Dying Words: Endangered Languages and What They Have to Tell Us

Author:   Nicholas Evans (Australian National University, Australia)
Publisher:   John Wiley and Sons Ltd
ISBN:  

9780631233053


Pages:   312
Publication Date:   17 April 2009
Replaced By:   9781119758754
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Dying Words: Endangered Languages and What They Have to Tell Us


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Full Product Details

Author:   Nicholas Evans (Australian National University, Australia)
Publisher:   John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Imprint:   Wiley-Blackwell (an imprint of John Wiley & Sons Ltd)
Dimensions:   Width: 17.10cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 25.10cm
Weight:   0.648kg
ISBN:  

9780631233053


ISBN 10:   0631233059
Pages:   312
Publication Date:   17 April 2009
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Replaced By:   9781119758754
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix Prologue xv A Note on the Presentation of Linguistic Material xx Part I The Library of Babel 1 1 Warramurrungunji’s Children 5 2 Four Millennia to Tune In 24 Part II A Great Feast of Languages 45 3 A Galapagos of Tongues 49 4 Your Mind in Mine: Social Cognition in Grammar 69 Part III Faint Tracks in an Ancient Wordscape: Languages and Deep World History 81 5 Sprung from Some Common Source 85 6 Travels in the Logosphere: Hooking Ancient Words onto Ancient Worlds 105 7 Keys to Decipherment: How Living Languages Can Unlock Forgotten Scripts 129 Part IV Ratchetting Each Other Up: The Coevolution of Language, Culture, and Thought 155 8 Trellises of the Mind: How Language Trains Thought 159 9 What Verse and Verbal Art Can Weave 182 Part V Listening While We Can 205 10 Renewing the Word 207 Epilogue: Sitting in the Dust, Standing in the Sky 229 Notes 232 References 249 Index of Languages and Language Families 274 Index 280

Reviews

Its straightforward and compelling style will make it appealing to a general audience as well as to professional linguists and anthropologists. ( Journal of Linguistic Anthropology , 10 April 2013) This is a wonderful book... This is story telling of the highest quality - with each story told in its relevant language, together with a translation - but it is also text with some messages of great importance. (Aboriginal History, 1 January 2011) Evans's book is one of the most penetrating and insightful works we have had on language for years. ( Current Anthropology , February 2011) In sum, this is the best book I've yet seen in terms of its potential to persuade the broader public of the need to value endangered languages and to support the fight to keep them in daily use. Will Dying words convince my recalcitrant friends? I don't know, but I will urge them to try it. (Language Documentation and Conservation, 2010) The style of this book is at a level that both interested laypersons and undergraduate students of linguistics can understand - and indeed be inspired by - without excessive pondering. But its content is so important, so beneficial - and hitherto, so distinctive among works of general linguistics - that it should be put into the hands of most, if not all, graduate students in this field. It is supported with good bibliographies which will generate further interest in its readers through the examples it discusses. With luck, it will encourage them to go out and do likewise. ( International Journal of Applied Linguistics, Spring 2010) Of all the books on language disappearance that have appeared in the last decade, Dying Words is intellectually the most challenging and the most persuasive. Evans sets out to show why linguistic diversity is an essential part of what makes us human ... .Modestly yet persuasively, Evans has thrown down an intellectual guantlet. (Times Literary Supplement , May 2010) I predict that Dying Words will be an important addition to the fields of linguistics and cultural anthropology... Evans maintains a style which is thought-provoking without being overbearing. I found the experience of reading Dying Words to be an exciting one. ( Journal of Folklore Research , January 2010) Nicholas Evans ... has written a sensitive and deeply persuasive book about what endangered languages can tell us. He gives us a huge mosaic of the dwindling storehouse of human discovery that is our languages. That's why we should care. ( Courier Mail, August 2009) Dying Words ... is an astonishing book. This is a study of dying languages, of tremendous variety and richness. It makes clear ... the importance of describing each language and each culture on its own terms ... .I recommend this book to any person with an enquiring mind, prepared to be astonished by the variety of languages, living and dead, which enrich our world. ( Teacher Magazine , September 2009) Evans has made an outstanding contribution toward increasing awareness of endangered languages with this book, and it deserves to be one of the go-to books on the topic. ( Linguist List , August 2009) Evans describes the dimensions of the loss, culled from his years of work in northern Australian Aboriginal communities, in the recently released Dying Words: Endangered Languages and What They Have to Tell Us. ( The Australian , June 2009) While some linguists worry that helping communities shore up their languages saps too much time from research, Evans believes that linguists who document languages in the field should take an active role in such activities. ( The Chronicle of Higher Education , May 2009) Nicholas Evans manages to conquer the mammoth task of sharing the plight of the endangered languages of the world in a manner that very few have been able to do. Intertwining anecdote and narrative with concepts of linguistics, Evans touches upon the need for awareness about the plight of the world's languages without unnecessary dramatics. ( Endangered Languages , April 2009)


Of all the books on language disappearance that have appeared in the last decade, Dying Words is intellectually the most challenging and the most persuasive. Evans sets out to show why linguistic diversity is an essential part of what makes us human ... .Modestly yet persuasively, Evans has thrown down an intellectual guantlet. (Times Literary Supplement, May 2010) I predict that Dying Words will be an important addition to the fields of linguistics and cultural anthropology... Evans maintains a style which is thought-provoking without being overbearing. I found the experience of reading Dying Words to be an exciting one. (Journal of Folklore Research, January 2010) Nicholas Evans ... has written a sensitive and deeply persuasive book about what endangered languages can tell us. He gives us a huge mosaic of the dwindling storehouse of human discovery that is our languages. That's why we should care. (Courier Mail, August 2009) Dying Words ... is an astonishing book. This is a study of dying languages, of tremendous variety and richness. It makes clear ... the importance of describing each language and each culture on its own terms ... .I recommend this book to any person with an enquiring mind, prepared to be astonished by the variety of languages, living and dead, which enrich our world. (Teacher Magazine, September 2009) Evans has made an outstanding contribution toward increasing awareness of endangered languages with this book, and it deserves to be one of the go-to books on the topic. (Linguist List, August 2009) Evans describes the dimensions of the loss, culled from his years of work in northern Australian Aboriginal communities, in the recently released Dying Words: Endangered Languages and What They Have to Tell Us. (The Australian, June 2009) While some linguists worry that helping communities shore up their languages saps too much time from research, Evans believes that linguists who document languages in the field should take an active role in such activities. (The Chronicle of Higher Education, May 2009) Nicholas Evans manages to conquer the mammoth task of sharing the plight of the endangered languages of the world in a manner that very few have been able to do. Intertwining anecdote and narrative with concepts of linguistics, Evans touches upon the need for awareness about the plight of the world's languages without unnecessary dramatics. (Endangered Languages, April 2009)


Author Information

Nicholas Evans is head of the Department of Linguistics, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University. He has worked on a wide variety of Australian Aboriginal languages as linguist, anthropologist and interpreter, and has recent extended his fieldwork into Papuan languages of the Trans-Fly region. He has written widely both on Aboriginal languages and across a broad spectrum of general linguistic topics, including grammars of Kayardild (1995) and Bininj Gun-wok (2003), dictionaries of Kayardild (1992) and Dalabon (2004, with Francesca Merlan and Maggie Tukumba), plus edited books on linguistics and archaeology (with Patrick McConvell), on polysynthesis (with Hans-Jürgen Sasse), on the classification of north Australian languages, and on grammar-writing (Catching Language: the standing challenge of grammar writing, with Felix Ameka and Alan Dench).

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