The Vanishing Languages of the Pacific Rim
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The Vanishing Languages of the Pacific Rim Edited by
Osahito Miyaoka Osamu Sakiyama and Michael E. Krauss
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Great Clarendon Street, Oxford ox2 6dp Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University’s objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide in Oxford New York Auckland Cape Town Dar es Salaam Hong Kong Karachi Kuala Lumpur Madrid Melbourne Mexico City Nairobi New Delhi Shanghai Taipei Toronto With offices in Argentina Austria Brazil Chile Czech Republic France Greece Guatemala Hungary Italy Japan Poland Portugal Singapore South Korea Switzerland Thailand Turkey Ukraine Vietnam Oxford is a registered trade mark of Oxford University Press in the UK and in certain other countries Published in the United States by Oxford University Press Inc., New York © 2007 editorial matter and organization Osahito Miyaoka, Osamu Sakiyama, and Michael E. Krauss © 2007 the chapters their various authors The moral rights of the author have been asserted Database right Oxford University Press (maker) First published 2007 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of Oxford University Press, or as expressly permitted by law, or under terms agreed with the appropriate reprographics rights organization. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside the scope of the above should be sent to the Rights Department, Oxford University Press, at the address above You must not circulate this book in any other binding or cover and you must impose the same condition on any acquirer British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data Data available Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Data available Typeset by SPI Publisher Services, Pondicherry, India Printed in Great Britain on acid-free paper by Biddles Ltd., www.biddles.co.uk ISBN 978-019-926662-3(hbk) 1 3 5 7 9 1 0 8 6 4 2
Contents
The Background to This Volume
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PART I Diversity, Endangerment, and Documentation 1 Keynote—Mass Language Extinction and Documentation: The Race against Time
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Michael E. Krauss
2 Documenting and/or Preserving Endangered Languages
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Bernard Comrie
3 Linguistic Fieldwork among Speakers of Endangered Languages
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Colette Grinevald
4 Language Policy and Language Rights
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David Bradley
5 Using Written Records to Revitalize North American Languages
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Toshihide Nakayama
6 Indigenous Voices and the Linguistics of Language Revitalization
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Marcellino Berardo and Akira Y. Yamamoto
7 Pidgins and Creoles in the Pacific
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Sabine Ehrhart and Peter Mühlhäusler
8 Linguistic Diversity in Decline: A Functional View
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Osahito Miyaoka
PART II Areal Surveys The South Pacific Rim 9 Languages of Middle America
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Yoshiho Yasugi
10 Languages of the Pacific Coast of South America
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Alexandra Y. Aikhenvald
11 Fuegian Languages Oscar E. Aguilera
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contents
12 Indigenous Languages of Australia
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Michael Walsh
13 Languages of New Guinea
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Alexandra Y. Aikhenvald and Tonya N. Stebbins
14 Languages of the Pacific Region: Malayo-Polynesian
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Osamu Sakiyama
South-East Asia 15 Indigenous Languages of Formosa
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Naomi Tsukida and Shigeru Tsuchida
16 Languages of Mainland South-East Asia
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David Bradley
17 Minority Languages of China
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Dory Poa and Randy J. LaPolla
18 Japanese Dialects and Ryukyuan
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Shinji Sanada and Yukio Uemura
The Northern Pacific Rim 19 Nivkh and Ainu
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Hiroshi Nakagawa and Osami Okuda
20 Siberia: Tungusic and Palaeosiberian
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Toshiro Tsumagari, Megumi Kurebito, and Fubito Endo
21 Native Languages of Alaska
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Michael E. Krauss
22 Languages of the Northwest Coast
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Honoré Watanabe and Fumiko Sasama
23 Languages of California
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Leanne Hinton
24 Languages of the South-West United States
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Kumiko Ichihashi-Nakayama, Yukihiro Yumitani, and Akira Y. Yamamoto The Authors Index of Subjects Index of Place Names Index of Names Index of Languages and Language Families
475 485 503 507 515
The Background to This Volume
Vanishing languages in the world
Deterioration of the physical environment and the biological ecosystem is proceeding rapidly on a global scale. There is hardly any area on earth that is pristine and not spoiled by civilization. Day after day we are made aware of the pollution of the land, sea, and air, the depletion of natural resources, the excess of waste materials, and the extinction of species of animals and plants, only to recognize begrudgingly that the physical and global environment (all through the Anökumene and even the ozone layer) are fragile, rapidly changing, and already in grave danger. The other contemporary issue that we may safely assume is directly connected with environmental deterioration and diminishing biological diversity is linguistic extinction, which is threatening an ever-increasing number of unique and traditional languages developed by the world’s peoples from hoary antiquity. This extinction is accelerating the loss of linguistic diversity in the face of incomparably slow processes of diversification as well as rediversification (e.g. into ‘Englishes’) and creolization (like Tok Pisin), which yield new languages. Some advocates have taken linguistic diversity to be inextricably linked to biological diversity, with each constituting a system in itself. Some observers, particularly in moist tropical regions (including Melanesia and southwest Asia), taking both linguistic and biological diversity as greatest near the equator and decreasing as one moves away from it, have suggested a direct correlation between the two diversities and even their “coevolution”. Depending upon how one grasps linguistic diversity, however, the correlation could be put into a caveat, since many linguists would believe that diversity should properly refer to deep genetic or “phylogenetic” divergence (cleavage) coupled with structural difference rather than simply to the sheer number of languages with less than moderate depth and minor differences and that value of linguistic diversity lies in the weight of time which the diversification has taken.
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As far as the diminishing phases of these diversities are concerned, they seem more positively correlated through the human and societal factors involved which came to the fore in the post-Columbian era and with everdeveloping technology. It would be more readily accepted that the humancentred deterioration of biological diversity on one hand and the diminution of linguistic diversity on the other should spring from a common soil and move in tandem through the socioeconomic (rather than ecological) mechanisms. It is now a familiar scene in countless areas around the world that people from civilized and industrialized countries have intruded—either through expeditions, trade, evangelization, or colonization—into the lands which indigenous peoples cherished and coexisted with for many centuries, forcedly expropriating the nature and recklessly exploiting its resources, while suppressing their traditional languages and cultures side by side. The same root notwithstanding, the issue of environmental deterioration together with the loss of biological diversity would much more easily come home to us as sources of anxiety or crises, while the loss of linguistic diversity seems much less likely to be perceived as something dire, or is perceived, if ever, in different—and often opposite—ways among people, barely penetrating public awareness in general. Linguists, however, started to organize around the growing concern about worldwide linguistic diversity and language endangerment in the late 1980s—especially under UNESCO, which had gradually developed a programme on languages from the 1960s (see Aikawa 2004). The Comité International Permanent de Linguistes (CIPL) has been taking a great interest in this highly topical worldwide problem. At the 1991 Linguistic Society of America (LSA) meeting, an incisive claim was made by Michael E. Krauss, our co-editor, in Krauss (1992), which has turned out to be probably one of the best-cited articles on language endangerment—see his Keynote Chapter 1 (this volume, based on Krauss 2001a) as well. As the International Decade of the World’s Indigenous People (1995–2004) also spurred stronger interest in the issue of endangered languages, together with the urging of UNESCO in particular, concrete actions started in various areas around the world, with conferences and symposia mushrooming all around. UNESCO’s Atlas (Wurm 2001) includes a concise but persuasive exposition about endangered language issues in the world, while important opinions on the issue from a global perspective have since been voiced by, to cite just a few, Dixon (1997), Crystal (2000), and Nettle and Romaine (2000), as well as many contributors in edited works and in conferences, reflecting varied linguistic, sociolinguistic, and language-policy points of view about
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the mechanism by which languages become endangered, the revival of endangered languages, and what researchers should be doing about the situation. The most recent (fifteenth) edition of the Ethnologue (edited by Gordon (2005), replacing the fourteenth by Grimes (2000)) catalogues all of the world’s 6,912 known living languages, 516 of which are “nearly extinct” (i.e. moribund) languages at the far end of the endangerment scale, so classified when “the speaker population is fewer than 50 or when the number of speakers is a very small fraction of the ethnic group”. Although the decline and extinction of languages is a worldwide phenomenon, both the UNESCO Atlas and the Ethnologue show that the distribution of endangered languages is not geographically even across the globe. Areal survey of endangered languages in the world was attempted as early as 1991 by Robins and Uhlenbeck, who concluded the preface to their work with the words “in the last decade of the twentieth century there can be an upsurge of descriptive activity in many countries” (1991: p. xiv). There have since appeared a number of surveys of the actual situations in particular areas of the world, for instance, Brenzinger (1998) on the situation in Africa, Shoji and Janhunen (1997) on the northern minorities which includes Krauss (1997) on the North Pacific Rim (though only from the Columbia River on the American side to the Ussuri River on the Asian side). Given the very rapid changes from which minority languages of the world have suffered, the decade and a half since Robins and Uhlenbeck (1991) is far from an insignificantly short period of time. A new areal survey on endangered languages, which gathers and systematizes accurate information on the situation, would provide a benchmark for our work in the coming decades. The present book is centred upon the Pacific region where the density of endangered languages is the highest in the world. The Pacific as it stands
The “Pacific” in this volume, not being coterminous with its geographical or oceanographical concept nor with the Ethnologue, encompasses not only Oceania (Island Pacific together with Australia and New Zealand), but also its bordering Pacific Rim areas (of Asia and the Americas) with the (sea) coast and its fringe area inland (or the “first tier” inland; see Krauss 2003: 211). Historically, a great part of the region was home to aboriginal peoples living there before the Mongoloid migrations as well as the crisscross of their migratory routes since prehistoric times. It is assumed on the basis of their linguistic interrelationships and from linguistic history, though the documentary evidence is very meagre, that numerous languages were born and
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died out here. The intriguing hypothesis recently proposed by Nichols (1995), concerning the spread of language around the Pacific Rim on the basis of the distribution of what she regarded as diagnostic structural features in language, would deserve to be well corroborated. Given so vast a region on earth, with a multitude of languages, it is not surprising that the Pacific does not make up a linguistic world of its own, distinct from other areas. It constitutes, however, a whole that has evolved a complex pattern of diversification into, movement of, and interaction (mixture and shift) among languages or linguistic families since prehistoric times, and, importantly, still remains an area which, unlike elsewhere in the world, has not been levelled out by a single (or few) very widespread linguistic family or structural type such as Indo-European or “Altaic” languages. Campbell (1997), leaving aside the (macro)phylophiliac “lumping”, counts about 150 genetic units, i.e. independent language families and isolates (the only known survivors of a family), in the New World (about 60 in North America), with a genetic diversity of the same range as that of the Americas being found in the Pacific Ocean and Australia between 85 and 90 units (over two-thirds of those in New Guinea), while his comparable figures for Eurasia and Africa are 37 and 20 respectively. This reckoning gives us some idea of the incomparable linguistic diversity in the Pacific where approximately 60 per cent of the world’s genetic units are found. Considering the different states of our knowledge available, genetic and typological, from different areas, however, it still remains a question whether the genetic diversity of an area is simply comparable on equal terms with another: say, New Guinea, which is very often claimed to be the highest in the world, versus North America with the comparable figures, which is generally more favoured by sufficient information (see below). Notwithstanding this much diversity in the Pacific, very many of the languages spoken by both the aboriginal and the migrant peoples in every area have now become endangered, some “potentially” or “seriously”, while others are “moribund” or on the verge of extinction; these languages are incessantly followed by many others heading toward these categories, thereby eroding the pre-existing diversity at an alarming rate—see below for the scale of endangerment and the terminology. For several reasons, proper and particular attention should now be paid to where the Pacific stands linguistically. 1. The geographically unbalanced concentration of endangered languages in the Pacific is striking.The direst endangerment of the area in the whole world is reflected by the fact that the Pacific area (in our sense) includes 72 per cent of the 516 “nearly extinct” languages in Gordon’s Ethnologue (2005). Most
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importantly, the greatest majority of these small to infinitesimal languages are not well or hardly documented. 2. As anywhere else, the Pacific has seen linguistic replacements and absorptions to various extents by prestigious languages, foreign and aboriginal (including lingua francas), which led to greatly reduced pre-existing diversity in its various areas. But the region as a whole still remains highly varied and complex in terms of both linguistic genealogy and typology. Language Isolates and small families with no demonstrable kin abound here much more densely than anywhere else in the world, with the genealogical diversity generally being accompanied by the typological. Such diversity should weigh heavier than the sheer number of languages involved, given the weight of time it reflects. The region is thus a valuable repository of indigenous languages with genuine diversity. 3. Within the region, the most critical (not necessarily qualitative) situation of language endangerment obtains at its southern and northern extremities—Australia (Ch. 12) and the southern part of South America (Fuegian; Ch. 11), and the North Pacific Rim (Chs. 19 to 23). The major factors responsible for this situation should include at least: (i) the precontact population in the region was in general very thinly scattered chiefly because the natural environment with limited resources is too inhospitable to support a high density of exclusively subsistencedependent population; and (ii) on top of this, the originally shaky subsistence pattern sustained in a fragile ecosystem was readily liable to destruction by outside factors, from insinuated money economy to recent regime changes (e.g. the fall of the Soviet Union leading to abrupt corruption of reindeer herding in Siberia—cf. § 20.3.2.2); (iii) despite limited local bilingualism or multilingualism (far from the kind in Melanesia—cf. Ch. 7, § 13.1), there were few regional lingua francas, pidgins, and creoles for inter-ethnic communication which could possibly have served as a cushion against the invading languages (Chinook jargon in northwest North America stood no comparison with Tok Pisin in New Guinea); (iv) the cultural (especially material and technological) gap was overwhelmingly wide between the aboriginal hunter-gatherers and the civilized intruders who generally did not tolerate the cultural diversity; and (v) the latter’s political, educational, and religious attitudes toward native languages were in general suppressive and assimilative except for short periods of (apparently) weakened suppression.
