8_Language Communication_W25

Introduction to Anthropology

  • Overview of Language and Communication.

This Topic

  • Defining language and communication.

  • What makes human language unique?

  • Theory, design features, and components of language.

  • Language learning: children's acquisition and ape language studies.

  • Studying language.

  • Language contact and risks to languages, along with preservation strategies.

Defining Language & Communication: Verbal Communication

  • Speech: Act of producing meaningful sounds.

  • Language: Cognitive processes involved in interpreting sounds.

  • Speech communities: Groups sharing a common language.

    • Importance of distinguishing language from communication.

Defining Language & Communication: Nonverbal Communication

  • Embodied communication includes:

    • Kinesics: Study of non-verbal communication—body language, posture, expressions, gestures, etc.

    • Non-word sounds: Examples include laughs and sighs.

    • Dress: Cultural expressions through clothing like jerseys and kimonos.

Defining Language & Communication: Nonverbal Communication (cont'd)

  • Proxemics: Study of how societies perceive and use space.

    • Hall's (1966) classification of interpersonal space.

Defining Language & Communication: Nonverbal Communication (cont'd)

  • Paralanguage: Vocal features conveying meaning apart from language.

    • Elements: Tone, volume, tempo, silences.

    • Contextual implications of silence.

Sign Language

  • Communication method using hand movements.

  • Functions as a complete communicative system like spoken languages.

  • Varieties exist globally, mainly associated with the hearing impaired.

Defining Human Language: What it is NOT

  • Language writing: Not a requirement for a language's validity—transcription aids research.

Defining Human Language: What it is NOT (cont'd)

  • Animal Communication Systems (ACS) includes:

    • Individual survival signals.

    • Mating and reproduction signals.

    • Social signals.

Defining Human Language: Design Features

  • Charles Hockett (1966) outlined key features:

    • Productivity/openness: Creating an infinite range of expressions.

    • Displacement: Communication about non-present events.

    • Prevarication: Ability to lie; grammar vs. semantics examples.

Defining Human Language: Design Features (cont'd)

  • Arbitrariness: No clear relationship between symbol and meaning.

  • Duality of patterning: Phonemes create morphemes at a complex level.

  • Semanticity: Connection between words and meanings varies by speaker.

How Do We "Learn" Language?

  • Focus on children's language acquisition and ape studies.

Language Acquisition: Children

  • Innate capacity to learn all language sounds and grammar systems from birth.

  • Linguistic competence (Chomsky): Mastery of grammar.

  • Communicative competence (Hymes): Mastery of socially and culturally appropriate speech.

Language Acquisition: Children (cont'd)

  • Examples of universal sequences include negation and wh-questions.

  • Importance of cognitive growth: Memory, causality, symbolic representation.

  • Baby talk is not universal.

Understanding Acquisition: Nonhuman Primate Communication

  • Primate communication relies on a call system—closed repertoire.

  • Capability to learn human communication systems exists through exposure to symbols.

Language Acquisition: Chimpanzee Language Studies

  • Washoe: First chimp to learn ASL.

Language Acquisition: Chimpanzee Language Studies (cont'd)

  • Nim Chimpsky: Conducted experiments indicating potential for language learning.

Language Acquisition: Chimpanzee Language Studies (cont'd)

  • Kanzi: Understood symbols and conducted complex tasks.

Language Acquisition: Gorilla Language Study

  • Koko: Learned ASL and vocabulary.

Criticisms of Ape Language Experiments

  • Concerns over the Clever Hans effect: Conditioning vs. understanding.

How Do We Study Language?

  • Various methodologies for studying language.

Descriptive Linguistics

  • Analyzing speech patterns using:

    • Phonology: Sound creation and usage.

    • Morphology: Meaning conveyed by sound sequences.

    • Syntax: Phrase and sentence formation.

Historical Linguistics

  • Examining language changes over time and divergence factors.

    • Concepts like cognates and protolanguage.

Pragmatics

  • Contextual language study through linguistic and nonlinguistic contexts.

    • Discourse: Understanding speech patterns longer than a sentence.

Semiotics

  • Study of signs and meaningful communication beyond language itself:

    • Iconicity, indexicality, symbolism (referencing Topic 7).

Sociolinguistics: Ethnography of Speaking

  • Examining language in societal context and its reflection on identity.

What is the Relationship Between Culture and Language?

  • Exploration of linguistic relativity and determinism principles.

Linguistic Influences on Culture

  • Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis: Language's nature affects habitual thought.

  • Linguistic determinism: Language shapes consciousness and behavior.

Multilingualism and Codeswitching

  • Multilingual environments—e.g., Singapore's languages.

  • Codeswitching: Usage of multiple languages in conversation.

Dialects

  • Language variations influenced by regions and social differences.

    • Factors in variation: Settlement patterns, isolation, contact, gender, and class.

What Happens When Languages Come into Contact?

  • Language evolution and its implications.

Pidgin Languages

  • Languages forming without native speakers; develop in multilinguistic contexts.

  • Creole languages emerging when passed to successive generations.

Creole Languages

  • Developed through colonial history; complex language evolution across communities.

Are Languages at Risk? Can We “Save” Them?

  • Examination of language extinction and revitalization efforts.

Extinction, Endangerment, & Revitalization

  • Language shift: Adoption of new languages by speakers.

Extinction, Endangerment, & Revitalization (cont'd)

  • Language endangerment when speakers fall below certain thresholds.

Extinction, Endangerment, & Revitalization (cont'd)

  • Language extinction: Abandonment of native languages leading to loss of function.

Extinction, Endangerment, & Revitalization (cont'd)

  • Revitalization challenges in maintaining local languages, requiring community involvement.

Extinction, Endangerment, & Revitalization (cont'd)

  • Strategies: Classroom learning, master-apprentice systems, and online resources.

Next Topic

  • Archaeology and assigned readings: Chapter 8.

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