140 likes | 420 Vues
Language. A system of symbolic communication using sounds and/or gestures that are able to be understood by all members within a society that share the language.Examples?Symbol vs. SignalSymbol: Shared understandings about the meaning of certain words, attributes, or objects. Signal: An instinct
E N D
1. Chapter 5 Language and Communication
2. Language A system of symbolic communication using sounds and/or gestures that are able to be understood by all members within a society that share the language.
Examples?
Symbol vs. Signal
Symbol: Shared understandings about the meaning of certain words, attributes, or objects.
Signal: An instinctive sound or gesture that has a natural or self-evident meaning.
3. Humans vs. Primates Koko the Gorilla:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-6277258515422356599&ei=v8NfS6f2CKjGqQKpyoyrCg&q=koko+the+gorilla&hl=en&client=firefox-a#
Chimpanzees, Orangutans and Gorillaz can communicate through sign language at the level of a ~2-3 year old human child.
Human culture is ultimately dependent on an elaborate system of communication far more complex than that of any other species.
4. LinguisticsThe Study of Language (one of the 4 major sub-fields of Anthropology) Descriptive Linguistics
Phonology: Sound-study The study of language sounds
Sounds in some languages that are absent/difficult to pronounce in others?
Morphology: Form-study The study of the patterns or rules of word formation in a language: Verb tenses, pluralization and compound words
Syntax: The patterns or rules by which words are arranged into phrases and sentences
Grammar: The entire formal structure of a language, including morphology and syntax
Grammar rules of different languages? Definite article differences?
5. Historical Linguistics The origins/changing nature of language Deciphering dead languages
Differences between earlier and later forms of the same language
How older languages developed into modern ones
Interrelationships among older languages
6. Language FamilyA group of languages descended from a single ancestral language Indo-European Language Family:
http://www.unilang.org/resources/linguistic/languagefamily_ie.jpg
Slavic Language Family:
http://www.lerc.educ.ubc.ca/LERC/courses/489/worldlang/Russian/language_family.gif
Nilo-Saharan Language Family:
http://mathildasanthropologyblog.files.wordpress.com/2009/01/nilo-sharan.png
The Linguistic divergence of languages may be traced by a method known as glottochronology which compares the core vocabularies of languages (pronouns, lower numerals, and names for body parts and natural objects). Assumption: These basic vocabulary words change more slowly than other words and at a more or less constant rate of 14 to 19 percent per 1,000 years.
7. Processes of Linguistic Divergence Selective Borrowing
Ex: Foreign words in the English language? English words in other languages?
Professional Specialization
Ex: Anthropology terms! Medical, Legal terms
Sub-culture lingo
Examples so far?
8. Language Loss and Revival Language loss usually the result of a dominant society assimilating subordinate societies.
Ex: English colonialism (500 years). In U.S. wiped out about half of all Native American languages.
Over the last ~500 years, 3,500 of the worlds 10,000 or so languages have become extinct because of forced assimilation, epidemics and warfare.
UNESCO (The United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization) is focused on preserving and reviving traditional languages
Initiative B@bel: Promotes multilingualism on the Internet, this initiative aims to bridge the digital divide (over 80% of all internet users speak just 10 languages -- chart on p. 109 in your book) to make access to Internet content and services more equitable for users worldwide.
http://portal.unesco.org/ci/en/ev.php-URL_ID=16541&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html
Reviving and Preserving language through song
Ethnographic Example: Andy Palacio and the Garifuna culture: http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/player/music/genre-wm/garifuna/watina-umalali-sg-wm.html
9. Language in its Social and Cultural Settings Sociolinguistics: Relationship between language and society. How social categories (age, gender, ethnicity, religion, occupation and class) influence the use and significance of distinctive styles of speech.
Gendered Speech: Distinct male and female speech patterns
Ex (book): Lakota language and Dances w/ Wolves
Ex: Gendered speech in U.S. culture?
Dialects: Varying forms of a language that reflect particular regions, occupations, or social classes and that are similar enough to be mutually intelligible.
Ex: Formal (standard) vs. Informal speech
10. The structure of the language one habitually uses influences the manner in which one understands his environment. The picture of the universe shifts from tongue to tongue. -B.J. Whorf Ethnolinguistics: The study of the relationships between language and culture, and how they mutually influence and inform each other
Linguistic Relativity: The idea that distinctions encoded in one language are unique to that language
Ex: Color spectrum and arbitrary names/divisions
Ex: Things most important to a culture are accorded more names and concepts
The Ayamara Indians in the Bolivian Highlands have 200 words for Potato
The Nuer pastoralists of Africa have over 400 names for cattle.
Ex: How many words do we have for car? Types of car?
What do elements of our language say about us
We conquer space, fight the battle of the bulge, carry out a war against drugs, make a killing of the stock market, shoot down an argument, torpedo a plan, spearhead a movement, decapitate a foreign government, or bomb on an exam.
11. Gesture-Call System Body signs account for over 60% of our total communication
It provides the key to speech, providing listeners with the appropriate frame for interpreting what a speaker is saying.
Ideas about personal space? Business space?
Paralanguage: voice effects that convey meaning
Giggling/groaning/sighing/pitch/tempo of words
Tonal languages: In some languages, intoning a word slightly differently will change the word entirely. Ex? (70% of the worlds language are Tonal)
What about texting, email, Facebook, etc without body signs and other cues, how do we get across the right meaning?
(According to a recent study, the intended tone of email messages is perceived correctly only 56% of the time)