Despite the precious store of linguistic—and intellectual—diversity with which the Pacific is endowed and despite its dire crisis, languages with decent
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documentation available are very few. In the face of this, we believe that the most urgent and strongest task for linguists should be their documentation, with high priority being assigned to those under-documented languages that have no known or no close relatives, and are on the very edge of extinction (see § 1.8.1). South Pacific. In terms of areal distribution, the South Pacific with its many islands (conveniently including those parts of Polynesia and Micronesia which are north of the equator) is outstanding in having a particularly large number of small (to very small and infinitesimal) languages. On the Latin American side of the Pacific, Middle America (Ch. 9) and the Pacific coast of South America (Ch. 10) also have remarkable diversity with a great many families, although the picture of actual situations still seems hazy for the latter, while only two (not known to be mutually related) isolates have survived in Fuegian (Ch. 11). The number of languages in Australia (Ch. 12)—which presumably had several hundred languages in the eighteenth century when the Europeans arrived—has now dwindled down to less than half that (i.e. about 250 or less). New Guinea (Ch. 13) is home to some 850 Papuan (non-Austronesian) and Austronesian languages, the latter of which are also distributed elsewhere (Chs. 14 to 17), with the total number of languages amounting to 1,000. Though still having a large number of languages, Australia and New Guinea have suffered an abrupt decline in their number of languages and speakers since the early days of contact, apart from several languages which still have over 100,000 speakers (Engan, Kuman in New Guinea, Samoan, Tongan, Tahitian, and Maori in New Zealand). Great phylogenetic diversity has been suspected of New Guinea, although the genealogical and typological information available still remains slim in general, despite the rapidly growing amount of documentation in Papua New Guinea (but not in Irian Jaya; see § 13.3.4). Another obscurity seems to prevail in Australia, with the difficulty of producing a phylogeny after a long “period of equilibrium” (Dixon 1997) when much language change may be of the diffusive, convergent type. South-East Asia. This area also has many small languages (Chs. 15 to 17) which have been threatened not only by pressure from dominant languages like Chinese (esp. Putonghua) and European colonial languages (Dutch, Spanish, French, English), but also from more locally long-established languages such as Bahasa Indonesia/Malay, Burmese, Thai, and Vietnamese. By contrast with the other regions of the Pacific, however, they belong to a relatively small number of linguistic families each with many sister languages (Mon-Khmer, Thai-Kadai, Tibet-Burman, Miao-Yao, and Austronesian),
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and most of the inland languages (apart from Austronesian and some exceptions) are tonal, monosyllabic, and thus more or less analytical (if not that simple). By contrast, Japanese-Ryukyuan1 (or “Japanic”; Ch. 18) and Korean (see § 4.1.1) remain genealogically isolated despite the unflagging efforts devoted to unravel their respective historical root or mutual affiliation. The view that Japanese was the end product of some single lineage (e.g. Dravidian) persisted for many years, but an alternative theory of polygenetic formation—i.e. of mixed Austronesian-Altaic origin, primarily suggested and pursued by such scholars as Evgeny Polivanov (1891–1938) and Hisanosuke Izui (1905–83)—has again earned recognition in recent years (Sakiyama 1990), while renewed attention has also been directed to possible relatedness with Manchu-Tungusic, conceivably through a Koreo-Japanic relationship (see Vovin and Osada 2003). In this context, for the overview of the area, it would be important to note that the two isolates are surrounded in almost all directions by widely distributed families and language groups comprising the Austronesian family, the tonal-monosyllabic languages, and the so-called Altaic languages (subsumed as a group in view of typology). The apparent exception lies in the direction of north-east Asia. North Pacific Rim. Starting from Japanese and Korean, north-east Asia is characterized by isolates such as Ainu, Nivx (Gilyak), and Yukaghir as well as small families (containing only a few sister languages) such as the ChukcheeKamchatkan and the Eskimo-Aleut family, apart from a number of representatives of Tungusic languages (Chs. 19 to 21). This narrow belt of isolates and small families extends across the Bering Strait and along the Northwest coast of North America, with language distribution becoming more dense and typological diversity increasingly greater (Chs. 21 to 24). All the languages, including even Chukchee and Central Yup’ik, each with a substantial number of about 10,000 speakers, are (more or less) endangered or moribund. The most recent and detailed survey of the whole North Pacific Rim (barring the two ends just below) is Krauss (2003). The North Pacific Rim—defined as an arc bordering the North Pacific from the Japanese archipelago and the Korean peninsula at one end to California (at roughly the same latitude) at the other—is a region neither so varied nor so high in its number of languages as the Pacific. But it is a corridor teeming with languages of diverse and often obscure lineage 1 Given that Ryukyuan has probably greater internal diversity than Japanese, the two-branch family may better be called Ryukyuan (or even Ryukyuic) rather than Japanese-Ryukyuan (Krauss 2001b: 203).
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comprising over forty genetic units, far more in the North American side (90 per cent)—an obscurity that led Boas (1911: 58) to the idea of “uncertainty of definition of linguistic families” as he got absorbed in the Northwest Coast Indian languages. Of approximately 150 genetic units in the Americas, North America north of Mexico contains some sixty, of which about 60 per cent are concentrated in the small region of northwest North America2 (Campbell 1997: 107–55; Miyaoka 1992a: 1048–66; Mithun 1999: 326–586). The centre of gravity of the indigenous languages lying in the northwest would arguably be a linguistic support for the coastal migration theory concerning North America (as first suggested in the early 1960s by C. J. Heusser et al. and recently strengthened by Canadian archaeologists—cf. Miyaoka 1992b; Nichols 1995) rather than the conventionally held “ice-free corridor” theory. This genealogical diversity and obscurity is naturally paired with the typological diversity of the North Pacific Rim, where each isolate or family seems more typologically fascinating than another. Typologically diverse as it is, the area is dominated by polysynthetic languages (§ 8.5, n. 10), which is a remarkable contrast with South-East Asia (above). Renewed interest in endangered languages
The year 2003 saw two important documents presented at the International Expert Meeting on UNESCO Programme Safeguarding of Endangered Languages (10–12 March 2003, Paris) by the Ad Hoc Expert Group on Endangered Languages, i.e. Language Vitality and Endangerment and Recommendations for Action Plans. These are expected to be the basis for international cooperation in works on language endangerment in coming years. In the first document, language situations are categorized into seven degrees with regard to intergenerational language transmission, the most commonly used factor in evaluating the vitality of a language (Fishman 1991). The seven-degree classification, basically derived from M. E. Krauss’s presentation at the Colloquium (12–17 February 2000, Bad Godesberg) for Language Endangerment, Research and Documentation—Setting Priorities for the 21st Century (Brenzinger ed. 2007), with some naming changes, will be followed in this book (except for some chapters) together with the terminologies, and the 2 In terms of the culture areas the region comprises the Arctic and Subarctic, the Northwest Coast, a portion of the Plateau, and California. The only other region in North America that comes rather close in linguistic diversity is, though out of the scope in this book, the Southeast, centred on the Gulf of Mexico. Outside these two regions one finds a relatively small number of widely distributed language families (Algonquian, Siouan, Iroquoian, etc.).
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five categories, excluding the two (5) safe and (5−) stable yet threatened which are not “endangered”, are indicated by the number:
• •
•
•
• •
•
Safe (5): The language is spoken by all generations. There is no sign of linguistic threat from any other language, and the intergenerational transmission of the language is uninterrupted.3 Stable yet threatened (5−): The language is spoken in most contexts by all generations with unbroken intergenerational transmission, yet multilingualism in the native language and one or more dominant languages has usurped certain important communication contexts. Potentially endangered (4): Most but not all children or families of a particular community speak their language as their first language, but it may be restricted to specific social domains (such as at home where children interact with their parents and grandparents). Endangered (3): The language is no longer being learned as the mother tongue by children in the home. The youngest speakers are thus of the parental generation. Parents may still speak their language to their children, but their children do not typically respond in the language. Seriously endangered (2): The language is spoken only by grandparents and older generations. While the parent generation may still understand the language, they typically do not speak it to their children. Moribund (1): The youngest speakers are in the great-grandparental generation, and the language is not used for everyday interactions. These older people often remember only part of the language but may not use it, since there may not be anyone to speak with. Extinct (0): There is no one who can speak or remember the language.
Background to this volume
This attempt at surveying the linguistic Pacific Rim region, modest as it is, is largely based upon research carried out over the period of 1999–2004 by the Endangered Languages of the Pacific Rim project (ELPR—director: Osahito Miyaoka) funded by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology of Japan (Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research on Priority Areas).4 The project, which encompassed the South Pacific Rim and the Pacific, the North Pacific Rim, East and South-East Asia, and Japan (cf. Miyaoka 2001: 15), has so far published about 120 volumes, mostly of linguistic documentation (many with CDs) in the ELPR series (2001–5: 3 Even “safe”, however, does not guarantee language vitality, because at any time speakers may cease to pass on their language to the next generation, given the ever-increasing economic and cultural pressure to switch to a prestigious language of the area. 4 See Miyaoka (2001: 14–15) for a brief description of organized efforts by Japanese linguists before ELPR.
