The Languages of Scandinavia: Seven Sisters of the North

Author:   Ruth H. Sanders
Publisher:   The University of Chicago Press
ISBN:  

9780226759753


Pages:   224
Publication Date:   15 March 2021
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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The Languages of Scandinavia: Seven Sisters of the North


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Overview

From fjords to mountains, schools of herring to herds of reindeer, Scandinavia is rich in astonishing natural beauty. Less well known, however, is that it is also rich in languages. Home to seven languages, Scandinavia has traditionally been understood as linguistically bifurcated between its five Germanic languages (Danish, Norwegian, Swedish, Icelandic, and Faroese) and its two Finno-Ugric ones (Finnish and Sámi). In The Languages of Scandinavia, Ruth H. Sanders takes a pioneering approach: she considers these Seven Sisters of the North together. While the two linguistic families that comprise Scandinavia’s languages ultimately have differing origins, the Seven Sisters have coexisted side by side for millennia. As Sanders reveals, a crisscrossing of names, territories, and even to some extent language genetics—intimate language contact—has created a body of shared culture, experience, and linguistic influences that is illuminated when the story of these seven languages is told as one. Exploring everything from the famed whalebone Lewis Chessmen of Norse origin to the interactions between the Black Death and the Norwegian language, The Languages of Scandinavia offers profound insight into languages with a cultural impact deep-rooted and far-reaching, from the Icelandic sagas to Swedish writer Stieg Larsson’s internationally popular Millennium trilogy. Sanders’s book is both an accessible work of linguistic scholarship and a fascinating intellectual history of language.

Full Product Details

Author:   Ruth H. Sanders
Publisher:   The University of Chicago Press
Imprint:   University of Chicago Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.286kg
ISBN:  

9780226759753


ISBN 10:   022675975
Pages:   224
Publication Date:   15 March 2021
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations List of Tables Introduction * Dead Man Talking 1 * Prologue to History 2 * Gemini, the Twins: Faroese and Icelandic 3 * East Is East: Heralding the Birth of Danish and Swedish 4 * The Ties That Bind: Finnish Is Visited by Swedish 5 * The Black Death Comes for Norwegian: Danish Makes a House Call 6 * Faroese Emerges 7 * Sami, Language of the Far North: Encounters with Norwegian, Swedish, and Finnish Epilogue * The Seven Sisters Now and in the Future Acknowledgments References Index

Reviews

An approachable overview of the evolution of the German language and a history of its speakers. --Kerstin Hoge, University of Oxford eLanguage, on Sanders's German: Biography of a Language In understanding linguistic history to respond to as well as shape historical and cultural change, Sanders rightly emphasizes that the history of a language cannot be divorced from the history of its speakers and that language is embedded in a social context. What is more, linguistic history is rescued from the dusty libraries of philology and comes beautifully alive in the book when it is paired with stories of everyday life and material culture. --Kerstin Hoge, University of Oxford Times Literary Supplement, on Sanders's German: Biography of a Language Languages are constantly in flux, but it takes a rather long view to show just what a contingent and transitory thing a language can be at any point in time. Sanders takes just such a view. . . . Her biography ranges widely over not just linguistics, but also over archaeology and genetic history to tell the story of these prolific Indo-Europeans and their languages . . . . It is an ingenious telling of just how German emerged from the primordial Germanic soup, and how many other ways it could have been. . . . This is an enjoyable yet still-scholarly read for the historian, linguist, and Germanophile alike. It would be a fine thing to have more such brief histories, made easily readable to the non-specialist, of the major world languages. --Verena Hoefig, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Economist, on Sanders's German: Biography of a Language This book focuses on contacts, colonialism, conflicts and causes of friction, and the resulting language developments from a macro perspective, investigating the Scandinavian languages from the point of view of their contacts rather than as static entities. This makes for a refreshing and pleasant read. It furthermore supplies a well-written introduction to the phonology, orthography, grammar, and linguistic varieties of each of the seven languages. It is especially laudable that Sami and Faroese are included here, and that all 'seven sisters' appear on an equal footing. An extremely valuable and long-overdue overview of all the major languages spoken in Scandinavia. --Verena Hoefig, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Scandinavian Studies This is a book remarkable in numerous respects; remarkable not only because of the vast time frame of some 6,000 years selected for this 'narrative, ' and not only because of the skillful and pervasively interesting manner in which the abundance of pertinent data is handled, but also because of the certainly unusual, yet all the same refreshingly captivating style which Sanders employs. --Kerstin Hoge, University of Oxford German Politics and Society, on Sanders's German: Biography of a Language A much-needed, comprehensive, and accessible overview of the interrelationship among these languages. . . . Throughout the book, Sanders makes a convincing argument about how languages, their perception, and even their definitions are simultaneously bound to multiple factors. Leaving out any one aspect from analysis--be it cultural or historical context, linguistic properties, the geographic or genealogical vicinity, or the mutual intelligibility between languages--would give a falsely simplified picture of the whole. . . . The Languages of Scandinavia is a welcome contribution. . . . Its strength lies in its inclusivity, and Sanders sees and describes contacts and encounters, whereas the scholarship has often focused on boundaries. --Ilmari Ivaska, University of Bologna Scandinavian Studies


Author Information

Ruth H. Sanders is professor emerita of German studies at Miami University of Ohio, where she taught Swedish language and German language, culture, and linguistics. She has traveled widely in Scandinavia, and has studied and worked in Sweden and Finland. She is the author of German: Biography of a Language. Sanders lives in Oxford, Ohio, with her husband.

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