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Title: Language and Religion:


1
Chapter 5
  • Language and Religion
  • Mosaics of Culture

2
Language Religion
  • Mentifacts
  • the central, enduring elements of a culture
    expressing its values, beliefs, including
    language, religion, folklore, artistic tradition
  • components of the ideological subsystem of
    culture that help shape the belief system of a
    society and transmit to succeeding generations
  • dynamic, in constant evolution

3
Language
  • Is the means of transmission of culture and the
    medium through which its beliefs and standards
    are expressed

4
Language.
  • the most important medium to transfer culture
  • Can determine perceptions, attitudes,
    understanding, responses of a society
  • an organized system of spoken words by which
    people communicate with each other with mutual
    comprehension

5
Language numbers
  • Prehistoric times 10,000 to 15,000 tongues
  • Cultural divergence
  • 7,000 or so remaining 20 to 50, no longer being
    learned/ dead
  • 2100 A.D. estimate is 600 approx. current
    languages in existence
  • Today greater than ½ worlds population speak
    only 8 languages

6
World distribution of living languages, 2004 - of
perhaps 6800 languages still spoken today
Asia 33 Africa 30 Pacific area 19 Americas
15 Europe 3
Estimated 1-2 languages lost each week
7
Language diversity
  • Gradations between languages
  • Chinese, Mandarin, Cantonese, Hakka, others
    sound differently, but all use kanji characters
  • European languages Spanish, Italian, French,
    Romanian
  • Arabic a number of related but distinct tongues
  • Sub-Saharan languages 1500 languages language
    variants

8
Languages spoken
  • Highest numbers in millions
  • Mandarin (China) 1076
  • English 551
  • Hindi/Urdu (India, Pakistan) 498
  • Spanish 427
  • Russian 267
  • Bengali (Bangladesh, India) 215
  • Portuguese 195
  • Malay-Indonesian 176
  • Japanese132
  • French 131
  • German 128

9
Language families
  • A group of languages descended from a single,
    earlier tongue (classification by sounds)
  • Estimated 30 to 100 language families worldwide
  • Romance languages
  • Latin in the Roman Empire, collapse cultural
    divergence
  • Emergence of several different, but related
    languages
  • Protolanguage (ancestor)
  • For romance languages Latin

10
Indo-European Family
  • Largest family
  • Spoken by ½ world
  • 8700-10,000 years old
  • From Agri-Rev. near the Caspian Sea

11
Genetic classification
  • Classification of languages by origin
    historical relationship
  • Germanic languages
  • English
  • German
  • Dutch
  • Scandinavian

12
Language distribution
  • Can include a large area, yet only yield a small
    number of speakers
  • Example Amerindian
    language families
  • 3 families
  • Close relationship with
    Asian languages
  • Corresponding with
    waves of migration

13
World language families
14
Language spread
  • Spatial diffusion process
  • 1. Relocation of massive
    population (dispersion
    of speakers)

Bantu of Africa
15
Language spread
  • 2. Adoption (acquisition of speakers) results
    from
  • 1. Conquest
  • 2. Religious conversions
  • 3. Superiority of culture
  • Adoption becomes a necessity
  • Medium of commerce, law, civilization, personal
    prestige

16
Spatial diffusion occurs
  • Relocation diffusion (transported by cultural
    dominance)
  • The to expansion diffusion acculturation
  • Example hierarchical diffusion
  • India English prestigious
  • Africa English use more impressive than Swahili
  • Barriers to diffusion
  • Cultural Greeks
  • Physical - mountains, Pyrenees Basque

17
Language change
  • Separate language formation
  • 1. Migration
  • 2. Segregation
  • 3. Isolation

18
Language change
  • Change within a language
  • 1. Syntax
  • 2. Borrowed
  • 3. Discover/colonization/technology

19
Dominance of English
  • Indo-European / offspring of proto-Germanic
  • 5th 6th centuries
  • migration of Danish, North German Frisian, Jutes,
    Angeles, and Saxons
  • many dialects, West Saxon dominated (Standard Old
    English)
  • 1066 Norman Conquest
  • in 11th century French dominated nobility
  • 1204 tie with France severed
  • Middle English (French enriched)
  • 15th 16th centuries Early Modern English