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editors: Osamu Sakiyama and Fubito Endo), as listed in http://www.elpr.bun. kyoto-u.ac.jp/ The core of this volume is based upon work carried out by participants of the project including papers presented and discussions made at its Conferences on Endangered Languages held in the autumn of each year in Kyoto (Sakiyama and Endo (eds.) 2001 [ELPR C-002], Sakiyama et al. (eds.) 2004 [ELPR C-004], Sakiyama and Endo (eds.) 2004 [ELPR C-005]). As such, the great majority of contributors to this volume are participants and researchers from Japan and abroad who took part in the symposia. Others, however, were invited to write specifically for this publication so as to cover the whole region (as much as possible) and to highlight a number of important topics that would otherwise have been left untouched. The volume consists of two parts. Part I (Chs. 1 to 8) discusses a number of fundamental problems in language endangerment with special reference to the Pacific Rim. Part II (Chs. 9 to 24) is comprised of regional surveys of vanishing languages therein, with the chapters arranged by starting from Middle America clockwise down to South America and Australia, and up toward the north of Asia and turning back into the New World as far as the southwestern United States, although this last is the region with “the oldest continuous record of human habitation on the continent outside of Mesoamerica” (§ 24.1). The chapters in Part II are not uniform in coverage and in focus, depending upon the regional situations and the author’s judgement and preference. It is clear that there are far too few linguistic workers committed to the documentation of the endangered languages of the area, given the current situation in which more and more languages are nearing extinction year by year while the amount of time needed to complete a sufficient description of one language is so great. It is to be feared that ten years from now the number of vanishing languages will have increased at an even faster rate. If this book is of some help in giving its readers an understanding of and sympathy for the plight of these languages, then the editors’ goal will have been attained. O. M. and O. S. (ELPR) December 2005 Acknowledgements
This inexperienced editor would like to thank every author for his or her important contribution to this work. This volume would not have materialized as it has without the collaboration of Australian scholars (in particular
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from La Trobe University). Endless thanks go to John Davey of OUP for his continuing patience and assistance with this book from its initial planning stages right through to its publication. Thanks are likewise due to his crew at OUP, and notably to Chloe Plummer, for all the hard work and conscientious effort undertaken in the final stages of production. My heartfelt gratitude goes to Setsuko Ikuta, Mitsuyo Takeuchi, and Tamami Shimada for their generous assistance in secretarial and technical work. Last, but not least, my thanks to Fumiko Sasama for going beyond the call of duty as a contributor by assisting with the editorial work on this volume. O. M. July 2006
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Krauss, M. (2003). “The languages of the North Pacific Rim, 1897–1997, and the Jesup expedition”, in L. Kendall and I. Krupnik (eds.), Constructing Cultures Then and Now: Celebrating Franz Boas and the Jesup North Pacific Expedition. Washington: Smithsonian Institution: National Museum of Natural History, 211–21. Ladefoged, P. (1992). “Another view of endangered languages”, Language, 68/4: 809–11. Meillet, A., and Cohen, M. (eds.) (1952). Les Langues du monde, 2nd edn. Paris: Campion. Mithun, M. (1999). The Languages of Native North America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Miyaoka, O. [宮岡伯人] (1992a). “North American Indian languages [北米インディア ン諸語]”, in T. Kamei et al. (eds.), The Sanseido Encyclopaedia of Linguistics [言語学 大辞典], vol. iii. Tokyo: Sanseido, 1004–78. —— (1992b). “Linguistic world of the North Pacific Rim [環北太平洋の言語世 界]”, Monthly Journal of Language [月刊言語], (Tokyo: Taishuukan Shoten), 21/8: 30–7. —— (ed.) (1992c). Languages of the North Pacific Rim: Types and History [北の言語類 型と歴史]. Tokyo: Sanseido. —— (2002). “The North Pacific Rim as a Linguistic ‘Old World’”, presented at the International Symposium “The Raven’s Arch: Jesup North Pacific Expedition Revisited”, Sapporo, 24–28 Oct. Nettle, D., and Romaine, S. (2000). Vanishing Voices: The Extinction of the World’s Languages. New York: Oxford University Press. Nichols, J. (1995). “The spread of language around the Pacific Rim”, Evolutionary Anthropology 3/6: 206–15. Robins, R. H., and Uhlenbeck, E. M. (1991). Endangered Languages. Oxford: Berg. Sakiyama, O. [崎山理] (ed.) (1990). Formation of the Japanese Language [日本語の形 成]. Tokyo: Sanseido. —— and Endo, F. [遠藤史] (eds.) (2001). Lectures on Endangered Languages ii: From Kyoto Conference 2000. ELPR C-002. —— Endo, F., Watanabe, H. [渡辺己], and Sasama, F. [笹間史子] (eds.) (2004). Lectures on Endangered Languages 4: From Kyoto Conference 2001. ELPR C-004. —— (2004). Lectures on Endangered Languages v: From Kyoto Conference 2002. ELPR C-005. Shoji, H., and Janhunen, J. (1997). Northern Minority Languages: Problems of Survival. Senri Ethnological Studies, 44. Osaka: National Museum of Ethnology. UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Units’ Ad Hoc Expert Group on Endangered Languages (2003). Language Vitality and Endangerment. 10 March 2003, Paris. Voegelin, C. F., and Voegelin, F. M. (1977). Classification and Index of the World’s Languages. New York: Elsevier North Holland, Inc. Vovin, A., and Osada, T. (eds.) (2003). Perspectives on the Origins of the Japanese Language. Kyoto: International Research Center for Japanese Studies. Wurm, S. A. (ed.) (2001). Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger of Disappearing. 2nd edn., rev., enlarged, and updated. Paris: UNESCO.
PART I Diversity, Endangerment, and Documentation
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Keynote—Mass Language Extinction and Documentation: The Race against Time Michael E. Krauss
1.1. Introduction: recognizing language endangerment as a global reality 1.2. Global total number of languages spoken 1.3. Classifying and counting languages as “safe”, endangered, or moribund 1.4. Language size distribution, extreme instability 1.5. Prevention of language loss, linguists’ role 1.6. Reasons for preventing language loss 1.6.1. Ethical argument 1.6.2. Scientific argument 1.6.3. Biological argument, “logosphere” 1.7. A tragedy quite unnecessary 1.8. Documentation and the linguist’s role 1.8.1. Documentation goals and priorities 1.8.2. Priorities within linguistics 1.8.3. Costs of documentation
3 5 7 10 12 13 14 14 16 17 18 19 21 22
1.1. Introduction: Recognizing Language Endangerment as a Global Reality I realize that there must be many people here who are attending a conference on the subject of Language Endangerment for the first time, and who may not have heard any of the information or opinions I shall begin this presentation with; on the other hand there are some people here, especially old friends and colleagues, who have heard this before, who I hope will be patient with me. To summarize: in a 1991 paper entitled “The world’s languages in crisis” addressing the Linguistic Society of America, I presented my views on the impending global mass extinction of languages with these statistics: of the world’s 6,000 languages, 20 to 50 per cent already are or soon will be no longer spoken by children, i.e. are moribund, to become extinct during the
This paper was written as a keynote address to the Kyoto Conference 2000 (held at Kyoto Kokusai Kaikan, 24 and 25 November). The author makes no apology for the informal and personal tone throughout. With minor updating, it expresses the author’s current views. I wish first to thank Professor Miyaoka for the great work he has done to arrange this conference and for inviting me to speak to this audience.
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twenty-first century; at the other end of the scale, only 5 to 10 per cent (300 to 600) are “safe”; and all the rest, 40 to 75 per cent are “merely” endangered, may cease being spoken by children during this century. The subject of language endangerment, i.e. languages ceasing to be spoken, becoming extinct (with or without documentation), is certainly not new, but in fact is as old as human history—and prehistory. But as a subject for conferences, however, particularly international conferences (rather than local conferences for patriots or loyalists concerned with the survival of particular languages or language groups, e.g. Ainu, Celtic), conferences concerned with the subject of survival or extinction of large numbers of languages on a massive scale as a field of enquiry and/or action, this is a fairly recent development, not much more than ten years old. Organized concern began on the part of the Permanent International Committee of Linguists, under UNESCO, in the late 1980s. That resulted in the first book with the title Endangered Languages (Robins and Uhlenbeck 1991). The first plenary conference session on the subject as such that I know of was at the Linguistic Society of America, January 1991, arranged by the late Ken Hale. The first whole conference that I attended on “Endangered Languages” was at Cornell, February 1995, and the second was that same year in Japan, the “International symposium on endangered languages”, Tokyo, 18–21 November 1995 (see Matsumura 1998). Though that was only five [now ten] years ago exactly it already seems like a long time! I dearly wish that my basic statistical statements of ten [now fifteen] years ago had by now proven to be a terrible mistake, but I’m afraid I see no reason to change them very fundamentally. They have met with little or no challenge as to their accuracy or realism, incidentally, even though obviously I can make no claim to be an “expert” (except perhaps merely for Alaska), and there are many experts, especially at this conference, who have studied for many years in this way many parts of the globe. Of these, I mention especially Barbara and Joseph Grimes as compilers of the Ethnologue, in a category by themselves, and to whom I shall return soon below. In another sense, however, my statements on the mass language extinction which we face this century, on an entirely unprecedented scale, have indeed met with another kind of challenge, namely that far from being the tragedy or catastrophe I call it, we should welcome it as progress and a benefit to mankind. That is a very widespread opinion among the public—though probably not the audience gathered here—and that is an all-important challenge to us to answer. I shall therefore also include my reasonings that it is not good for us to lose languages at the end of the first part of this presentation.
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1.2. Global Total Number of Languages Spoken First, for the number of languages still spoken (or, in some cases, no longer actively spoken, but only still remembered by a few old persons), there have been several global survey estimates over recent decades. The trend is definitely for higher and higher estimates—but for how long? In the 1930s to 1950s linguists guessed there might be 2,500 to 3,500 languages (e.g. Meillet and Cohen 1952: p. xxix); here we have not only to consider the perennial problem of definition between language and dialect, but also to remember that exploration was at a relatively preliminary stage, especially in some parts of the world where diversity is greatest. Major advance was realized in the Voegelin’s Classification and Index of the World’s Languages (1977); I count in that book about 4,430 languages listed, not including about 370 more listed as extinct. I note further Stephen Wurm’s well-informed and representative statement that “well over five thousand languages are known to exist or to have existed in the world” (Robins and Uhlenbeck 1991: 1). However, by far the most extensive survey and inventory of mankind’s languages worldwide has long been conducted by the Summer Institute of Linguistics/Wycliffe Bible Translators, as published in the Ethnologue (1st edition 1951, most recent printed edition the 14th in 2000); I have at hand the 8th (the first “complete” or worldwide one, with language counts) to 14th editions, all with Barbara Grimes as editor and including Joseph Grimes as consulting editor, from the years 1974, 1978, 1984, 1988, 1992, 1996 2000; the total number of (non-extinct) languages listed in each of those, respectively, is 5,687, 5,103, 5,445, 6,170, 6,528, 6,703, 6,809 [6,912 in the 15th edn. by Gordon].1 The drop between the first two totals is related to the earlier reports of the Voegelin project and their final publication of 1977, as the Grimes project basically takes over from there. Note the lessening in the increase between the 10th–14th editions, each four years, 725, 350, 175, 106. How high their total might get before the rate of extinction starts to exceed the rate of discovery or definition of new languages is an interesting question. In any case, I personally believe that the Ethnologue numbers are on the high side, from the examples I know, given a fairly high standard for defining different languages as opposed to dialects, perhaps in consideration of immediate intelligibility of Bible translation. The worldwide total figure I have been using is
1
The 15th edn. (Gordon 2005) lists languages, with an increase of 103, but perhaps over five years.
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6,000 extant languages, a nice round figure that happens to be one millionth of the human population, a kind of middle figure that I have not heard anyone object to, not only because no exact such figure could be established, but most importantly, because what matters is of course not the hypothetical figure itself, but rather the dynamics and proportions in what is happening to that figure. It is perhaps of interest to provide some further detail on Ethnologue totals in tabular form including breakdown by continent: Europe, Middle East, Asia, Africa, Pacific, Americas (after 1988 Middle East is included in Asia) (see Table 1.1). Table 1.1. Ethnologue language totals Edition
Year
Total
Eur.
ME
Asia
Afr.
Pac.
Am.
