SlideShare uma empresa Scribd logo
1 de 34
Daniel W. Hieber
        Rosetta Stone
         February 27, 2012




Language Endangerment &
      Nationalism
Pat Gabori
• One of the last 8
  speakers of Kayardild
• Passed away in 2009




                 Evans, Nicholas. 2010. Dying Words.
                   Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
Boa Sr
• Last speaker of
  Aka-Bo
• Passed away in
  2010, at age ~85
Great Andamanese Languages
•   Aka-Bo          •   Extinct
•   Aka-Bea         •   Extinct
•   Akar-Bale       •   Extinct
•   Aka-Kede        •   Extinct
•   Aka-Kol         •   Extinct
•   Oko-Juwoi       •   Extinct
•   A-Pucikwar      •   Extinct
•   Aka-Cari        •   Extinct
•   Aka-Kora        •   Extinct
•   Aka-Jeru        •   7 speakers (2006)
The Last Speakers of Chitimacha




              Photos courtesy of the National
                Anthropological Archives
Question:

How does somebody become a
last speaker?
More Questions (to think about)
• Is this a recent phenomenon?
• Should we care more now than previously?
• Is it simply that we have the luxury of caring more
  now?
• Is there something qualitatively different between
  language endangerment today versus in the
  Neolithic?
• Is this a difference in kind or magnitude?
THE STATE OF LANGUAGES
TODAY
Country Size by Number of Languages
           Image courtesy of Worldmapper.com
Critically Endangered Languages




          UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger
Languages by Vitality




           UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in
                           Danger
• Smallest
                 languages
                                                          • 8 million
3,586                                      0.2%             speakers



          • Mid-sized
            languages
                                                                  • 1,200 million
2,935                                    20.4%                      speakers



      • Biggest languages

                                                                        • 4,500
 83                                      79.5%                            million
                                                                          speakers
                             Harrison, K. David. 2007. When Languages
                                                 Die.
THE ORIGINAL STATE OF
LANGUAGE
The Original State of Language
      ante 8,000 BCE
      • Language itself is 50,000 years old (at least)
      • Population estimate, dawn of Neolithic: 10 million
      • Size of communities is capped at several thousand until
        5,000 BCE (city-states in the Fertile Crescent)
      • Most languages had fewer than ~500 speakers
         • Kayardild – probably never more than ~150 speakers
         • Gurr-goni – stable 70 speakers for as long as anyone
           remembers
      • Number of languages peaked 10,000 y.a.
         • ~ 5,000 – 20,000 languages


Krauss, Michael. 1998. The scope of the language endangerment crisis and recent responses to it. In Kazuto Matsumura (ed.),
     Studies in Endangered Languages. Tokyo: Hituji Syobo. 101-113.
Evans, Nicholas. Dying Words. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
THE HISTORY OF LANGUAGE
DEATH
The Agrarian Revolution
8,000 BCE – 5,000 BCE
• Shift to sedentary communities
• Speaker communities became larger
• Decrease in # of languages offset by population
  expansion
• Renfrew-Bellwood Effect
   • Decrease in deep-level diversity, i.e. the number of
     unrelated stocks or deep lineages
   • Decrease in number of language families
• First massive extinction of languages
• Didn’t happen everywhere
   • Papua New Guinea still fits the pre-Neolithic model
           Evans, Nicholas. 2010. Dying Words. Malden, Ma: Wiley-Blackwell.
Languages Outgrow Their Borders
3000 BCE – 1500 ACE
• Celtic (Europe, prehistory   • Arabic (Middle East, North
  – 51 BCE                       Africa 622 – 750 ACE)
• Akkadian (Mesopotamia        • Latin (Europe, North
  ca. 2250 – 500 BCE)            Africa, Middle East 753
• Greek (Balkans, Persia,        BCE onward)
  Eastern Europe 1600 BCE      • Germanic (Northern
  – 1453 ACE)                    Europe (ca. 500 BCE
• Hittite (Turkey 1750 –         onward)
  1180 BCE)                    • Mandarin (221 BCE
• Aramaic (Mesopotamia ca.       onward)
  700 BCE onward)              • Nahuatl (Central Mexico
• Sanskrit (Southern Asia        600 – 1519 ACE
  500 BCE onward)              • Quechua (South America
                                 ca. 1100? ACE – 1572)
The Rise of the Nation-State
(1500 – 1900)
• Portuguese – Brazil, Southern Africa
• Dutch – Indonesia, South Africa, New England
• French – Europe, West Africa, North America,
  Madagascar
• Russian – Northern Asia
• English – North America, India, Eastern Africa,
  Australia

