • Languages in contact

11
Sociolinguistics
  • Sociolinguistics - the study of the relationships
    between a language system (langue) and speaking
    (parole) in a social and cultural context
  • Study of the structure and use of language as it
    relates to its social setting

12
Ethnography of Communication
  • the descriptive study of the use of language,
    deeply embedded in its cultural context (Dell
    Hymes)

13
The acronym SPEAKING
  • S setting and scene
  • P participants
  • E ends the desired or expected outcome
  • A Act how form and content are delivered
  • K key mood or spirit (serious, ironic, etc.)
  • I instrumentalities the dialect or language
    variety
  • N norms speaking conventions
  • G genres different types of performance
    (speech, joke, sermon, etc.)

14
Paralinguistic Features
  • Body language and extralinguistic noises
  • At least 90 of emotional information in English
    is transmitted by body language and tone of
    voice

15
Kinesics
  • System of notating and analyzing postures, facial
    expressions, and body motions that convey messages

16
Social Dialects
  • Forms of a language
  • Reflecting regions or social classes
  • Similar enough to be mutually intelligible
  • Social dialects (or sociolects) are language
    varieties that are correlated not so much with
    geographic as with social space
  • Examples black English, Spanglish, inner city
    Boston, Newfie

17
Regional/Geographic Dialects
  • Define people by where they live
  • southern dialect
  • newfie

18
Language and Gender
  • Linguistic features as markers of social
    divisions in society
  • North American society
  • Men and Women use English differently
  • Language reflects traditional gender inequality

19
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20
Are Women More Polite than Men? N. America
  • Women typically use more polite speech
  • Characterized by a high frequency of honorific
    and softening devices such as hedges and
    questions
  • act like a lady respect those around you
  • Boys and men the masculine voice

21
Languages in Contact
  • Diglossia
  • Bilingualism
  • Pidgins and creoles

22
DIGLOSSIA
  • Speech communities in which two or more varieties
    of the same language are used by some speakers
    under different conditions
  • Classic Arabic of the Koran and diversified local
    forms of Arabic
  • Java Javanese and Bahasa Indonesia

23
BILINGUALISM
  • native-like control of two languages
  • A gradient
  • Degrees or stages of bilingualism based on
    performance the ability to understand and
    produce meaningful utterances in the second
    language

24
Pidgin Languages
  • a pidgin is a lingua franca that comes into use
    in situations where a group of individuals with
    no language in common find a need to communicate
  • a minimal language
  • a mixed language, bulk of vocab usually from the
    language of the dominant power
  • many pidgins are short-lived

25
Creole Languages
  • a creole a pidgin that remains in use and is
    expanded to serve the whole range of functions
    necessary to a speech community over the course
    of two or more generations
  • Reflects hybrid origins

26
SPEECH EVENTS
  • how individuals behave with speech in a specific,
    culturally defined situation

27
LINGUISTIC CODES AND SPEECH COMMUNITIES
  • Speech communities a real social unit within
    which speakers share a repertoire of ways of
    speaking
  • may include one or several languages
  • Members of such communities engage in verbal
    interaction that is not randomly alternating
    between distinct LINGUISTIC CODES but choose
    systematically among them and put them to
    specialized uses

28
CODE SWITCHING
  • Crystal (1987) suggests that code, or language,
    switching occurs when an individual who is
    bilingual alternates between two languages during
    his/her speech with another bilingual person

29
WHY CODE SWITCH?
  • a speaker may not be able to express him/herself
    in one language so switches to the other to
    compensate for the deficiency
  • switching commonly occurs when an individual
    wishes to express solidarity with a particular
    social group
  • to create a special effect

30
CODE SWITCHING AS METACOMMUNICATION
  • Code switching is an indirect form of social
    commentary
  • code switching is a linguistic device for FRAMING
    verbal messages
  • it is a fine-grained technique for identifying
    stretches of talk as particular kinds of doings
    that are intended to accomplish particular kinds
    of work

31
Language Registers
  • A variety of language that serves a particular
    social situation
  • Monolingual code switching styles of speaking
  • The vernacular, the standard, the honorific
  • Specifically defined varieties scientific,
    legal, religious, intimate, etc.

32
LANGUAGE SHIFTS
  • the social meaning communicated by language
    shifts
  • reflexive statements about social structure

33
Language, Nationalism, Ethnicity
  • Linguistic nationalism attempt by ethnic
    minorities and even countries to proclaim
    independence by purging their languages of
    foreign terms or reviving unused languages

34
Language Planning and Identity
  • Purification
  • Revival
  • Reform
  • Standardization
  • Modernization

35
A SPEECH EVENT IN A SPEECH COMMUNITY
36
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40
Discourse, Subjectivity, Power
  • Discourses
  • Ways of talking about the world
  • a system of representation
  • Codes and conventions
  • rules and practices that produced meaningful
    statements and regulated discourse in different
    historical periods
  • about language and practice
  • Discourse is "a group of statements which provide
    a language for talking about ...a particular
    topic at a particular historical moment." 
  • "Discourse, Foucault argues, constructs the
    topic.  It defines and produces the objects of
    our knowledge.  It governs the way that a topic
    can be meaningfully talked about and reasoned
    about.

41
Discourse, Subjectivity, Power
  • Discourse -- the bearer of various subject
    positions
  • Subject positions -- specific positions of agency
    and identity in relation to particular forms of
    knowledge and practice
  • Subjectivity --produced within discourse,
    subjected to discourse.
  • subject position--for us to become the subject
    of a particular discourse,  and thus the bearers
    of its power/knowledge we must locate ourselves
    in the position from which the discourse makes
    most sense, and thus become its 'subjects' by
    subjecting' ourselves to its meanings, power and
    regulation.

42
Discourse, Subjectivity, Power
  • power follows from our casual acceptance of the
    "reality with which we are presented"
  • Power a field of possibilities in which several
    ways of behaving, several reactions and diverse
    comportments may be realized
  • the totality of practices, by which one can
    constitute, define, organize, instrumentalize the
    strategies which individuals in their liberty can
    have in regard to each other.

43
Discourse, Gender, Power
  • sexuality and the body -- sites of power and
    politics
  • socially imposed structures that objectified
    sexual identity and gender differences
  • socially imposed structures that shape gender
    relations and behavior
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