8 9 10 11 12 13 14 [15
1974 1978 1984 1988 1992 1996 2000 2005
5,687 5,103 5,445 6,170 6,528 6,703 6,809 6,912
46 55 83 185 209 225 230 239
42 40 45 67
1,956 1,562 1,666 1,846 2,034 2,165 2,197 2,269
1,741 1,600 1,727 1,919 1,995 2,011 2,058 2,092
1,039 1,034 1,053 1,216 1,341 1,302 1,311 1,310
803 812 871 938 949 1,000 1,013 1,002]
One factor which may enter into some of the increases, in addition to the obvious one of improved information or coverage, is certainly not proliferation or diversification of languages, but, especially in these SIL counts, bilingualism in dominant lingue franche, replacing ability to understand and interact in broad dialect continua, so that such traditional competence range shrinks and what might have been functionally one language might now be a dozen, not by linguistic change but only by sociolinguistic change. Extinct languages are not included in these table figures. However, the number of (known) extinctions is not (yet) nearly so high as is sometimes claimed. For example, extinct languages are very liberally listed in Voegelin and Voegelin (1977), including both ancient and recent cases, not only the well-known ones, but many that are only mentioned as having existed, without any documentation; yet of an approximate total of 4,800 languages reported in the book, only 370 are extinct. Thus, though the total number of language extinctions since history began is surely higher, the number of historically recorded extinctions (in this broad sense) is probably not far over 400—yet. We could soon be losing that number every decade.
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1.3. Classifying and Counting Languages as “Safe”, Endangered, or Moribund Just as the term endangered languages is adopted from the biological term endangered species, the UNESCO project began with the concept of Red Book to list what is classified as endangered, as an alarm, a call for protection. However, just as many biologists have pointed out that, given the situation that is so alarming in so many parts of the world, including huge sectors for which we have very limited information or access, especially because of regimes that judge such information and access to be in economic or political conflict with the “national interest”, it would be far more realistic to maintain instead a Green Book of species that are not endangered, so that any known extant species is assumed to be endangered unless shown otherwise. The biological species endangerment rates of the very worst biological alarmist estimates, e.g. that 50 per cent (not just 5 per cent) of mammals may be endangered (or threatened), are still better than the very best language endangerment scenarios I can imagine. Therefore all the more reason I ended up resorting first to the much easier calculation of how many languages are “safe” (in quotation marks), a sort of term I coined for the purpose. To define this term, I took then and still take now the time-frame of this twenty-first century. Though it is barely imaginable to me what the world will be like in the year 2100, there are people alive now who will still be alive then, and some calculation principles are pretty clear. One is that, generally, any language which is now no longer being spoken to children, barring radical change and reversal of language loss, will be extinct by the year 2100. Calling languages no longer spoken by children—i.e. moribund languages—calling them merely “endangered” is a kind of euphemism, but that usage is already well established, probably for good humanistic reasons. Let us continue that, but with the special qualification of “seriously endangered”, and set that special category for the moment aside. For classification as “safe”, I can envision only two factors definitive for our purposes. One is sheer number of speakers, a number large enough that even under the worst political or economic conditions, e.g. genocides that governments can get away with for long periods these days, it is still probable that at least some children will be learning the language as mother tongue in the year 2100. With the consideration that Breton, with over a million speakers in living memory, is now highly endangered under French rule, likewise Ryukyuan under Japanese, whereas Greenlandic and Faeroese with only forty-odd thousand speakers each, both geographically isolated and under Danish rule,
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at the other extreme, are “safe”, it is clear that safety in numbers is relative to the size and nature of the dominant society, and to geography, but it is also clear that Greenlandic and Faeroese are somewhat more the exception, with both their geographic isolation and the relative lightness of the Danish yoke. In other words, the lower threshold of safety in numbers, on the average, is probably much closer to one million speakers than to 50,000. The number of languages with a million or more speakers has generally been listed as 200odd, but the current total could be 330 (Grimes 2000),2 increased of course not so much by a sudden spectacular growth of languages with under a million speakers as by subdivision of very large languages. Perhaps it is fair to say that 300 out of 6,000 languages, i.e. most importantly 5 per cent, are “safe” by sheer number of speakers. Ten years ago I calculated that by lowering the threshold of safety in numbers from one million down to 100,000, one might double or actually quadruple that percentage, but such a limit seems perilously low in most cases for the conditions of this new century. The other most important type of factor contributing to language maintenance is socioeconomic and/or attitudinal, a factor surely much more abstract and difficult to define, though probably no less important than sheer number of speakers in itself. For relatively small numbers of speakers to maintain their languages indefinitely, certain minimal conditions would be required, e.g. a viable literacy, and social conditions favourable enough to support or at least tolerate maintenance of that language. The only languages qualifying as realistically “safe” under those conditions, I believe, would be those that enjoy recognition and support as national languages of nation-states or at least as regional languages thereof. This adds only a very small number of languages to even those with 100,000 or more speakers, let alone 1,000,000. There are currently about 200 sovereign states in the world (a number gradually increasing), but of those a very large proportion recognize only English or Spanish or Arabic, for instance, and of course the state languages of most of the 200 are already very safely in the category of over a million speakers to begin with. Thus very few languages are added to the “safe” category by this factor of state support, e.g. Icelandic with 280,000 speakers, or in the regional class and under 100,000 speakers the unusual Greenlandic and Faeroese examples. Perhaps so factoring this kind of status seems simplistic to some, and there may well be categories of languages in Africa and Asia where no state or regionally recognized languages dominate over certain types of relatively strong tribal languages enough that some kind 2
The 15th edn. of Ethnologue: 347.
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of balance may allow the tribal languages to be spoken to children through the century. Unless shown otherwise on a significant scale, for the moment I still estimate that the number of “safe” languages, those which will still be spoken by (some number of) children at the end of this twenty-first century, is somewhere between 300 and 600, or 5 to 10 per cent of today’s 6,000. That means, of course, that we stand to “lose”, in some sense, 90 to 95 per cent of the 6,000 languages we still have. With that I raise two types of question: one is whether a language is to “die”, become extinct, i.e. cease to be spoken as a living language, and the other is whether that language is to be preserved at least in the sense that it is documented before it becomes extinct. The documentation question I shall consider later, and here consider the more probable scenarios for how many of the 6,000 will be extinct by the year 2100 and how many more will be on their way to extinction, still spoken or remembered, but with no children speakers, so as to become extinct during the next century. I take pleasure in noting two important favourable changes from my earlier estimates of the number of languages already moribund and to become extinct during this century. One is that ten [now fifteen] years ago I had the impression that somewhere between 20 and 40 or even 50 per cent of the 6,000 were already not spoken by children, or soon would not be, by the year 2000. My present impression is that the century has begun with a figure of more like 15 to 30 per cent moribundity, perhaps most likely 20 to 25 per cent. (My minimum guess of 20 per cent moribundity some years ago matched or at least approached Joseph Grimes’s maximum guess [p.c.], and my current minimum of 15 per cent comes still closer.) The second favourable change is that there has been significant increase in programme activity to reverse the loss of languages no longer spoken by children in at least some parts of the world, such as North America and Australia, where the loss has been especially severe—increase in the incipient development of serious “immersion”-type programmes. These significant exceptional cases, perhaps soon to multiply rapidly, now clearly show that the process of language loss does not inevitably have to progress unidirectionally toward extinction. The two perhaps most spectacular cases of loss reversal are the closely related Maori of New Zealand and Hawaiian. Both of these languages, incidentally, have the advantages of (1) relatively large numbers of people, (2) a history as a state and literary language, and (3) are the only aboriginal language of the entire state, with (4) relatively little internal dialectal diversity. I do not see any clear way to predict just how rapidly such success at reversing loss may spread in various parts of the world, so can only emphasize still more insistently the qualifying phrases in my previous estimates, “will become
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extinct during the 21st century, at the rate things are going, unless radical measures are taken”. In any case, ten [now fifteen] years ago and still by far the largest category of the 6,000 languages lies with those that fall between the two categories described above, that are neither moribund nor “safe”, i.e. languages that are “merely endangered”. Those languages are still spoken by children, but for how much longer? Given the maximum and minimum figures for the two other categories above, 5 to 10 per cent and 15 to 30 per cent, there are left in between 60 to 80 per cent, or 3,600 to 4,800 languages whose future hangs in the balance. But what “balance”?
1.4. Language Size Distribution, Extreme Instability We need to put that question of “balance” first into long-term perspective, and to recognize that the language extinction crisis we now face is certainly quite unprecedented. Mankind’s history has been one long process of technological change from hunting-gathering society to agrarian to industrial (and post-industrial) society with ever-increasing rates of population growth that accompany such development. Before the food-production revolution beginning about 10,000 years ago, human population was not only quite low and sparse, c.5,000,000 to 10,000,000 worldwide, but also very large societies would not have been possible. Size distribution of societies was relatively uniform, and the difference between the average-size language and the mediansize language was not enormous. The number of languages was therefore relatively stable, and perhaps somewhat higher than it is now, though not enormously so. If any pre-agrarian societies had developed so far beyond others in power that they eliminated others on the scale that is now about to happen, there would be historical or archaeological evidence that we don’t have. Now, however, the size distribution is such that the top ten languages account for close to half of the world’s population, the top fifty or sixty for maybe three-quarters of it, and the top 300 or so (i.e. the languages with a million or more speakers) must account for over 90 per cent, leaving still 5,700 languages to be spoken by something like 5 to 7 per cent. Though the average-size language (6,000,000,000/6,000) has about 1,000,000 speakers, the median-size language is now far smaller, with about 6,000 speakers. The upper 3,000 languages must account for something on the order of 99.9 per cent of the world population. In the process of preparing this paper, I had received a most interesting document from Joseph Grimes, a listing of the current Ethnologue’s
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(14th edn.) languages in order of their number of speakers, which I have used to adjust somewhat the above figures.—Here, even though I digress, I cannot pass up the chance to remark on the bottom end of that list, the 229 languages listed with ten or fewer speakers. Of those 229, 105 are in Australia and 48 are in the USA. Starting at the bottom, 52 languages are listed as having one speaker only (28 in Australia, 10 in the USA), 29 with two (19, 3 respectively), 28 with three (21, 0), 12 with four (4, 2), 26 with five (7, 8), 18 with six (10, 4), 10 with seven (only 2, 1), 7 with eight (3, 2), 2 with nine (1, 1), and 45 with the round number of ten speakers (9 in Australia, 17 in the USA). One suspects that a part of the reason why most of these languages are in Australia and the USA is that information and access is much better in these two countries than in, for example, Indonesia, Myanmar, Sudan. To return to my original text—such a pattern of size distribution as noted above is extremely unstable, reflecting of course the ever-increasing inequality in power of the societies the languages represent. Given the current trends of accelerating industrialization, urbanization, deforestation, expulsion, resettlement, compulsory assimilationist education, genocide, globalization, pervasiveness of expanding communication technology, mass media, one can only expect most factors favouring the languages of more powerful societies to expand at the expense of the less so to take effect with increasing rapidity, with the result that a graph showing total human population growth exploding almost vertically upward will also show the number of different languages still spoken imploding almost vertically downward with but little delay. The United States and Australia are relatively “advanced” in this process—as implied in my digression above—both already having shown over 90 per cent loss (extinction or moribundity) of their aboriginal languages. Areas where linguistic diversity is at its densest, such as parts of Africa, and especially Papua New Guinea and Indonesia, which have the very highest (over 800) and second-highest numbers (over 700) of different languages, have not yet “advanced” nearly so far in language loss (or elimination), but those areas are rapidly heading in that direction. I therefore fear that whatever favourable change I might see in the moribundity figures presented above, and in the prospects for reversal of language loss through community commitment and external encouragement or at least tolerance—I fear that such improvement may be greatly exceeded by the rate at which the “merely endangered” majority, the 60 to 80 per cent of the 6,000, will cease to be spoken to (and therefore by) children during this century, to become extinct in some cases already during this century, and surely during the next. Others have interpreted statistics such as those I suggested ten [now fifteen] years ago to imply that with the higher moribundity estimates, negligible
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amount of loss reversal, and rapidly increasing cessation of intergenerational transmission adding significantly to extinctions during this very century, we might well find that by the year 2100 already 50 per cent or 3,000 languages will be extinct, and another 40 to 45 per cent will by then be well on their way to extinction, so that we do indeed stand to lose 90 to 95 per cent of our present human languages. I agree that is possible, that is certainly what is at stake. In some senses it is a relatively trivial point then, to determine more precisely which percentage will become extinct during this century and which percentage the next, at the rate things are going or will go. Perhaps 50 per cent extinction this century—a rate of about one language every twelve days, by the way—is a pessimistic scenario, and an optimistic but possible figure might be 30 per cent, for the rest to be lost during the next, giving us at least a little more time to consider and act.