20
Worldwide diffusion
Since 1600s 7 million English speakers increased
to 375 million Today 1.5 billion speakers 375
native 375 second language 750 with reasonable
ability
21
International English
22
Speech communities
  • Standard language
  • Accepted community norms of
  • 1. Syntax
  • 2. Vocabulary
  • 3. Pronunciation
  • Plus dialects dialect of dominance
  • Reflecting areal, social, professional differences

23
Dialects speech variants
  • 1. Vocabulary
  • 2. Pronunciation
  • 3. Rhythm
  • 4. Speed
  • Social dialects
  • Denote social class/education level
  • Usually follows standard language
  • Vernacular
  • Non-standard language
  • Dialect native to locale, or social group

24
Speech regions dialect diffusion in the United
States
25
Pidgin
  • An amalgamation of languages
  • Pidgin is not a mother tongue of any of its
    speakers
  • A creation of essentially a new language
  • mixture of dominate languages
  • main languages broken down
  • baby talk
  • Past 400 years 100 new languages

26
Creole
  • Created when pidgin becomes the first language of
    speakers who lost native tongue
  • Examples
  • Swahili Bantu dialects
  • Afrikaans pidginized Dutch African
  • Haitian Creole pidginized French African

27
Lingua franca
  • Established language used habitually for
    communication by people whose native tongues are
    mutually incomprehensible
  • Examples
  • Swahili
  • English
  • Hindi in India
  • Mandarin in China

28
Official language
  • A designated single language for governments,
    school, universities, courts
  • Nigeria 350 different
    languages, English is
    official

29
Languages on the landscape
  • Toponyms place names
  • 1. Historical
  • chester (Latin castra) camp Winchester
  • ing, ham (Anglo Saxon) family, people, hamlet
    Birmingham
  • burg (Latin for town)
  • Arabs Cairo victorious, Sudan land of blacks,
    Sahara wasteland

30
Toponyms continued
  • 2. Borrowed from
  • Heroes Columbus, Ohio, Lincoln, Ill
  • Previous locations Moscow, Idaho, Dublin, Calif
  • Distortions Breukelyn Brooklyn
  • Tribal names maha Omaha, kansa Kansas
  • 3. Names consisting of 2 parts
  • Generic classifying
  • Specific modifying or particular
  • Twin Falls, Hudson River, Bunker Hill, Long
    Island

31
Religion - cultural rally point
  • A personal or institutionalized system of worship
    and of faith in the sacred divine

32
Impacts on culture
  • Formalized views
  • Economic patterns
  • Political structures
  • Religious landscapes
  • Scared places of landscape

33
Religions cultural innovations
  • Can be unique to single cultural group
  • Can be related to nearby or distant groups

34
How to classify
  • Two distinctions
  • 1. Monotheism
  • 2. Polytheism
  • Three categories
  • 1. Universalizing
  • 2. Ethnic
  • 3. Tribal

35
Categories
  • Universalizing
  • Buddhism
  • Christian
  • Islam
  • Ethnic
  • Judaism
  • Hindu
  • Shinto
  • Tribal
  • Animism
  • Shamanism

World Patterns 1970 2002 Christian 933 m 2.0
b Islam 503 m 1.3 b Hindu 458 m 900
m Buddhism 180 m 360 m Judaism 14 m 14 m
14 m Secular 850 m Measure of
affiliation More than ½ world population adheres
to universalizing religions
36
Principal world religions
37
Innovation areas and diffusion routes of major
world religions
38
Judaism - ethnic
  • Monotheistic
  • Foundation to Christianity Islam
  • 3,000 4,000 years old, Near East cultural
    hearth
  • Dispersion - immigration
  • Zionism - 1948