• Nationalism old & new
• Irredentism
World Empires - 1800
World Empires - 1898
A THEORY OF LANGUAGE
DEATH
The Political Means
(1900 – today)
• Public choice theory / praxeology
• No language policy is neutral
   • State monopolies
   • Calculation problems (Misean)
   • Information problems (Hayekian)
• Fallacies of composition
   • Nationalism and national language
   • Imagined communities
• Institutionalization of coercion
   • English-Only legislation
   • Compulsory education
Paved with Good Intentions
• Konmité Pou Etid Kwéyòl (KEK) – Dominica
  (Patwa)
• Native Title Legislation – Australia
• No Child Left Behind (NCLB) – United States
• New Yoricans – Puerto Rico > New York City
• BIA Schools – United States
The Three Generations of
Language Loss
1.   Elders
   •    Fluent speakers
   •    First to be affected by societal changes (schooling or urbanization)
   •    Push their children to focus on the dominant language (can be
        defensive or economic)
2. Adults
   •    Conversant but with non-standard grammar
   •    Possibly limited to receptive language skills only
   •    Often semi-speakers of both languages (leads to creolization)
   •    Unaware of language shift; defaults to dominant language
   •    Lack economic resources (broad sense) to devote to language
   •    Possibly denegrate their heritage language (peer pressures)
3. Children / Young Adults
   •    Little to no heritage language
   •    Wish they were taught the language
   •    Have the economic resources (broad sense) to devote to language
The Economic Means (& Others)
•   Killer languages?
•   Globalization?
•   Technology?
•   Trade?
•   Urbanization?
RESPONSES & REVITALIZATION
The Spanish Missionaries
   1500s – 1700s
   • Alonso de Molina – Nahuatl
   • Franciscans, Dominicans, Augustinians each
     wanted their own Nahuatl grammar
   • Tradition continued in S. America (Quechua), N.
     America (Guale, Timucua; Florida), and Brazil
   • Jesuits were excellent field linguists
         • Numerous manuscripts lost when they were
           expelled from Paraguay
   • By 1700, 21 grammars were published
   • Missionary work was (and is – SIL) common
     globally
Shobhana L. Chelliah & Willem J. de Reuse. 2011. Handbook of Descriptive Linguistic Fieldwork. Dodrecht: Springer.
Colonial Explorations
1700 – 1900
• Jefferson lists
• Bureau of American
  Ethnology
• Roger Williams –
  Narragansett (Rhode
  Island)
• Intense interest in
  comparative
  linguistics
The Boasian Linguists
1900s – 1950s
• Franz Boas – describing each language and culture
  in its own terms
• Sparked a whole cadre of field linguists
  •   Mary Haas
  •   Morris Swadesh
  •   Edward Sapir
  •   Benjamin Lee Whorf
  •   J. P. Harrington
  •   Margaret Mead
  •   Ruth Benedict
The Rise of Generativism
1950s – 1980s
• Leonard Bloomfield, Language (1933)
  • Structuralist linguistics
  • Comprehensive description of N. American
    languages
  • Meaning is irrelevant to understanding how
    language operates
• Noam Chomsky, Syntactic Structures (1959)
  • Transformational grammar
  • Universal Grammar (later works)
  • Introspection as a method
Revitalization
1990s – 2010s
• 1992 – Language publishes seminal article
  • Ken Hale – On endangered languages and the
    safeguarding of diversity
  • Ken Hale – Language endangerment and the human
    value of linguistic diversity
  • Krauss – The world’s languages in crisis
• Training indigenous speakers as linguists (Hale)
• Journals (LD&C), Conferences
  (LD&D, SILS, SSILA), Organizations (FEL, ELF)
• Recognition and support from the field
Should We Care?
• Should no language ever go extinct? What would
  that look like?
• Are there qualitatively different types of language
  death?
• Is there a difference in kind between language
  death in the past and language death today?
• Should we care about all language death or just
  some?
Contact Information


               Daniel W. Hieber
    Associate Researcher, Rosetta Stone Labs
                (540) 236-7580
           dhieber@rosettastone.com

            www.danielhieber.com

Mais conteúdo relacionado

Mais procurados

Language death and language loss
Language death and language lossLanguage death and language loss
Language death and language lossDesi Puspitasariku
 
Esperanto and Minority Languages
Esperanto and Minority LanguagesEsperanto and Minority Languages
Esperanto and Minority LanguagesFederico Gobbo
 
World Englishes by Eak Prasad Duwadi
World Englishes by Eak Prasad Duwadi World Englishes by Eak Prasad Duwadi
World Englishes by Eak Prasad Duwadi eak prasad duwadi
 
Language shift maintenance death
Language shift maintenance deathLanguage shift maintenance death
Language shift maintenance deathAdnanBaloch15
 
A Right to Our Voice: Linguistic Human Rights and Peace Education
A Right to Our Voice: Linguistic Human Rights and Peace EducationA Right to Our Voice: Linguistic Human Rights and Peace Education
A Right to Our Voice: Linguistic Human Rights and Peace EducationCheryl Woelk
 
World Englishes and Second Language Acquisition
World Englishes and Second Language AcquisitionWorld Englishes and Second Language Acquisition
World Englishes and Second Language AcquisitionCharlotte Jones
 
Language maintenance and shift
Language maintenance and shift Language maintenance and shift
Language maintenance and shift Farah Nadia
 
English worldwide global englishes
English worldwide   global englishesEnglish worldwide   global englishes
English worldwide global englishesStephan Hughes
 
Eng 420 lecture5n6
Eng 420 lecture5n6Eng 420 lecture5n6
Eng 420 lecture5n6ssuser8546c2
 
English 781 881 we slides
English 781 881 we slidesEnglish 781 881 we slides
English 781 881 we slideslisyaseloni
 
Current Prospectives on Teaching WEs and ELF
Current Prospectives on Teaching WEs and ELFCurrent Prospectives on Teaching WEs and ELF
Current Prospectives on Teaching WEs and ELFElla Glazov
 
World Englishes
World EnglishesWorld Englishes
World EnglishesEmakemak
 
New microsoft office power point presentation
New microsoft office power point presentationNew microsoft office power point presentation
New microsoft office power point presentationBushra Trisha
 

Mais procurados (20)

language death
language deathlanguage death
language death
 
Polnat03(3)
Polnat03(3)Polnat03(3)
Polnat03(3)
 
Languages of the word
Languages of the wordLanguages of the word
Languages of the word
 
Language death and language loss
Language death and language lossLanguage death and language loss
Language death and language loss
 
Esperanto and Minority Languages
Esperanto and Minority LanguagesEsperanto and Minority Languages
Esperanto and Minority Languages
 
World Englishes by Eak Prasad Duwadi
World Englishes by Eak Prasad Duwadi World Englishes by Eak Prasad Duwadi
World Englishes by Eak Prasad Duwadi
 
Language shift maintenance death
Language shift maintenance deathLanguage shift maintenance death
Language shift maintenance death
 
A Right to Our Voice: Linguistic Human Rights and Peace Education
A Right to Our Voice: Linguistic Human Rights and Peace EducationA Right to Our Voice: Linguistic Human Rights and Peace Education
A Right to Our Voice: Linguistic Human Rights and Peace Education
 
World Englishes and Second Language Acquisition
World Englishes and Second Language AcquisitionWorld Englishes and Second Language Acquisition
World Englishes and Second Language Acquisition
 
Language maintenance and shift
Language maintenance and shift Language maintenance and shift
Language maintenance and shift
 
English worldwide global englishes
English worldwide   global englishesEnglish worldwide   global englishes
English worldwide global englishes
 
Eng 420 lecture5n6
Eng 420 lecture5n6Eng 420 lecture5n6
Eng 420 lecture5n6
 
Ch06
Ch06Ch06
Ch06
 
Language death
Language deathLanguage death
Language death
 
English 781 881 we slides
English 781 881 we slidesEnglish 781 881 we slides
English 781 881 we slides
 