1.5. Prevention of Language Loss, Linguists’ Role Obviously a more important point than the statistical speculation is not only what can be done to reverse language loss, but in at least twice as many cases, i.e. of the “merely endangered” languages (60 to 80 per cent as opposed to 15 to 30 per cent), what can be done to prevent language loss. It is certainly far easier and more effective for parents to speak the language to their children in the home, in the miraculous supremely human universal traditional way, than by any method linguistics can devise. If only people could be brought to remember this before they abandon speaking their traditional language in the home to their children, rather than regret it themselves too late for that, or for their children to regret it still later. Here I shall take just this moment to answer the phonetician Peter Ladefoged’s very important rhetorical question (“Another view of endangered languages”, 1992, in direct opposition to mine printed in the previous issue). He refers to an elderly speaker of Dahalo in Uganda, who was proud and happy, without regret, that his son spoke only Swahili. Ladefoged asks, “Who am I to say he was wrong?” I think I can answer, on the basis of what I have seen, not of speculation, that at the very least the Dahalo father himself may live to regret that his son does not speak Dahalo, and even more likely, the son will regret it, sooner or later. Ladefoged himself would probably have to agree with at least that much; so we narrow the question to the role of linguists in the issue—and who, if not linguists? I insist that linguists have a crucial role in fact at three levels in the matter of language endangerment: (1) in calling attention to it, increasing as much
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as possible public awareness of it, that it is happening, and that individuals, whole peoples or nations, and even the human race as a whole will live to regret it, or at the very least—and even Ladefoged would have to agree—may live to regret it; (2) in documenting languages, all languages of course, but with logical priority systematically assigned to languages according to criteria we need to agree upon; (3a) in providing technical help to language communities which are trying to reverse loss after cessation of traditional intergenerational transmission, and (3b), the most difficult but with the highest numerical stakes by far, providing help to communities in strengthening the position of endangered languages both technically, e.g. with good writing systems, lexical expansion, expansion of use in education, media, and even activism in sociopolitical support where possible, given the often advantageous position of the professional linguist. This last role, (3b), is by far the most controversial one, which I realize many linguists disagree on. Role (3a) is increasingly being recognized as important and appropriate for linguists as more essentially theoretical linguistics becomes less fully the predominant or exclusive type in academe, and in fact paying jobs are multiplying rapidly for role (3a), helping with endangered languages. I shall for the moment concentrate my continuing remarks on roles (1) and (2).
1.6. Reasons for Preventing Language Loss As I noted above, response to my efforts in role (1), in raising public awareness of the impending loss of so many languages, has never included any objection to the statistics of its magnitude, but only objection to my claim it is a tragedy or a disaster. At all educational and economic levels in the USA especially, the most common objection and probably prevalent attitude is that the decrease in number of languages should in fact only be welcomed as a benefit to the human condition. It is therefore of the utmost importance that we give the reasons why we believe the loss to be bad rather than good for mankind. I now classify such reasons into three types, which I shall summarize here, not in order of importance. However, all these reasons presuppose one point which it is also essential to explain, that all known human languages are at an equal human intellectual, spiritual, logical, aesthetic, linguistic level. There is no such thing as a “primitive” language, or inferior or superior language, any more than there is such a race. True, there are languages with larger literatures, larger vocabularies, representing larger, more powerful societies, but this has only
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to do with the technology, especially weaponry, of the society, and has nothing to do with the inherent linguistic nature of the languages themselves. All languages in that sense are equal.
1.6.1. Ethical Argument First, then, is the human rights or ethical argument. If the number of languages is to decrease, on what principles do we allow this to happen or help it to happen? So far the only principle that appears to be operating is social Darwinism, “survival of the fittest”, whereby languages of the most powerful, best-armed societies replace those of the weaker. This is getting increasingly frowned upon when it operates between defined nation-states, which have armies and navies, but it seems to be still rather well tolerated when it happens within nation–states. (That can also lead to trouble where linguistic boundaries do not coincide with those of the nation–states, taking Kurdish and Albanian as some recent notorious examples.) Language and “reason” are gifts which define humanity as unique, different from all other animals or brutes, giving us the ability to do conscious planning for future conditions to our best advantage. It is ironic indeed that, endowed with reason, we have not yet learned to apply such reasoned principles to our language situation. Instead, brutishly, we still allow the future of that to be determined essentially by length of claw or missile trajectory control. The United Nations has since the1960s, and increasingly in the last decade, recognized the right to speak one’s own ethnic language as a basic human right, therefore at least questioning the right of Turkey to forbid its citizens to use Kurdish, protecting Basque in Spain and France, for example, and literally thousands of other languages, the majority of which are spoken in only one nation–state and are therefore especially vulnerable to violation of human rights.
1.6.2. Scientific Argument Second, I list the scientific argument, at three levels, of increasing importance. At the lowest level, surely, I consider the importance of languages for the science of linguistics. It could in fact be argued, as Chomsky is reported to say, that to a Martian all human languages essentially are the same, with only trivial variation, and that, to understand the basic nature of human language, any single such language will suffice, so the famous phrase “take English, for example”, and if you insist on double-checking, all right, take Japanese too. In biology, to understand the basic nature of life, it would be stupid to
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use panda bears and coelacanths for their DNA, when white rats and fruitflies are so much handier and cheaper. That is an important argument, for an entirely different purpose, to which I’ll return. My point here is that the argument that language loss is indeed bad for the science of linguistics, coming from us linguists, can be mostly counterproductive, sounding self-serving and trivial to the average hard-working taxpayer: “Ah, so you linguists want to keep people speaking their own languages just so you can study them, like animals in a laboratory or a zoo, not caring about the people at all. Their interest and the national interest are far more important than the science of linguistics.” I believe it very important to argue the point within linguistics, but not outside the profession. In fact, there it could still be claimed that lost diversity is not considered an important issue by mainstream academic linguists, given the theoretical definition and claim cited above. The second level of scientific argument, far more important to the public, is what I call the informational, that embedded in every language is a vast body of information that has been accumulated by the countless generations of its speakers regarding e.g. their own special history, geography, and especially environment, animals and their behaviour, and plants and their medicinal uses, that “you chew on the bark of this bush and the lump in your breast goes away”, but the last person who remembers that is now 87 years old. I suppose at that level, perhaps beyond knowledge of a useful root like potato are also realms of ideas such as those represented by kayak, igloo, or omelette, sushi, bagel. Every time we lose a language, mankind is impoverished. As Ken Hale put it, it’s “like dropping a bomb on the Louvre”. Now for the highest level of scientific argument, which I call the abstract, that every language has embedded within it not only information and ideas unique to its history and environment, for example, but also its own unique interpretation of universal human experience, e.g. of human emotions, human relations, kinship systems, or especially in its grammar, e.g. of time and reality, subordination, evidentiality in its verb system, or of space and direction in its demonstatives, to pick just some examples, not necessarily the most abstract either. This becomes quite obvious to anyone who seriously tries to learn a new language. To sum up the second and third levels of the scientific argument, when we lose a language, we certainly lose not “just another set of words (for the same things)” but vast treasures of information, ideas, and even beyond that, we lose different ways of thinking, in fact ability, even freedom some would say, to think in different ways. Just as it is in our interest to be able to assign difficult or important decisions to juries or parliaments rather than to single individuals or dictators, because “two heads are
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better than one”, and it is not better that all people think alike, the same claim should be made for the importance of linguistic diversity.
1.6.3. Biological Argument, “Logosphere” This then leads to the third type of argument, which I now call the biological. This is the most abstract and difficult to claim, but potentially the most important of all. I claim first that each language is of inestimable value, and as complex as a life-form, a species of human creation that is so complex that, as I’ve put it before, “a hundred linguists working a hundred years could not get to the bottom of (fully document and explain) a single language”. I’ve never heard a linguist disagree with that claim, though many non-linguists have, so it behoves us linguists to explain the biological argument first at that level. The final level of the biological argument is, I claim, that in the same way that individual languages can be compared with living species, so also can the human world of languages, mankind’s linguistic diversity, also be compared with biological diversity as constituting a system in itself, a structure of some kind, with interrelationships, interactions, interdependences, a system which we are barely beginning to recognize as such, or to understand. In fact we have no name for it, so on the model of the term biosphere which we use for the ecosystem of biodiversity that is the delicate membrane around our little planet in which we have evolved and on which our survival as living organisms utterly depends, I construct the term logosphere for the ecosystem of linguistic diversity that is the delicate environment of cultural and intellectual and linguistic diversity in which we have evolved and on which, I herewith claim, our survival as humanity utterly depends. I confess that is a challenging claim to defend, and many people believe the opposite, that linguistic diversity is a curse, but I consider that the most important argument of all. For me, furthermore, there are two quasi-mystical connections to it. One is what I used to call the aesthetic argument, and made the tactical mistake of listing that first, that the world would be a less beautiful and less interesting place if the only flower were tulips or chrysanthemums, or the only language were English or Japanese. That could seem like a trivial or subjective issue, aesthetics being a luxury where people are starving, and beauty being in the eye of the beholder. Or worse, since journalists’ deadline is tonight, their space is limited, likewise their time and their readers’ attention span; as I once made the mistake of listing that aesthetic argument first, that’s all that got printed, and my whole argument would be merely that with so many languages lost the world would be less interesting and beautiful
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(to some privileged persons). Yet “man does not live by bread alone” and for some important reason a beautiful landscape is a biologically healthy landscape, so the aesthetic argument is somehow part of the biological. The other quasi-mystical connection I call the religious argument, which for me is even ancestral, as I would not be the first of my ethnic group to argue that our linguistic diversity was given to us or imposed upon us by God, as explained in the story of the Tower of Babel, the interpretation of that story being that our creator, our father-figure, in his wisdom, which far surpasses ours, gave us that linguistic diversity, or punished us with it, for our own good. There must be many people who believe that we have now suddenly somehow reached that pinnacle of godly wisdom, so that we may now presume to rebuild the tower and stop speaking so many languages. I personally do not share that conviction, and believe instead that we are at the very least much safer not to stop speaking so many languages before we are really sure we know what we are doing, and, with the logosphere as with the biosphere, we have the responsibility to hand it down as best we can to the next generation in the condition it was handed down to us.
1.7. A Tragedy Quite Unnecessary To conclude this basic section on language endangerment, its causes and consequences, I wish to emphasize one further principle, now to distinguish language endangerment sharply from endangerment of biological species. Whereas there is in fact often or usually a genuine conflict of economic interest between human groups and the maintenance of animal species, e.g. the logging industry’s need to harvest redwood trees and the maintenance of spotted owl habitat, or agriculture and panda bamboo supplies, or demand for decorative knife handles and rhinoceroses’ reluctance to donate their horns, to take just a few well-known examples, which require genuine sacrifice or compromise on the part of the human groups, conflict between language groups as such is totally avoidable; loss of any language is a totally unnecessary tragedy, maintenance of any language along with acquisition of one or more others requires no sacrifice or compromise whatever, of anything of value. Though instead in many parts of the world arrogance, paranoia, bigotry, and stupidity seem to prevail, it is really only those qualities that need to be sacrificed in order to prevent the loss of language. It has been shown routinely over and over again that very ordinary persons can learn two, three, four, or more languages quite well, with no harm to the brain
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or any mental abilities—quite the contrary—and that such skills are so natural to the human brain that even children can learn multiple languages, more easily in fact than adults. There is no limit in principle to the capacity of a human brain for language, learning whereof can be a lifelong process. So there is no real or justifiable reason to sacrifice Navajo in order to add English, or Ryukyuan or Ainu for Japanese, or Basque for French and/or Spanish. Even the political reasons for thinking so are false and unnecessary, as the time is rapidly coming when we will have to understand human organization as something more complex than the mere exclusive taxonomy of nation-states left of defunct colonial empires. For us to survive that phase it will have to become possible for one to be linguistically and competently both a Kurd and a Turkish citizen, an Ainu and Japanese, a Basque and Spanish or French, Navajo and American, and a loyal one too. Our organizational principles must become intelligent and flexible enough to adapt to the complex nature of our humanity.
