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Linguistic Anthropology

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Presentation on theme: "Linguistic Anthropology"— Presentation transcript:

1 Linguistic Anthropology
An Introduction

2 Guten Abend.

3 /p/ /b/ /t/ /d/ Some English Phonemes Bilabial stop Alveolar stop
(“pot”) /b/ (“bot”) /t/ (“tot”) /d/ (“dot”) voiceless voiced

4 might not be understood…
A rose by any other name might not be understood…

5 What is Anthropology? Anthropo logy anthropos - ἄνθρωπος legein - λέγω
from the Greek anthropos - ἄνθρωπος meaning “man; man-faced; a human being” from the Greek legein - λέγω meaning “to speak”

6 The “Study of” or “Science of”
bios + logy = the study of bios (“life”) geo + logy = the study of geo (“earth”) psykhe + ology = the study of psykhe (“breath”, “spirit”, “soul”) theos + logy = the study of theos (“God”)

7 Four-Field Anthropology
Cultural Anthropology Archaeology Linguistic Anthropology Biological (or Physical) Anthropology

8 Cultural Anthropology
Focuses on the role culture plays in human life Culture is Learned by individuals as they grow up within a group Passed on from generation to generation The primary means by which humans adapt to their environments Constantly changing

9 Three Components of Culture
Material Behavioral Ideational Nepali Mother and Child (1995)

10 Archaeology Focuses on human life in the past Humans of the past
Relied on their cultures to adapt Shared many common features with recent and modern humans Saw their cultures change as a result of the same processes that change cultures today

11 Linguistic Anthropology
Focuses on the role language plays in human life Language is Learned by individuals as they grow up within a group Passed on from generation to generation The primary means by which a human learns his/her culture Constantly changing

12 Biological Anthropology (aka“Physical Anthropology”)
Focuses on humans as biological organisms Biological organisms Have similar features and needs Are the products of evolutionary and environmental forces Are genetically unique

13 Four-Field Anthropology
Cultural Anthropology Archaeology Linguistic Anthropology Biological (or Physical) Anthropology Applied Anthropology (aka the “fifth field”) the cultural fields the biological field making it relevant

14 Linguistic Anthropology
Uses all of the tools of Anthropology (and other fields) to study language Examples What did language evolve? What biological features make language possible? How do languages change? How does language affect culture (and vice versa)?

15 Other Questions What does human language actually do?
How does human language do this? How is human language like non-human systems of communication? In what ways is human language different from non-human systems of communication?


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