Current Prospectives on Teaching WEs and ELF
Current Prospectives on Teaching WEs and ELFCurrent Prospectives on Teaching WEs and ELF
Current Prospectives on Teaching WEs and ELF
 
World Englishes
World EnglishesWorld Englishes
World Englishes
 
Kachru
KachruKachru
Kachru
 
Language
LanguageLanguage
Language
 
New microsoft office power point presentation
New microsoft office power point presentationNew microsoft office power point presentation
New microsoft office power point presentation
 

Destaque

L'art des déchets (chiffres remaniés)
L'art des déchets (chiffres remaniés)L'art des déchets (chiffres remaniés)
L'art des déchets (chiffres remaniés)Brice Gaillard
 
Tongo.asia - L'assurance communication
Tongo.asia - L'assurance communicationTongo.asia - L'assurance communication
Tongo.asia - L'assurance communicationBrice Gaillard
 
Draft - Developper Sur Elgg
Draft - Developper Sur ElggDraft - Developper Sur Elgg
Draft - Developper Sur ElggBrice Gaillard
 
Tongo.asia - How we are going to break the language barrier
Tongo.asia - How we are going to break the language barrierTongo.asia - How we are going to break the language barrier
Tongo.asia - How we are going to break the language barrierBrice Gaillard
 
Hieber - An Introduction to Typology, Part II: Voice & Transitivity
Hieber - An Introduction to Typology, Part II: Voice & TransitivityHieber - An Introduction to Typology, Part II: Voice & Transitivity
Hieber - An Introduction to Typology, Part II: Voice & TransitivityDaniel Hieber
 
Cross Border Selling: Breaking the Language Barrier with Automated Translation
Cross Border Selling: Breaking the Language Barrier with Automated TranslationCross Border Selling: Breaking the Language Barrier with Automated Translation
Cross Border Selling: Breaking the Language Barrier with Automated Translationkantanmt
 
24 single or multiple filling defects in the
24 single or multiple filling defects in the24 single or multiple filling defects in the
24 single or multiple filling defects in theDr. Muhammad Bin Zulfiqar
 
Iklim dan Budaya Organisasi
Iklim dan Budaya Organisasi Iklim dan Budaya Organisasi
Iklim dan Budaya Organisasi pjj_kemenkes
 
Shale Gas Environmental Summit 2015
Shale Gas Environmental Summit 2015Shale Gas Environmental Summit 2015
Shale Gas Environmental Summit 2015Anna Serazetdinova
 
Creating unforgettable customer experiences by Philip Whittaker
Creating unforgettable customer experiences by Philip WhittakerCreating unforgettable customer experiences by Philip Whittaker
Creating unforgettable customer experiences by Philip WhittakerNUS-ISS
 
Vet 2300 professional development week 12
Vet 2300  professional development week 12Vet 2300  professional development week 12
Vet 2300 professional development week 12stanbridge
 
Conservation Agriculture mechanization a major technique in reducing machiner...
Conservation Agriculture mechanization a major technique in reducing machiner...Conservation Agriculture mechanization a major technique in reducing machiner...
Conservation Agriculture mechanization a major technique in reducing machiner...African Conservation Tillage Network
 
Chapter 26 battery sizing and discharge analysis norestriction
Chapter 26   battery sizing and discharge analysis norestrictionChapter 26   battery sizing and discharge analysis norestriction
Chapter 26 battery sizing and discharge analysis norestrictionMostafa Khaled
 
What are the feed with drawl of broiler at market time
What are the feed with drawl of broiler at market timeWhat are the feed with drawl of broiler at market time
What are the feed with drawl of broiler at market timeDr Muhammad Umar Aziz
 
Herramientas del software educativo
Herramientas del software educativoHerramientas del software educativo
Herramientas del software educativokarenpicazo258
 
Ussage and impediments of technology enabled services in banking sector
Ussage and impediments of technology enabled services in banking sectorUssage and impediments of technology enabled services in banking sector
Ussage and impediments of technology enabled services in banking sectorIAEME Publication
 
NAFCU Magazine July 2014
NAFCU Magazine July 2014NAFCU Magazine July 2014
NAFCU Magazine July 2014Scott Wilson
 

Destaque (20)

L'art des déchets (chiffres remaniés)
L'art des déchets (chiffres remaniés)L'art des déchets (chiffres remaniés)
L'art des déchets (chiffres remaniés)
 
Tongo.asia - L'assurance communication
Tongo.asia - L'assurance communicationTongo.asia - L'assurance communication
Tongo.asia - L'assurance communication
 
Draft - Developper Sur Elgg
Draft - Developper Sur ElggDraft - Developper Sur Elgg
Draft - Developper Sur Elgg
 
Tongo.asia - How we are going to break the language barrier
Tongo.asia - How we are going to break the language barrierTongo.asia - How we are going to break the language barrier
Tongo.asia - How we are going to break the language barrier
 
Hieber - An Introduction to Typology, Part II: Voice & Transitivity
Hieber - An Introduction to Typology, Part II: Voice & TransitivityHieber - An Introduction to Typology, Part II: Voice & Transitivity
Hieber - An Introduction to Typology, Part II: Voice & Transitivity
 
Tongo.Asia
Tongo.AsiaTongo.Asia
Tongo.Asia
 
Cross Border Selling: Breaking the Language Barrier with Automated Translation
Cross Border Selling: Breaking the Language Barrier with Automated TranslationCross Border Selling: Breaking the Language Barrier with Automated Translation
Cross Border Selling: Breaking the Language Barrier with Automated Translation
 
Hukum Agama
Hukum AgamaHukum Agama
Hukum Agama
 
24 single or multiple filling defects in the
24 single or multiple filling defects in the24 single or multiple filling defects in the
24 single or multiple filling defects in the
 
Iklim dan Budaya Organisasi
Iklim dan Budaya Organisasi Iklim dan Budaya Organisasi
Iklim dan Budaya Organisasi
 
Shale Gas Environmental Summit 2015
Shale Gas Environmental Summit 2015Shale Gas Environmental Summit 2015
Shale Gas Environmental Summit 2015
 
Creating unforgettable customer experiences by Philip Whittaker
Creating unforgettable customer experiences by Philip WhittakerCreating unforgettable customer experiences by Philip Whittaker
Creating unforgettable customer experiences by Philip Whittaker
 