1.8. Documentation and the Linguist’s Role It remains for me to append some remarks on the linguist’s role in documentation of endangered languages. Who, of course, can do this job, if not linguists? It is true and important to remember that audio- and videotape recording can best be done by anyone who has a good knowledge of the language and its culture, a good working relationship with the speakers, access to good recording equipment, and skill in using it. Linguists should obviously do everything they can to facilitate the work of such people, but the skills of linguists are themselves not required for that role. If two persons had been standing next to Moses, say at the shore of the Red Sea, one the linguist who had learned how to scratch onto skin or stone symbols for the consonants of what God spake there, and another person next to him with a video camera recording all that, which document would be valued more today? Even though linguistics has made some progress since then so that now we presumably know how to transcribe vowels too, and even vowel lengths and tones, linguistics cannot and now should not have to substitute for the recording. Yet without linguistic information and skills the mere recording of an extinct language, no matter how good, would remain as indecipherable as an Etruscan inscription, so obviously there remains a crucial role for linguistics. In the Hebrew case, if all living
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tradition of the language had been lost, the consonant transcription and comparative semitics would be the key. Obviously with both the technology and the improved linguistics, we should be very grateful to be today in such a good position to document endangered languages, very fortunately now good enough just in time to meet the challenge of accelerated language loss. We do indeed have a chance, if we get our priorities right, to minimize or greatly compensate for the loss in the form of “adequate” documentation which can preserve permanently a record of many or perhaps even most of the languages we stand to lose—whether we lose them or not as living languages being a different matter, treated above; the permanency of the record also being a different matter, for the policy and technology of safe archiving, also an important subject, which we must never fail to take to account.
1.8.1. Documentation Goals and Priorities Here I shall try to describe the linguist’s documentation role in a relatively narrow and traditional way, in fact the old-fashioned Boasian one of “grammar, texts, dictionary”, but first remark, of course, that though no doubt many endangered languages may not or may never have speakers who could become the linguists, or linguists who could become speakers, obviously such a combination is ideal. Linguists should certainly strive at all times to find and train speakers who have the motivation and talents to learn the linguistic skills, and themselves to learn the languages. I am also aware that there are other priorities in type of documentation, especially high-quality electronic recording of language use in a broad range of domains, which would have to concentrate more on languages still in vigorous use, such as those the Volkswagen Foundation has had meetings about these past few years in Germany, which have been very fruitful and stimulating. Here I confine myself to the narrower traditional view, which I justify with the following hypothetical claim: that a perfect student could learn from a perfect grammar and set (of some size and variety) of written texts, and a perfect dictionary, from those three books alone, how to speak perfectly an extinct language or language that student had never heard spoken. True, of course, no such perfection will be achieved, but what can one aim for? Surely we can come somewhere near, and even a remote approach can be precious indeed. Hebrew had mainly just the consonants, various oral traditions of vowels and prosody, no systematic grammatical or lexical elicitation, but only an extensive text which happens to have a remarkably wide
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vocabulary. The oral traditions and assiduous cultivation of those, inspired by passion for the content of the text, are what made the revival of Hebrew possible, a language that had had no native speakers for most of two millennia. It is not wrong to compare the resources or potential resources for today’s endangered languages with those for Hebrew, in some important ways very favourably, in fact, so this is another consideration for the importance and potential of documentation, even very imperfect documentation. It may take twenty years, or two hundred, or it may never happen that documentation may result in language revival, but two things are completely clear, first that here again the linguistic and biological parallels do not hold, that an extinct language can at least hypothetically be revived, a species (so far) not, and second, that it is certain that no extinct language can ever be revived if it is not documented. Given today’s situation, number of endangered languages, and number of linguists able to work with them, prioritization on a wide scale is obviously necessary—especially with meetings like this, involving people and organizations who can play a major role in coordinating the prioritization. Obvious criteria are (1) degree of endangerment of a given language (from the Bad Godesberg meeting in 2000, February, we have been working on a scale of such degrees—cf. the Background to this volume); (2) quantity and quality (adequacy) of extant documentation, for which criteria need to be established; (3) genetic and/or typological isolation of the language (e.g. a dialect of a well-documented language or member of a well-attested branch of a family rated lower than a relative isolate, or language of a relatively unusual type); and one other type of criterion, namely (4) degree of accessibility, which could eliminate some languages ranking very high by the above criteria but which are situated in countries or districts where access or contact is not permitted or is too dangerous, threatening even the life of the linguist and/or speakers, often even in areas which are not war-torn. Finally, I shall offer a few thoughts on criterion (2) above, adequate documentation, and the financial costs thereof. Taking first dictionaries, what is a “perfect” or “complete” dictionary of a language? I believe such a dictionary would enable the (perfect) student (who also has a perfect grammar) to interpret correctly all words and all possible sentences or texts in its language, likewise to construct them. However, no finite corpus of texts could guarantee the occurrence of all possible lexemes, and a far more efficient way to assemble the dictionary would have to include extensive systematic elicitation on a culturally informed semantic basis, also on a phonological basis (elicitation through possible phonological sequences), and most efficiently
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of all on a combined phonological and semantic basis, from lexica of genetically related languages, i.e. on a comparative basis, where possible. Obviously, even under the best of circumstances, no dictionary will ever be complete (though it may become so for the opposite reason, closure of the corpus by the extinction of the language). At the Alaska Native Language Center we have used the term “comprehensive dictionary” to mean fairly full coverage, such that in a new or newly discovered text in the language on any traditional subject(s), one would on the average probably find one word at most, say, every five pages which could not be correctly interpreted from the dictionary. In my experience, the minimum-size such dictionary, i.e. for the lexically minimum-size language, turns out to have about 6,000 lexemes. That is for languages of very small populations, spoken over very narrow geographical areas, with minimum dialectal variation, and no lexical expansion beyond the aboriginal (e.g. few or no trade-language loans, or Bible translations), such as my Eyak dictionary (mainly three speakers, of one village), or Larry Kaplan’s King Island Iñupiaq Eskimo (one village on a small island). Comparably comprehensive dictionaries of languages like Central Alaskan Yupik or North Alaskan Inupiaq, with base populations in the ranges of 10,000 to 20,000, and significant dialectal variation, might contain 10,000 or more lexemes, before including development like loans from trade languages or neologisms e.g. from pedagogical texts or Bible translations.
1.8.2. Priorities within Linguistics In 2000, I was in Washington to testify at a US Senate hearing on amending the 1990–2 Native American Languages Act now to support total-immersion type programmes. The hearing was chaired by Hawaii Senator Daniel Inouye, who asked me how much it would cost to produce such dictionaries for all remaining Native US languages, which required me to think very hard. Luckily in that connection I was also in contact with Katherine Ball, then head of the National Science Foundation linguistics programme, who provided me with some very useful information and also some very good news, which I’d like to share here. First, for some relevant historical background: when I first presented my sermon on the magnitude of the language endangerment crisis at the Linguistic Society of America plenary in January 1991, criticizing the discipline, then so heavily preoccupied with theory under the Chomskyan impetus, for “presiding obliviously over the disappearance of 90% of the very field to which it is dedicated”, one of the most important responses from the floor came from Paul Chapin, Kathy Ball’s long-time
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predecessor as head of the NSF linguistics programme. He pointed out, very justifiably, that NSF had never stopped placing very high funding priority on documentation of endangered American (or other) languages (no matter how humble and marginal a role the theoretical mainstream had relegated such work to, as barely being “linguistics” at all). As a result of that 1991 meeting I found myself chair of a new LSA committee on endangered languages; I set the first major goal for the committee to be not to change the whole world but, more modestly, at least to influence the discipline to include much more concern for endangered languages and documenting them. NSF’s Kathy Ball told me that, in 2000, now by far the largest category of proposals NSF receives from American linguists is for the documentation of (especially American) endangered languages! So the last decade has indeed produced a profound change in priorities for American linguistics.
1.8.3. Costs of Documentation Perhaps it would not be inappropriate to conclude with some very practical, i.e. financial, considerations. Kathy Ball further told me that the average documentation (dictionary) proposal for an endangered US language was for $300,000 over three years ($100,000 a year, including all salaries, expenses, and maybe 40 per cent overhead charged by the typical university), and that they usually don’t get finished in those three years, and have to come back and ask for two years more, so it costs $500,000 for a dictionary per language. To answer Senator Inouye’s question, then, I estimated that out of 155 remaining US languages, about 100 have nothing like a comprehensive dictionary but have speakers from whom such could be assembled, so the total project at that rate would cost $50,000,000. Furthermore, the time-frame for that should be within the next ten years, as probably a third of the 155 languages will become extinct or at least severely reduced that soon, thus $5,000,000 a year for the next ten years. (That information now at least stands in the US Congressional Record, though I cannot say there has yet been any such appropriation!) Note that the above is for dictionaries only. Professor Osahito Miyaoka has been working for many years on a comprehensive grammar of Central Alaskan Yupik, so to find out about grammars I recently asked him how much more quickly such a grammar can be done than a dictionary, to which he of course answered “longer, much longer”. So we’ll have to agree for the moment that for a dictionary and a grammar, we should double the cost, to $1,000,000 per language. This does not include the texts, but for the moment let us at least imagine that that can be done “on the side”, and/or
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also by others. Furthermore, the USA, Japan, and Germany are expensive countries to work in, so that the cost in dollars or yen or marks could be a lot less insofar as the work is conducted in other parts of the world, or on the economic scale of other parts of the world, where ideally much of the work we might hope will eventually originate and be based. In that way the average total per language might well be lowered to half that million, to begin with. Permit me, accordingly, since I’ve come this far, to indulge in a little more arithmetic and speculation. To get as much work done as possible, it would save significant time if a given linguist spends his or her documentation career on related languages, so that though the first language will cost $500,000 average, the next would go a lot faster, for maybe $200,000 average. If the linguist starts at the age of 25, finishes first language at the age of 35, and then spends an average of four years for five languages until age 55, that linguist can document six languages in a thirty-year career, costing $1,500,000, at $250,000 per language. I further speculate that if such work were done for 3,000 languages, properly prioritized, over the next thirty years, or with lead time and training time even over the next fifty, most of the moribund and more immediately endangered languages could be comprehensively documented. This would require a worldwide total of 500 linguists, costing $750,000,000 distributed over the next thirty years (at $25,000,000 per year), or over the next fifty (at $15,000,000 per year). Compared to the cost of certain military hardware and many other programmes, certainly compared to the gross national product of countries like the USA, Japan, or Germany, these language documentation costs seem quite reasonable. The more I think about it the more optimistic I become that funding on such a scale is indeed attainable. Granted, this does not allow for “a hundred linguists working a hundred years”, as every single language deserves, but it will make a vast difference in the record and future of mankind’s intellectual heritage—not a bad way for linguistics to serve.
References The following includes literature referred to in the foregoing, and also other relevant articles by the author, especially those available in Japanese. Dorian, N. (1993). “A response to Ladefoged’s other view of endangered languages”, Language, 69: 575–9. Grimes, B. (ed.), (2000). Ethnologue, 14th edn. Dallas: SIL. Harmon, D. (1995). “The status of the world’s languages as reported in Ethnologue”, Southwestern Journal of Linguistics, 14: 1–28. Krauss, M. (1992a). “The world’s languages in crisis”, Language, 68/1: 4–10.