39
Variety
  • Ashkenazim (conservative liberal)
  • 80, mixing of genders, dress, language
  • Liberal reformed
  • Ultra Orthodox (shepardic)
  • Hebrew services, traditional dress, beards, hats,
    kosher food, no pork or shellfish, no mixing of
    genders at church
  • Landscape
  • Synagogue (group most important 10 men),
    vineyards

40
Jewish dispersions, A.D. 70 - 1500
41
Christianity - universalizing
  • Monotheistic
  • Parent religion Judaism, Near East
  • Rapid expansion throughout Roman Empire to
    underclasses
  • Accounts for nearly 1/3 world population
    (Protestant Catholic)

42
Expansion diffusion
  • Hierarchical
  • first military outposts, cities
  • Contagious
  • to surrounding populations
  • Relocation
  • faith to the New World Asia through the
    missionary system

43
Christianity split
  • Fall of the Roman Empire
  • Catholic
  • Italy, Spain, Portugal, France, Poland, Ireland
  • Latin America, Philippines, Africa
  • Protestant
  • West northern Europe (The Netherlands, England,
    Germany)
  • Anglo-America, Australia, New Zealand, Oceania,
    South Africa
  • Sub-Saharan Africa
  • both present traditional
  • Ethnic barriers Japan, China India
  • Cultural hearth not important today

44
Christian landscape Untied States
  • 20 denominations 85 of population
  • Catholic
  • Florida, New England, Southwest, New Orleans
  • Utah Mormon
  • South Baptist, the Bible Belt
  • Upper Midwest Lutherans

45
Major religious regions of the United States
46
Religious groups
  • Roman Catholic
  • Largest single church
  • Protestant faiths
  • Larger proportion of population
  • Biggest groups Baptists, Methodists
  • Mormon
  • 2nd fastest growing church worldwide, 14 m
  • American developed religion
  • 80 of Utahs population
  • Jewish
  • 6 m, concentrations NYC, Chicago, Miami

47
Religious landscapes
  • Parish church
  • formed center of small towns
  • village commons (the Puritans)
  • Village church
  • rural communities
  • Central cathedrals
  • in plaza, focus of religious / secular life
  • Cemetery beside church, or outskirts of town

48
Islam (Muslim) - universalizing
  • Monotheistic
  • Parent religion Judaism, Near East, 622 A.D.
  • Contagious diffusion
  • Arabia, Central Asia, No. India, North Africa
  • Relocation diffusion
  • Indonesia, So.Africa, Western Hemisphere
  • Cultural hearth still important location today

49
Islamic regions
  • Asia largest absolute number
  • Africa highest proportion, 42
  • Indonesia highest percentage of any country
  • Sub-groups
  • Sunni 80 to 85 of total
  • Shiites Iran, Iraq, Bahrain, Yemen

50
Spread and extent of Islam
51
Islamic landscape
  • Mosque center of worship community life
  • Community more important than building

52
Hinduism - ethnic
  • Polytheistic
  • Worlds oldest religion
  • perhaps 4,000 years old
  • Web of religious, philosophical, social,
    economic, artistic elements
  • 780 million in India, 80 of pop.
  • Indus River Valley
  • spread by contagious diffusion
  • So.East Asia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Cambodia,
    Thailand, Laos, Vietnam, Myanmar, Sri Lanka

53
Hindu landscape
  • Temples / shrines
  • Holy men / sacred animals
  • Sacred locations
  • Ganges River

54
Buddhism - universalizing
  • Polytheistic
  • Out growth of Hinduism
  • Founded in India, 2,500 years ago
  • Spread by contagious diffusion
  • India to China, then Japan, Southeast Asia
  • Two schools of thought
  • Theravada old school
  • Mahayana more progressive form

55
Buddhism diffusion
  • Contagious
  • North to China, then across to Japan
  • South to Southeast Asia

56
Buddhist landscape
  • Stupa commemorative shrine
  • Temple / pagoda enshrining image or relic of
    Buddha
  • Monastery
  • Bodhi tree

57
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