Vet 2300 professional development week 12
Vet 2300  professional development week 12Vet 2300  professional development week 12
Vet 2300 professional development week 12
 
Conservation Agriculture mechanization a major technique in reducing machiner...
Conservation Agriculture mechanization a major technique in reducing machiner...Conservation Agriculture mechanization a major technique in reducing machiner...
Conservation Agriculture mechanization a major technique in reducing machiner...
 
rgls present
rgls presentrgls present
rgls present
 
Chapter 26 battery sizing and discharge analysis norestriction
Chapter 26   battery sizing and discharge analysis norestrictionChapter 26   battery sizing and discharge analysis norestriction
Chapter 26 battery sizing and discharge analysis norestriction
 
What are the feed with drawl of broiler at market time
What are the feed with drawl of broiler at market timeWhat are the feed with drawl of broiler at market time
What are the feed with drawl of broiler at market time
 
Herramientas del software educativo
Herramientas del software educativoHerramientas del software educativo
Herramientas del software educativo
 
Ussage and impediments of technology enabled services in banking sector
Ussage and impediments of technology enabled services in banking sectorUssage and impediments of technology enabled services in banking sector
Ussage and impediments of technology enabled services in banking sector
 
NAFCU Magazine July 2014
NAFCU Magazine July 2014NAFCU Magazine July 2014
NAFCU Magazine July 2014
 

Semelhante a Hieber - Language Endangerment & Nationalism

Language Documentation and Conservation in Oceania
Language Documentation and Conservation in OceaniaLanguage Documentation and Conservation in Oceania
Language Documentation and Conservation in OceaniaGary Holton
 
At Home and Exiled in Language Studies: Interdisciplinarity, intersectionalit...
At Home and Exiled in Language Studies: Interdisciplinarity, intersectionalit...At Home and Exiled in Language Studies: Interdisciplinarity, intersectionalit...
At Home and Exiled in Language Studies: Interdisciplinarity, intersectionalit...RMBorders
 
At Home and Exiled in Language Studies: Interdisciplinarity, intersectionalit...
At Home and Exiled in Language Studies: Interdisciplinarity, intersectionalit...At Home and Exiled in Language Studies: Interdisciplinarity, intersectionalit...
At Home and Exiled in Language Studies: Interdisciplinarity, intersectionalit...UNESCO-RILA
 
Development of language
Development of languageDevelopment of language
Development of languagePatrick White
 
Spanish powerpoint
Spanish powerpointSpanish powerpoint
Spanish powerpointsee1kr
 
Linguistic Vitality (AILDI 2012)
Linguistic Vitality (AILDI 2012)Linguistic Vitality (AILDI 2012)
Linguistic Vitality (AILDI 2012)Rolando Coto
 
Presentation endangered languages and linguistic diversity
Presentation endangered languages and linguistic diversityPresentation endangered languages and linguistic diversity
Presentation endangered languages and linguistic diversityZwidzai Chinyowa
 
Empres of the Word
Empres of the WordEmpres of the Word
Empres of the Wordshekar1861
 
APHG Unit 3: Language
APHG Unit 3: LanguageAPHG Unit 3: Language
APHG Unit 3: Languageappleselena
 
In Defense of Linguistic Diversity. EXPOLINGUA 2011
In Defense of Linguistic Diversity. EXPOLINGUA 2011In Defense of Linguistic Diversity. EXPOLINGUA 2011
In Defense of Linguistic Diversity. EXPOLINGUA 2011UNESCOmhok
 
eng_420_lecture5n6.ppt
eng_420_lecture5n6.ppteng_420_lecture5n6.ppt
eng_420_lecture5n6.pptamjadgulabro
 
Language deth, language shift, marker, micro/macro sociolinguistics
Language deth, language shift, marker, micro/macro sociolinguisticsLanguage deth, language shift, marker, micro/macro sociolinguistics
Language deth, language shift, marker, micro/macro sociolinguisticsIqramushtaq1142
 
Lec 19 Fo 06 Culture
Lec 19 Fo  06 CultureLec 19 Fo  06 Culture
Lec 19 Fo 06 CultureUSAteacher
 
Ili nz study_trip_2009
Ili nz study_trip_2009Ili nz study_trip_2009
Ili nz study_trip_2009Manuela Noske
 
Laura Welcher - The Rosetta Project and The Language Commons
Laura Welcher - The Rosetta Project and The Language CommonsLaura Welcher - The Rosetta Project and The Language Commons
Laura Welcher - The Rosetta Project and The Language Commonslongnow
 

Semelhante a Hieber - Language Endangerment & Nationalism (20)

Language Documentation and Conservation in Oceania
Language Documentation and Conservation in OceaniaLanguage Documentation and Conservation in Oceania
Language Documentation and Conservation in Oceania
 
At Home and Exiled in Language Studies: Interdisciplinarity, intersectionalit...
At Home and Exiled in Language Studies: Interdisciplinarity, intersectionalit...At Home and Exiled in Language Studies: Interdisciplinarity, intersectionalit...
At Home and Exiled in Language Studies: Interdisciplinarity, intersectionalit...
 
At Home and Exiled in Language Studies: Interdisciplinarity, intersectionalit...
At Home and Exiled in Language Studies: Interdisciplinarity, intersectionalit...At Home and Exiled in Language Studies: Interdisciplinarity, intersectionalit...
At Home and Exiled in Language Studies: Interdisciplinarity, intersectionalit...
 