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Krauss, M. (1992b). “A loss for words”, Earthwatch, 11/3: 10–12. —— (1992c). “Status of Eskimo languages in world perspective”, in N. Graburn (ed.), Language and Educational Policy in the North. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. —— (1993a). “The language extinction catastrophe just ahead: Should linguists care?” Actes du Xve Congrès International des Linguistes (Quebec), 43–6. —— (1993b). “Gengo zetsumetsu no kiki mokuzen ni semaru – wareware gengogakusha wa nani o nasubeki ka” (Japanese translation of variant of above), Gengo, 22/8: 12–7. —— (1994). “Language endangerment”, in O. Miyaoka (ed.), Languages of the North Pacific Rim. Hokkaido University Publications in Linguistics 7. Sapporo: Hokkaido University, 283–93. (Translated by F. Sasama into Japanese as “Gengo no kiki”, in Ainu-go no tsudoi – Chiri Mashiho o tsugu. Sapporo: Hokkaido shuppan kikaku centre, 249–63. —— (1995). “Language loss in Alaska, the United States, and the world”, in Frame of Reference (Alaska Humanities Forum), 6/1: 1, 3–5. —— (1996a). “The status of Native American language endangerment”, in Stabilizing Indigenous Languages. Flagstaff: Northern Arizona University, 16–21. —— (1996b). “Linguistics and biology: threatened linguistic and biological diversity compared”, Chicago Linguistic Society (CLS), 32: 69–75. —— (1997). “The indigenous languages of the North: a report on their present state”, (lead article) in H. Shoji and J. Janhunen (eds.), Northern minority languages. Senri Ethnological Studies 44. Osaka, 1–34. —— (1998a). “The scope of the language endangerment crisis and recent response to it”, in K. Matumura (ed.), 101–12. —— (1998b). “The condition of native North American languages: the need for realistic assessment and action”, Special issue of International Journal of Sociology of Language, 132: 9–21. —— (2000). Statement in Hearing before the Committee on Indian Affairs of the United States Senate. S. Hrg. [06–648], 106th congress, 2nd session, on S.2688 to amend the Native American Languages Act, to provide for the support of Native American language survival schools, 20 July 2000. US GPO 20000. 29–33, 111–28. Ladefoged, P. (1992). “Another view of endangered languages”, Language, 68: 809–11. Matumura, K. (ed.) (1998). Studies in Endangered Languages. Tokyo: Hituzi Syobo. Meillet, A., and Cohen, M. (eds.) (1952). Les Langues du monde, 2nd edn. Paris: Compion. Robins, R. H., and Uhlenbeck, E. M. (eds.) (1991). Endangered Languages. Providence, RI: Berg Publishers Ltd., published with the authority of the Permanent International Committee of Linguists. Voegelin, C., and Voegelin, F. (1977). Classification and Index of the World’s Languages. Amsterdam: Elsevier.
2
Documenting and/or Preserving Endangered Languages Bernard Comrie
2.1. Introduction 2.2. Language documentation and preservation 2.3. The case of Welsh and its implications 2.4. Language revitalization and linguistic diversity 2.5. Conclusions
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2.1. Introduction This chapter originated as a “general remarks” response to the individual papers presented at the conference on endangered languages held in Kyoto at the end of 2000; some of these papers appear in revised form in the present volume. In my presentation, I have decided to concentrate on one topic that emerged recurrently in the papers presented, and this is the relationship between the documentation of endangered languages and the preservation of endangered languages.
2.2. Language Documentation and Preservation By documentation, I refer to archival materials on a language such that at least some aspects, and preferably as many as possible, of that language will be available to future generations even if the language dies out. By preservation, I mean prevention of the demise of a language by ensuring that it remains as a viable means of communication in a speech community. At first sight the relationship between preservation and documentation might seem to be straightforward, and indeed in my early thinking on this matter I would myself probably have adhered to the dictum that we should preserve wherever we can, and document in those cases where we cannot, no doubt allowing a certain amount of overlap as a kind of “insurance policy” in case we overestimate the viability of a particular language, or for purely scientific or educational reasons.1 The
1 After all, both general linguistics and mother tongue education have benefited from the “documentation” of languages like English and Japanese that are far from endangered.
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crucial aspect of this naive—as I would now call it—view is that preservation is seen as potentially pre-empting documentation: if we know that a language will be preserved, then it is at least in less urgent need of documentation. In my remarks here, I want to suggest some reasons why this view is misplaced, and why the apparent hierarchical relation between preservation and documentation may need to be rethought, or at least taken more carefully into consideration as we develop priorities for the documentation of endangered languages. Actually, the term “preservation” is perhaps a little too vague in this context, and I would like further to distinguish among three possible scenarios. The first, which we might refer to as preservation proper, is where a language is still the basic medium of communication of a community, acquired as first language by all or virtually all children, with no signs of any diminution of its role in the speech community. In such a situation, the question of an active policy of “preservation” hardly arises, since preservation of the status quo will simply be the continuation of the language’s healthy state, although of course if one can foresee future dangers from new technologies (television, Internet, etc.) to which the language of the community has not yet adapted one might want to take pre-emptive measures to ensure the language’s viability in these new domains. The second is revitalization, where a language is still spoken as a first language without attrition by some members of the community, but is not being widely acquired in this form by children—indeed it may even be the case that the middle generation consists primarily of semi-speakers and no children are acquiring the language without attrition. Here, the question of “preserving” the language does arise, in the sense of ensuring that, despite the possible generation gap, children once again start acquiring the language in its unreduced form, for instance from those of their grandparents’ generation, or from those of the middle generation who happen to have acquired the full version of the language—since such language acquisition would normally take place outside the immediate family, specific community structures, such as schools, would need to be initiated. Third, if a language no longer has any native speakers (or at least, any speakers of the language in its unreduced form), one might attempt language revival, i.e. reviving a language that has become extinct. Such revival does, of course, depend on good documentation, if the language is to be revived in anything like its original state: Features of the language that were not well documented will not be reproduced in the revived variety, except perhaps by chance.2 2 And in the absence of documentation, one will have no way of knowing which chance solutions are correct.
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Indeed, the role of such a revived language may be more in the nature of an “emblem” for the community in question than a resurrection of the language in its original form. This is not to belittle the importance of the emblematic function of a language, but rather to emphasize that a revived language may indeed satisfy this emblematic function without approaching a faithful continuation of the now extinct language. An example of this would be Revived Cornish in its relation to the original spoken language, which died out probably in the early nineteenth century. Since language revival depends crucially on documentation, rather than being a potential alternative, I will not consider language revival except briefly in what follows. Clearly, the recognition of three levels (preservation, revitalization, revival) is something of a simplification, given that in reality there can be any number of intermediate stages, and different parts of the same speech community may be at different stages. A more detailed typology can be derived from, for instance, Fishman (1991: 395). The concerns of the preceding paragraph bring up a related question, namely: for whose benefit is the documentation, revitalization, or revival taking place? First, it is clearly for the community that speaks or spoke the language in question, since without the cooperation of the speech community none of documentation, revitalization, or revival is possible, with the likelihood of success diminishing as we go through the list. And nothing in what I will say subsequently goes against the primacy of this requirement. But second, it is also for the benefit of linguistics as a science, since this science depends on access to linguistic diversity. There are at least two aspects to this. The one concerns linguistic structure, e.g. grammar, where only access to languages of different types gives us a chance of identifying the limits on the range of potential human cross-linguistic variation, and this is the area that probably most linguists think of first in this connection. But there is another, at least equally important area, especially now that linguistics is once again playing an important role in discussions about human prehistory, and that is that endangered languages often have an important part to play in resolving historical questions with implications going far beyond linguistics. Even the documentation of the lexicon of a language can go a long way to resolving questions of genetic affiliation and language contact, and we can only regret that the Etruscan dictionary which the Emperor Claudius is reported to have compiled is no longer extant. As shown by D. Bradley (§ 16, this volume), an endangered language may well provide crucial archaic phonological material that aids in our understanding of the history of a language family and its speakers.
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While linguists will surely never match geneticists’ success in retrieving DNA from 30,000-year-old Neanderthal remains, at least our discipline can make its contribution to our understanding of human prehistory by documenting, if not preserving, as much as possible. In the ensuing discussion, by documentation I will mean primarily documentation for linguistic purposes, while by revitalization I will mean revitalization for the purposes of the community.
2.3. The Case of Welsh and its Implications I want now to turn to a particular case study, where the potential for tension between documentation and revitalization does, I think, come to the fore. It deals with one particular language, Welsh, although it reflects a situation that is, I suspect, typical of many, if not most or even all, situations of language revitalization.3 My attention was drawn to the issues I am about to discuss by the detailed study carried out by Mari C. Jones on the revitalization of Welsh in two communities in present-day Wales (Jones 1998), although I should emphasize that my own interpretations with regard to the relation between revitalization and documentation are not to be attributed to the author of this monograph. It may be worth briefly summarizing the basic facts concerning the contraction of the Welsh language over the last two and a half centuries. Around 1750, Wales was still overwhelmingly a Welsh-speaking country (Jones 1998: 8), indeed overwhelmingly a monolingual Welsh-speaking country. By the 1991 census, the percentage of the population able to speak Welsh had fallen to 18.7 per cent, with perhaps the most significant drop between 1931 (36.8 per cent) and 1971 (20.8 per cent); there are now effectively no monolingual speakers of Welsh. Indeed, my own discussions around 1970 with relatively impartial observers of the linguistic situation in Wales suggested that the language might well die out as a basic medium of communication in the whole of Wales within one to two generations. In fact, in the period since the 1971 census the percentage of Welsh speakers has more or less stabilized, and there is even some evidence that it may actually be increasing, given that there are younger fluent speakers whose
3 For instance, Lynch et al. (2002: 28) refer to “the demographically swamped Maori and Hawaiian languages, which are spoken by many young speakers according to patterns that clearly reflect those of English”, and this despite substantial support for the languages in the local educational systems.
