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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Lessons from Documented Endangered Languages

Edited by K. David Harrison, David S. Rood and Arienne Dwyer
Swarthmore College / University of Colorado / University of Kansas

2008. vi, 375 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 2990 8 / EUR 115.00 / USD 173.00
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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9020 5 / EUR 115.00 / USD 173.00
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This volume represents part of an unprecedented and still growing effort to advance, coordinate and disseminate the scientific documentation of endangered languages. As the pace of language extinction increases, linguists and native communities are accelerating their efforts to speak, remember, record, analyze and archive as much as possible of our common human heritage that is linguistic diversity. The window of opportunity for documentation is narrower than the actual lifetime of a language, and is now rapidly closing for many languages represented in this volume. The authors of these papers unveil newly collected data from previously poorly known and endangered languages. They organize highly complex linguistic facts­ - paradigms, affixes, vowel patterns­ - while pointing out the theoretically challenging aspects of these. Beyond this, they reflect on the social and human dimensions, discussing particular problems of nostalgia and modernity, memory and forgetting, and obsolescence and ethics, while viewing language as not merely data on a page but as a living creation in the minds and mouths of its speakers.


Table of contents

A world of many voices: Editors' introduction
K. David Harrison, David S. Rood and Arienne Dwyer
1–12
Sri Lanka Malay revisited: Genesis and classification
Umberto Ansaldo
13–42
Working Together: The interface between researchers and the native people - The Trumai case
Aurore Monod Becquelin, Emmanuel de Vienne and Raquel Guirardello-Damian
43–66
Tense, Aspect and Mood in Awetí verb-paradigms: Analytic and synthetic forms.
Sebastian Drude
67–110
Tonogenesis in Southeastern Monguor.
Arienne Dwyer
111–128
Language, ritual and historical reconstruction: Towards a linguistic, ethnographical and archaeological account of Upper Xingu Society
Carlos Fausto, Bruna Franchetto and Michael Heckenberger
129–158
Endangered Caucasian languages in Georgia: Linguistic parameters of language endangerment
Jost Gippert
159–194
Contact, attrition and shift in two Chaco languages: The cases of Tapiete and Vilela
Lucía A. Golluscio and Hebe González
195–242
Tofa language change and terminal generation speakers
K. David Harrison and Gregory D.S. Anderson
243–270
Hocank's challenge to morphological theory
Johannes Helmbrecht and Christian Lehmann
271–316
A Preliminary study of same-turn self-repair initiation in Wichita conversation
Armik Mirzayan
317–354
Multimedia analysis in documentation projects: Kinship, interrogatives and reciprocals in ǂ Akhoe Hai ǁ om
Thomas Widlok, Christian Rapold and Gertie Hoymann
355–370
Index
371–375


Subject classification

Linguistics
Theoretical linguistics