Development of language
Development of languageDevelopment of language
Development of language
 
Spanish powerpoint
Spanish powerpointSpanish powerpoint
Spanish powerpoint
 
Linguistic Vitality (AILDI 2012)
Linguistic Vitality (AILDI 2012)Linguistic Vitality (AILDI 2012)
Linguistic Vitality (AILDI 2012)
 
Presentation endangered languages and linguistic diversity
Presentation endangered languages and linguistic diversityPresentation endangered languages and linguistic diversity
Presentation endangered languages and linguistic diversity
 
Eng424 2
Eng424 2Eng424 2
Eng424 2
 
Culture and language
Culture and languageCulture and language
Culture and language
 
Empres of the Word
Empres of the WordEmpres of the Word
Empres of the Word
 
Myth 2
Myth 2Myth 2
Myth 2
 
APHG Unit 3: Language
APHG Unit 3: LanguageAPHG Unit 3: Language
APHG Unit 3: Language
 
Languages
LanguagesLanguages
Languages
 
In Defense of Linguistic Diversity. EXPOLINGUA 2011
In Defense of Linguistic Diversity. EXPOLINGUA 2011In Defense of Linguistic Diversity. EXPOLINGUA 2011
In Defense of Linguistic Diversity. EXPOLINGUA 2011
 
eng_420_lecture5n6.ppt
eng_420_lecture5n6.ppteng_420_lecture5n6.ppt
eng_420_lecture5n6.ppt
 
Language deth, language shift, marker, micro/macro sociolinguistics
Language deth, language shift, marker, micro/macro sociolinguisticsLanguage deth, language shift, marker, micro/macro sociolinguistics
Language deth, language shift, marker, micro/macro sociolinguistics
 
05 Language death.ppt
05 Language death.ppt05 Language death.ppt
05 Language death.ppt
 
Lec 19 Fo 06 Culture
Lec 19 Fo  06 CultureLec 19 Fo  06 Culture
Lec 19 Fo 06 Culture
 
Ili nz study_trip_2009
Ili nz study_trip_2009Ili nz study_trip_2009
Ili nz study_trip_2009
 
Laura Welcher - The Rosetta Project and The Language Commons
Laura Welcher - The Rosetta Project and The Language CommonsLaura Welcher - The Rosetta Project and The Language Commons
Laura Welcher - The Rosetta Project and The Language Commons
 

Mais de Daniel Hieber

Optional subject marking in Chitimacha
Optional subject marking in ChitimachaOptional subject marking in Chitimacha
Optional subject marking in ChitimachaDaniel Hieber
 
The Politically Incorrect Guide to Language Death
The Politically Incorrect Guide to Language DeathThe Politically Incorrect Guide to Language Death
The Politically Incorrect Guide to Language DeathDaniel Hieber
 
Hieber, Manavi & Manavi - Rosetta Stone and Navajo Language Renaissance: coll...
Hieber, Manavi & Manavi - Rosetta Stone and Navajo Language Renaissance: coll...Hieber, Manavi & Manavi - Rosetta Stone and Navajo Language Renaissance: coll...
Hieber, Manavi & Manavi - Rosetta Stone and Navajo Language Renaissance: coll...Daniel Hieber
 
Hieber - An Introduction to Typology, Part III: Grammatical Relations
Hieber - An Introduction to Typology, Part III: Grammatical RelationsHieber - An Introduction to Typology, Part III: Grammatical Relations
Hieber - An Introduction to Typology, Part III: Grammatical RelationsDaniel Hieber
 
Hieber - An Introduction to Typology, Part I: Morphological Typology
Hieber - An Introduction to Typology, Part I: Morphological TypologyHieber - An Introduction to Typology, Part I: Morphological Typology
Hieber - An Introduction to Typology, Part I: Morphological TypologyDaniel Hieber
 
Manavi, Bittinger, & Hieber - A Case Study in Digital Collaboration
Manavi, Bittinger, & Hieber - A Case Study in Digital CollaborationManavi, Bittinger, & Hieber - A Case Study in Digital Collaboration
Manavi, Bittinger, & Hieber - A Case Study in Digital CollaborationDaniel Hieber
 

Mais de Daniel Hieber (6)

Optional subject marking in Chitimacha
Optional subject marking in ChitimachaOptional subject marking in Chitimacha
Optional subject marking in Chitimacha
 
The Politically Incorrect Guide to Language Death
The Politically Incorrect Guide to Language DeathThe Politically Incorrect Guide to Language Death
The Politically Incorrect Guide to Language Death
 
Hieber, Manavi & Manavi - Rosetta Stone and Navajo Language Renaissance: coll...
Hieber, Manavi & Manavi - Rosetta Stone and Navajo Language Renaissance: coll...Hieber, Manavi & Manavi - Rosetta Stone and Navajo Language Renaissance: coll...
Hieber, Manavi & Manavi - Rosetta Stone and Navajo Language Renaissance: coll...
 
Hieber - An Introduction to Typology, Part III: Grammatical Relations
Hieber - An Introduction to Typology, Part III: Grammatical RelationsHieber - An Introduction to Typology, Part III: Grammatical Relations
Hieber - An Introduction to Typology, Part III: Grammatical Relations
 
Hieber - An Introduction to Typology, Part I: Morphological Typology
Hieber - An Introduction to Typology, Part I: Morphological TypologyHieber - An Introduction to Typology, Part I: Morphological Typology
Hieber - An Introduction to Typology, Part I: Morphological Typology
 
Manavi, Bittinger, & Hieber - A Case Study in Digital Collaboration
Manavi, Bittinger, & Hieber - A Case Study in Digital CollaborationManavi, Bittinger, & Hieber - A Case Study in Digital Collaboration
Manavi, Bittinger, & Hieber - A Case Study in Digital Collaboration
 

Último

Inclusivity Essentials_ Creating Accessible Websites for Nonprofits .pdf
Inclusivity Essentials_ Creating Accessible Websites for Nonprofits .pdfInclusivity Essentials_ Creating Accessible Websites for Nonprofits .pdf
Inclusivity Essentials_ Creating Accessible Websites for Nonprofits .pdfTechSoup
 
HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...
HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...
HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...Nguyen Thanh Tu Collection
 
Incoming and Outgoing Shipments in 3 STEPS Using Odoo 17
Incoming and Outgoing Shipments in 3 STEPS Using Odoo 17Incoming and Outgoing Shipments in 3 STEPS Using Odoo 17
Incoming and Outgoing Shipments in 3 STEPS Using Odoo 17Celine George
 
Keynote by Prof. Wurzer at Nordex about IP-design
Keynote by Prof. Wurzer at Nordex about IP-designKeynote by Prof. Wurzer at Nordex about IP-design
Keynote by Prof. Wurzer at Nordex about IP-designMIPLM
 
call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️9953056974 Low Rate Call Girls In Saket, Delhi NCR
 
ISYU TUNGKOL SA SEKSWLADIDA (ISSUE ABOUT SEXUALITY
ISYU TUNGKOL SA SEKSWLADIDA (ISSUE ABOUT SEXUALITYISYU TUNGKOL SA SEKSWLADIDA (ISSUE ABOUT SEXUALITY
ISYU TUNGKOL SA SEKSWLADIDA (ISSUE ABOUT SEXUALITYKayeClaireEstoconing
 
Science 7 Quarter 4 Module 2: Natural Resources.pptx
Science 7 Quarter 4 Module 2: Natural Resources.pptxScience 7 Quarter 4 Module 2: Natural Resources.pptx
Science 7 Quarter 4 Module 2: Natural Resources.pptxMaryGraceBautista27
 
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - PAPER 1 Q3: NEWSPAPERS.pptx
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - PAPER 1 Q3: NEWSPAPERS.pptxECONOMIC CONTEXT - PAPER 1 Q3: NEWSPAPERS.pptx
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - PAPER 1 Q3: NEWSPAPERS.pptxiammrhaywood
 
4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx
4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx
4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptxmary850239
 
Karra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptx
Karra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptxKarra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptx
Karra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptxAshokKarra1
 
Barangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptx
Barangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptxBarangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptx
Barangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptxCarlos105
 
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice great
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice greatEarth Day Presentation wow hello nice great
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice greatYousafMalik24
 
Like-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdf
Like-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdfLike-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdf
Like-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdfMr Bounab Samir
 
Difference Between Search & Browse Methods in Odoo 17
Difference Between Search & Browse Methods in Odoo 17Difference Between Search & Browse Methods in Odoo 17
Difference Between Search & Browse Methods in Odoo 17Celine George
 
GRADE 4 - SUMMATIVE TEST QUARTER 4 ALL SUBJECTS
GRADE 4 - SUMMATIVE TEST QUARTER 4 ALL SUBJECTSGRADE 4 - SUMMATIVE TEST QUARTER 4 ALL SUBJECTS
GRADE 4 - SUMMATIVE TEST QUARTER 4 ALL SUBJECTSJoshuaGantuangco2
 
ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4
ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4
ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4MiaBumagat1
 
Gas measurement O2,Co2,& ph) 04/2024.pptx
Gas measurement O2,Co2,& ph) 04/2024.pptxGas measurement O2,Co2,& ph) 04/2024.pptx
Gas measurement O2,Co2,& ph) 04/2024.pptxDr.Ibrahim Hassaan
 

Último (20)

Inclusivity Essentials_ Creating Accessible Websites for Nonprofits .pdf
Inclusivity Essentials_ Creating Accessible Websites for Nonprofits .pdfInclusivity Essentials_ Creating Accessible Websites for Nonprofits .pdf
Inclusivity Essentials_ Creating Accessible Websites for Nonprofits .pdf
 
HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...
HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...
HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...
 
Incoming and Outgoing Shipments in 3 STEPS Using Odoo 17
Incoming and Outgoing Shipments in 3 STEPS Using Odoo 17Incoming and Outgoing Shipments in 3 STEPS Using Odoo 17
Incoming and Outgoing Shipments in 3 STEPS Using Odoo 17
 
Raw materials used in Herbal Cosmetics.pptx
Raw materials used in Herbal Cosmetics.pptxRaw materials used in Herbal Cosmetics.pptx
Raw materials used in Herbal Cosmetics.pptx
 
Keynote by Prof. Wurzer at Nordex about IP-design
Keynote by Prof. Wurzer at Nordex about IP-designKeynote by Prof. Wurzer at Nordex about IP-design
Keynote by Prof. Wurzer at Nordex about IP-design
 
call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
 
YOUVE GOT EMAIL_FINALS_EL_DORADO_2024.pptx
YOUVE GOT EMAIL_FINALS_EL_DORADO_2024.pptxYOUVE GOT EMAIL_FINALS_EL_DORADO_2024.pptx
YOUVE GOT EMAIL_FINALS_EL_DORADO_2024.pptx
 
ISYU TUNGKOL SA SEKSWLADIDA (ISSUE ABOUT SEXUALITY
ISYU TUNGKOL SA SEKSWLADIDA (ISSUE ABOUT SEXUALITYISYU TUNGKOL SA SEKSWLADIDA (ISSUE ABOUT SEXUALITY
ISYU TUNGKOL SA SEKSWLADIDA (ISSUE ABOUT SEXUALITY
 
Science 7 Quarter 4 Module 2: Natural Resources.pptx
Science 7 Quarter 4 Module 2: Natural Resources.pptxScience 7 Quarter 4 Module 2: Natural Resources.pptx
Science 7 Quarter 4 Module 2: Natural Resources.pptx
 
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - PAPER 1 Q3: NEWSPAPERS.pptx
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - PAPER 1 Q3: NEWSPAPERS.pptxECONOMIC CONTEXT - PAPER 1 Q3: NEWSPAPERS.pptx
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - PAPER 1 Q3: NEWSPAPERS.pptx
 
4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx
4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx
4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx
 
Karra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptx
Karra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptxKarra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptx
Karra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptx
 
Barangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptx
Barangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptxBarangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptx
Barangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptx
 
OS-operating systems- ch04 (Threads) ...
OS-operating systems- ch04 (Threads) ...OS-operating systems- ch04 (Threads) ...
OS-operating systems- ch04 (Threads) ...
 
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice great
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice greatEarth Day Presentation wow hello nice great
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice great
 
Like-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdf
Like-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdfLike-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdf
Like-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdf
 
Difference Between Search & Browse Methods in Odoo 17
Difference Between Search & Browse Methods in Odoo 17Difference Between Search & Browse Methods in Odoo 17
Difference Between Search & Browse Methods in Odoo 17
 
GRADE 4 - SUMMATIVE TEST QUARTER 4 ALL SUBJECTS
GRADE 4 - SUMMATIVE TEST QUARTER 4 ALL SUBJECTSGRADE 4 - SUMMATIVE TEST QUARTER 4 ALL SUBJECTS
GRADE 4 - SUMMATIVE TEST QUARTER 4 ALL SUBJECTS
 
ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4
ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4
ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4
 
Gas measurement O2,Co2,& ph) 04/2024.pptx
Gas measurement O2,Co2,& ph) 04/2024.pptxGas measurement O2,Co2,& ph) 04/2024.pptx
Gas measurement O2,Co2,& ph) 04/2024.pptx
 

Hieber - Language Endangerment & Nationalism

  • 1. Daniel W. Hieber Rosetta Stone February 27, 2012 Language Endangerment & Nationalism
  • 2. Pat Gabori • One of the last 8 speakers of Kayardild • Passed away in 2009 Evans, Nicholas. 2010. Dying Words. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
  • 3. Boa Sr • Last speaker of Aka-Bo • Passed away in 2010, at age ~85
  • 4. Great Andamanese Languages • Aka-Bo • Extinct • Aka-Bea • Extinct • Akar-Bale • Extinct • Aka-Kede • Extinct • Aka-Kol • Extinct • Oko-Juwoi • Extinct • A-Pucikwar • Extinct • Aka-Cari • Extinct • Aka-Kora • Extinct • Aka-Jeru • 7 speakers (2006)
  • 5. The Last Speakers of Chitimacha Photos courtesy of the National Anthropological Archives
  • 6. Question: How does somebody become a last speaker?
  • 7. More Questions (to think about) • Is this a recent phenomenon? • Should we care more now than previously? • Is it simply that we have the luxury of caring more now? • Is there something qualitatively different between language endangerment today versus in the Neolithic? • Is this a difference in kind or magnitude?
  • 8. THE STATE OF LANGUAGES TODAY
  • 9. Country Size by Number of Languages Image courtesy of Worldmapper.com
  • 10. Critically Endangered Languages UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger
  • 11. Languages by Vitality UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger
  • 12. • Smallest languages • 8 million 3,586 0.2% speakers • Mid-sized languages • 1,200 million 2,935 20.4% speakers • Biggest languages • 4,500 83 79.5% million speakers Harrison, K. David. 2007. When Languages Die.
  • 13. THE ORIGINAL STATE OF LANGUAGE
  • 14. The Original State of Language ante 8,000 BCE • Language itself is 50,000 years old (at least) • Population estimate, dawn of Neolithic: 10 million • Size of communities is capped at several thousand until 5,000 BCE (city-states in the Fertile Crescent) • Most languages had fewer than ~500 speakers • Kayardild – probably never more than ~150 speakers • Gurr-goni – stable 70 speakers for as long as anyone remembers • Number of languages peaked 10,000 y.a. • ~ 5,000 – 20,000 languages Krauss, Michael. 1998. The scope of the language endangerment crisis and recent responses to it. In Kazuto Matsumura (ed.), Studies in Endangered Languages. Tokyo: Hituji Syobo. 101-113. Evans, Nicholas. Dying Words. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
  • 15.
  • 16. THE HISTORY OF LANGUAGE DEATH
  • 17. The Agrarian Revolution 8,000 BCE – 5,000 BCE • Shift to sedentary communities • Speaker communities became larger • Decrease in # of languages offset by population expansion • Renfrew-Bellwood Effect • Decrease in deep-level diversity, i.e. the number of unrelated stocks or deep lineages • Decrease in number of language families • First massive extinction of languages • Didn’t happen everywhere • Papua New Guinea still fits the pre-Neolithic model Evans, Nicholas. 2010. Dying Words. Malden, Ma: Wiley-Blackwell.
  • 18. Languages Outgrow Their Borders 3000 BCE – 1500 ACE • Celtic (Europe, prehistory • Arabic (Middle East, North – 51 BCE Africa 622 – 750 ACE) • Akkadian (Mesopotamia • Latin (Europe, North ca. 2250 – 500 BCE) Africa, Middle East 753 • Greek (Balkans, Persia, BCE onward) Eastern Europe 1600 BCE • Germanic (Northern – 1453 ACE) Europe (ca. 500 BCE • Hittite (Turkey 1750 – onward) 1180 BCE) • Mandarin (221 BCE • Aramaic (Mesopotamia ca. onward) 700 BCE onward) • Nahuatl (Central Mexico • Sanskrit (Southern Asia 600 – 1519 ACE 500 BCE onward) • Quechua (South America ca. 1100? ACE – 1572)
  • 19. The Rise of the Nation-State (1500 – 1900) • Portuguese – Brazil, Southern Africa • Dutch – Indonesia, South Africa, New England • French – Europe, West Africa, North America, Madagascar • Russian – Northern Asia • English – North America, India, Eastern Africa, Australia • Nationalism old & new • Irredentism
  • 22. A THEORY OF LANGUAGE DEATH
  • 23. The Political Means (1900 – today) • Public choice theory / praxeology • No language policy is neutral • State monopolies • Calculation problems (Misean) • Information problems (Hayekian) • Fallacies of composition • Nationalism and national language • Imagined communities • Institutionalization of coercion • English-Only legislation • Compulsory education
  • 24. Paved with Good Intentions • Konmité Pou Etid Kwéyòl (KEK) – Dominica (Patwa) • Native Title Legislation – Australia • No Child Left Behind (NCLB) – United States • New Yoricans – Puerto Rico > New York City • BIA Schools – United States
  • 25. The Three Generations of Language Loss 1. Elders • Fluent speakers • First to be affected by societal changes (schooling or urbanization) • Push their children to focus on the dominant language (can be defensive or economic) 2. Adults • Conversant but with non-standard grammar • Possibly limited to receptive language skills only • Often semi-speakers of both languages (leads to creolization) • Unaware of language shift; defaults to dominant language • Lack economic resources (broad sense) to devote to language • Possibly denegrate their heritage language (peer pressures) 3. Children / Young Adults • Little to no heritage language • Wish they were taught the language • Have the economic resources (broad sense) to devote to language
  • 26. The Economic Means (& Others) • Killer languages? • Globalization? • Technology? • Trade? • Urbanization?
  • 28. The Spanish Missionaries 1500s – 1700s • Alonso de Molina – Nahuatl • Franciscans, Dominicans, Augustinians each wanted their own Nahuatl grammar • Tradition continued in S. America (Quechua), N. America (Guale, Timucua; Florida), and Brazil • Jesuits were excellent field linguists • Numerous manuscripts lost when they were expelled from Paraguay • By 1700, 21 grammars were published • Missionary work was (and is – SIL) common globally Shobhana L. Chelliah & Willem J. de Reuse. 2011. Handbook of Descriptive Linguistic Fieldwork. Dodrecht: Springer.
  • 29. Colonial Explorations 1700 – 1900 • Jefferson lists • Bureau of American Ethnology • Roger Williams – Narragansett (Rhode Island) • Intense interest in comparative linguistics
  • 30. The Boasian Linguists 1900s – 1950s • Franz Boas – describing each language and culture in its own terms • Sparked a whole cadre of field linguists • Mary Haas • Morris Swadesh • Edward Sapir • Benjamin Lee Whorf • J. P. Harrington • Margaret Mead • Ruth Benedict
  • 31. The Rise of Generativism 1950s – 1980s • Leonard Bloomfield, Language (1933) • Structuralist linguistics • Comprehensive description of N. American languages • Meaning is irrelevant to understanding how language operates • Noam Chomsky, Syntactic Structures (1959) • Transformational grammar • Universal Grammar (later works) • Introspection as a method
  • 32. Revitalization 1990s – 2010s • 1992 – Language publishes seminal article • Ken Hale – On endangered languages and the safeguarding of diversity • Ken Hale – Language endangerment and the human value of linguistic diversity • Krauss – The world’s languages in crisis • Training indigenous speakers as linguists (Hale) • Journals (LD&C), Conferences (LD&D, SILS, SSILA), Organizations (FEL, ELF) • Recognition and support from the field
  • 33. Should We Care? • Should no language ever go extinct? What would that look like? • Are there qualitatively different types of language death? • Is there a difference in kind between language death in the past and language death today? • Should we care about all language death or just some?
  • 34. Contact Information Daniel W. Hieber Associate Researcher, Rosetta Stone Labs (540) 236-7580 dhieber@rosettastone.com www.danielhieber.com

Notas do Editor

  1. Harrison's quotes:"Language death typically begins with political or social discrimination against a language or its speakers. This may take the form of official state policies to suppress speech, or it may be benign neglect.“"Faced with such pressures, young speakers […] may abandon their ancestral language. When they grow up, they may fail (or refuse) to transmit it to their children. Many factors can interrupt successful language transmission, but it is rarely the result of free will. The decision tends to be made by the very youngest speakers, 6- and 7-year-olds, under duress or social pressure, and these children then influence the speech behavior of adults in the community. These youngest speakers - acting as tiny social barometers - are acutely sensitive to the disfavored status of their elders' language and may choose to speak the more dominant tongue.“Are there non-political means by which languages die as well?Are some languages inherently superior to others?Do speakers actually ‘abandon’ their language?Must a speaker abandon their language in order to acquire the dominant one?
  2. My perspective:Praxeology, the study of human action qua action (basis of things like economics, particularly the Austrian school), public choice theoryLargely two types of language death – voluntary and coercive; these more or less align with economic and politicalNormativity issues – best to put those issues aside until after our analysis is complete
  3. A good number of the data-deficient ones are probably endangered as well
  4. 80% of the world’s population uses only 83 of the world’s languages
  5. A point about data – it’s irrelevantThese numbers and the ones preceeding are all frankly hand-picked by linguistsThey’re meaningless without a theory of language decline
  6. This was a new phenomenon – never before had a single language been spoken by so many peopleCeltic – replaced the original European inhabitants (possibly related to Basque); had horse and wheel technologyAkkadian – Assyrian and Babylonian empiresGreek – Alexander’s Greek empire; Byzantine empireHittite – First attested Indo-European language; Hittite empireAramaic – Persian empireSanskrit – Vedic scripts; later adopted by BuddhismArabic – Islamic empire (Caliphates)Latin – replaced the Celtic languages (Caesar conquers Gaul, invades England); Romance descendantsGermanic – Anglo-Saxon (English); invasions of RomeNahuatl – Aztec empire; arrival of Spanish under Hernan CortesQuechua – Incan empire; conquered by Francisco Pizarro
  7. Irredentism - From the ideology of nationalism was also born the principle of irredentism, the policy of incorporating historically or ethnically related peoples into the larger umbrella of a single state, regardless of their linguistic differences.By one estimate, just 2 or 3 percent of newly minted "Italians" spoke Italian at home when Italy was unified in the 1860s. Some Italian dialects were as different from one another as modern Italian is from modern Spanish.This in turn prompted the Italian statesman Massimo D'Agelizo (1798–1866) to say, "We have created Italy. Now we need to create Italians."Still, even with this, dialect chains continued (and continue) to be commonIt’s simply not possible for a single linguistic variety to span such a large geographic area for an extended period of timeLook at Latin, and now English – even with global communications, English has fractured
  8. Important to remember these are political borders, not linguistic ones- Even in 1898, the linguistic borders still looked a lot closer to the Australia map
  9. Public Choice – Applying the insights of economics and praxeology to politics- Those in government follow their incentives as wellNationalism – postcolonial statesCalculation – standards nobody speaksInformation / Composition – Navajo and treatiesComposition – the language of the U.S. is NOT English
  10. Sometimes what seems like economic means are actually political meansPuerto Ricans in NYC – belief that the dominant language is betterInhibits their children in the heritage languagePatwa children in DominicaNavajo - Most widely spoken indigenous language north of Mexico1970 – 90% of BIA boarding school children spoke Navajo1992 – 18% of preschoolers knew Navajo2011 – Less than 5% of school-aged children
  11. Lingua francas are typically trade languages, which result in a stable, healthy bilingualismTrade generally enhances cultural exchange and intercultural acceptance – it doesn’t diminish itTrade is not a one-way phenomenon; look at the influence of Japanese culture in the U.S.Urbanization has been a persistent force ever since the Agrarian RevolutionEconomies of scale, decreased search costs, increased division of labor which allows for higher productivity and greater wealthNote that this is most frequently (but not always) a completely voluntary process – people prefer the benefits of a city to the benefits of network effects in their language
  12. Guale and Timucua are now extinctSpanish had to learn the language in order to preachEstablished a printing press and cranked out grammarsPreviously unheard of – this was a huge boon for the preservation of indigenous languages
  13. Jesse Baird Little Doe – Wampanoag
  14. Chitimacha
  15. I see Chomsky as a continuation of structuralismChomsky’s approach makes fieldwork unnecessaryFieldwork was still being carried out, but marginalized