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parents do not speak Welsh; the increase is largely attributable to the educational system, in particular immersion schools (Jones 1998: 15–24). Perhaps even more important is that the decline of the Welsh language is perceived as having been at least halted, if not reversed, so that Welsh-speaking society, and indeed Welsh society as a whole to the extent than even non-Welshspeakers regard the continued existence of the language as an important part of Welsh culture, consider the language to have been saved, i.e. as being in a situation where we can speak of an ongoing successful revitalization programme. It is clear that in terms of the emblematic value of the Welsh language to Welsh society, Welsh is no longer (barring future changes in attitude) an endangered language. But something else is clear from the detailed description of varieties of revitalized Welsh from Jones (1998), which indeed forms the bulk of the discussion in her monograph: the variety of the language that is emerging as a result of revitalization is one that lacks some of the distinctive characteristics of the Welsh language, including its various dialects, as this language was previously passed from generation to generation. I will mention just two examples. Welsh, like most European languages, has a system of grammatical genders, distinguishing two genders, masculine and feminine. Much as in French, the assignment of some nouns is readily semantically predictable (e.g. nouns denoting male humans are masculine, those denoting female humans are feminine), while more specific semantic and formal criteria can be adduced for ever smaller groups of non-human nouns, leaving a residue of nouns whose gender simply has to be learned. Different linguists will no doubt adopt different stances on just how many words have arbitrarily assigned gender, with respect to Welsh as with respect to other languages having grammatical gender that is not completely predictable on a semantic basis (as in English). But those who are acquiring or learning Welsh under the language revitalization programme bear witness to serious attrition of the gender system. One of the manifestations of the gender system is the presence of different third person singular pronouns, with the feminine pronoun hi being required not only for female human referents (English “she”), but also for non-humans (English “it”) that happen to be of feminine gender. In her study, Jones found that in the largely Anglicized Rhymney area only speakers aged 75 and over regularly used hi with feminine non-human nouns, while those under 75 varied between just under 40 per cent and scarcely over 0 per cent correct usage of the feminine pronoun under these circumstances (Jones 1998: 65). In the more strongly Welsh-speaking area of Rhosllannerchrugog, the dividing age between those who control this aspect
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of pronoun usage and those who do not is lower, at 40, but the difference between those 40 and above and those below 40 is equally striking (Jones 1998: 170). Other features related to the gender distinction show, if anything, an even clearer decline, in terms of adherence to the traditional norm, correlating with younger age, though some of these interact with another of the typical features of traditional Welsh. Welsh, like the other Insular Celtic languages, is characterized by initial “mutations”, i.e. changes in the initial consonant of a word depending on what precedes it or what syntactic position it finds itself in. Thus the word “father” is tad in isolation, but voices its initial consonant (“soft mutation”) in dy dad “your father” (and would also do so as direct object of a finite verb, whether or not adjacent to that verb), fricativizes it (“spirant mutation”) in ei thad “her father”, and nasalizes it (“nasal mutation”) in fy nhad “my father”. There are dialect differences within traditional Welsh as to the details of the mutations, and some dialects have lost the so-called spirant mutation, but all varieties of traditional Welsh have systematic use of mutations. Again, Jones’s study finds a significant drop in the correct usage of the mutations correlating with younger age, the drop being more marked in the Anglicized Rhymney district than in Rhosllannerchrugog, though even in the latter the 7 to 19 year olds failed to use soft mutation after the possessive pronoun ei “his” in about 60 per cent of cases.4 But perhaps the most “worrying” aspect of the disruption of traditional patterns in revitalized Welsh in the schools is that these disruptions not only characterize the speech of children from non-Welsh-speaking family backgrounds, but seem also to be feeding back though the school into the speech of those who do come from Welsh-speaking backgrounds (Jones 1998: 147–50), so that the disruptions of the traditional patterns come to characterize not only the speech of “new” speakers of the language, but rather the language as a whole in the usage of the younger generation. It should also be noted that most of the features examined by Jones are what might be regarded as relatively “superficial”, in the sense that they are easily recognizable and almost inevitably occur with considerable frequency in any reasonable stretch of linguistic performance; this is, of course, necessary given the need in her study to perform statistical comparisons of 4 Since they failed to make use of the aspirate mutation after the homonymous possessive pronoun ei “her” in about the same percentage of cases, the crucial use of mutation to differentiate “his” from “her” was thus significantly eroded. Incidentally, as these examples show, the mutations are not synchronically phonologically motivated, since homonymous items can behave differently as mutation triggers.
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different speakers. One wonders what is happening, in revitalized Welsh, to more subtle features of traditional Welsh, such as some of the syntactic complications involved in subordination, for instance in complement clauses and relative clauses. There is another kind of change noted by Jones in the shift from traditional Welsh to revitalized Welsh, and that is the loss of dialect diversity. Indeed, Jones’s discussion of dialect-specific features for both Rhymney (Jones 1998: 90–103) and Rhosllannerchrugog (Jones 1998: 188–206) shows that most dialect features investigated are being levelled out in favour of a generalized South Welsh in the case of Rhymney, a generalized North Welsh in the case of Rhosllannerchrugog, with even some of loss of distinctions between North and South Welsh, for instance in the case of lexicon. This is, of course, something that is perhaps inevitable in the process of language standardization—witness, for instance, the amount of variation that has been lost within English dialects of Great Britain in the last 150 years—but it does perhaps point to an important aspect of the documentation/revitalization issue. In today’s world, a speech variety with a larger number of speakers has, other things being equal, a better chance of survival than one with a small number of speakers. This means that those interested in preserving or revitalizing a language to meet a reasonably full range of today’s communicative needs are almost inevitably pushed in the direction of greater standardization, of centralization with respect to regional variation, as seen in other cases parallel to Welsh, for instance in the development of Standard Basque. Such standardization also facilitates the task of teaching the language to members of the community who are not speakers of the corresponding language, since it provides a clear norm that can be used across the educational system, without having to provide materials for each regional variety of the endangered language. But this can also threaten to lead to the loss of structurally or historically interesting features, for instance of aspiration or pitch accent in Basque, both of which are found in some (not all) dialects, but are not part of the standard language. At worst, such standardization can lead to an artificial compromise variety that comes to be felt as characteristic of “new” speakers of the language and is rejected by traditional speakers. Indeed it may even lead, as in the case of Breton, to “new” speakers creating a whole batch of neologisms based on derivational possibilities (or impossibilities) of the language in order to differentiate the endangered language clearly from the language that is threatening to engulf it, but which are rejected
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by traditional speakers (Jones 1998: 301), thus creating an even greater rift between speakers of the traditional and revitalized languages. From Jones’s discussion, it seems that Welsh may have avoided the worst of this scenario, since at least some regional variation, in particular the rather clear divide between North and South Welsh, is being maintained. But it is equally clear that language revitalization is leading, among “new” speakers, to considerable loss of the variation that was once there. Once again, this factor may not be evaluated equally by linguists and by members of the speech community, given the former’s interest in diversity, although here the interests of the speech community may themselves be divided: loyalty to a particular language can be consistent both with a positive attitude towards dialect diversity (on the grounds that preserving a variety of the language is equally preserving the language) and with a negative attitude (on the grounds that dialect diversity can impede the resistance of the language to the forces that threaten it).
2.4. Language Revitalization and Linguistic Diversity But let us return to the main line of our argument, in particular the effect that language attrition is having on linguistic diversity. A counter-argument that may well be made, and has indeed been made in such cases as the revitalization of Welsh, is that the kinds of changes that are being observed in the passage from traditional to revitalized language are simply the kinds of changes that would be expected to take place anyway by normal language change, certainly by language change in a situation of language contact. Perhaps the changes are somewhat more rapid under revitalization. But since language change has characterized all known instances of living languages at all time periods, and since virtually all languages have almost always been in some situation of language contact, decrying the changes that have taken place between a traditional and a revitalized language would be tantamount to trying to stop language change. After all, English has gone much further than Welsh in the loss of grammatical gender, although grammatical gender was a full-fledged feature of Old English, and this without any threat of endangerment. According to Ross (2001), Takia, an Oceanic language that shares the island of Karkar (Papua New Guinea) with the Papuan language Waskia, has almost completely remodelled its syntax after that of its nonAustronesian neighbour—a process that Ross calls “metatypy”—while retaining its Oceanic lexicon and morphology, and its distinct identity. And
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Maltese, historically an offshoot of vernacular Arabic, has lost almost all the idiosyncrasies of the phoneme inventory of Arabic (almost any other variety of Arabic), no doubt in large measure through close contact with speakers of Romance languages, though without losing ground as the basic medium of communication on the Maltese archipelago. Might not the radical simplifications in the phoneme inventory of revitalized Lummi, as documented by Timothy Montler and mentioned by H. Watanabe and F. Sasama (§ 22.5) be placed under the same heading? As an individual phenomenon, perhaps, but not in terms of the overall effect on the world’s linguistic diversity. At present, and in contrast to the situation during the rest of the past tens of thousands of years of human linguistic history, the languages threatening to engulf endangered languages are relatively few in number and encompass a remarkably narrow range of known cross-linguistic diversity.5 In previous periods, regular language change gave rise to some of the highly idiosyncratic features of particular languages that have played a major role in the construction of subparts of linguistic theory, such as clicks in the Khoisan languages and near-consistent syntactic ergativity in such languages as Dyirbal (northeastern Australia). Indeed, language contact even permitted clicks to spread from Khoisan to neighbouring Bantu languages. What we are witnessing now is the loss of idiosyncratic features in favour of the levelling influence of the world’s dominant languages. A hard-hearted scientist might not shed too many tears over the loss of grammatical gender in Welsh, since there are still plenty of other languages that provide rich information on grammatical gender systems, including major languages like French and German. But the loss of the initial mutations should cause more concern, since there are rather few languages that have rich systems of morphophonemic alternations of initial segments, especially such as are as far removed from their phonetic-phonological origins as in the case of Welsh. Basically, the well-documented cases are the other Insular Celtic languages, all of them more seriously endangered than Welsh, and a number of West African languages of the Atlantic branch of Niger-Congo—in addition to some Austronesian languages whose documentation is in general at a less advanced stage.
5 Note that even in the prototypical laboratory of linguistic diversity, Papua New Guinea, for which Ethnologue (www.ethnologue.com, consulted on 31 May 2005) lists 820 languages, according to the same source ten of these languages are extinct, while a further twenty-two (including one creole) are “nearly extinct”.
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2.5. Conclusions Let me now try to draw some conclusions from the above discussion, in particular with regard to linguists’ work on endangered languages. Perhaps the most salient lesson for linguists is that the revitalization of a language does not obviate the need for documentation of the traditional language, since a revitalized language may differ quite extensively from the traditional language to which it corresponds, in particular through the loss of precisely those distinguishing features that make the traditional language of such paramount importance to linguistics. Let me emphasize that by this I do not mean to construct an argument against language revitalization (or revival); indeed I believe that the emblematic value of a language to its community is an important part of the cultural legacy of that community and one that should not be controlled by outsiders, not even in the name of science. But the present discussion does suggest that even in cases of language revitalization, even in a case as successful as that of Welsh, documentation of the traditional variety should remain a matter of the highest priority.
References Fishman, J. (1991). Reversing Language Shift. Multilingual Matters 76. Clevedon: Multilingual Matters. Jones, M. C. (1998). Language Obsolescence and Revitalization: Linguistic Change in Two Sociolinguistically Contrasting Welsh Communities. Oxford Studies in Language Contact. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Lynch, J., Ross, M., and Crowley, T. (2002). The Oceanic Languages. Richmond: Curzon. Ross, M. (2001). “Contact induced change in Oceanic languages in north-west Melanesia”, in A. Y. Aikhenvald, and R. M. W. Dixon (eds.), Areal Diffusion and Genetic Inheritance: Problems in Comparative Linguistics. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 134–66.
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Linguistic Fieldwork among Speakers of Endangered Languages Colette Grinevald
3.1. Introduction 3.2. Working on endangered languages: linguistic description at the core 3.2.1. Basic linguistic descriptive work 3.2.2. Language documentation projects 3.2.3. Preservation-revitalization projects 3.2.4. Conclusion: multiple demands but language descriptions at the core 3.3. Issues embedded in the complex situations of fieldwork on endangered languages 3.3.1. Considering fieldwork in time line: past–present–future 3.3.1.1. Past 3.3.1.2. Present 3.3.1.3. Future 3.3.2. Dealing with loss 3.3.2.1. Loss of natural context for language learning and participant observation 3.3.2.2. Loss of a sense of norm, and increased variation in the language 3.3.2.3. Loss of choice of speakers 3.3.2.4. Loss of linguistic confidence of certain types of speakers 3.3.2.5. Loss of speakers retold 3.3.2.6. Loss of the speakers 3.3.2.7. Conclusion: a pervasive sense of loss 3.3.3. Dealing with language attitudes 3.3.3.1. Helping revalorize the language and the speakers 3.3.3.2. Dealing with normative attitudes of language activists 3.3.3.3. Facing language ownership 3.3.4. Conclusions: on the extra complications of fieldwork on endangered languages 3.4. Working with speakers of endangered languages
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Colette Grinevald was previously Colette Craig. The title of this chapter was suggested to me by Nancy Dorian whom I wish to thank here for her generous sharing of ideas and materials, and whose pioneering work in the field of endangered languages, including its issues of fieldwork, I wish to acknowledge here. I also want to thank Roberto Zavala for all the brainstorming time and effort he invested in the production of the original version of this chapter. While I think of myself simply as a spokesperson for the fieldworker colleagues from various continents with whom I know I share the concerns expressed here (in particular North American, Latin American, European, and Australian colleagues on career tracks parallel to mine over the last decades), I am also sure others could have been more eloquent and I will therefore take full responsibility for the likely awkwardness and roughness of my own statements. What should be clear is that the issues raised here need to be integrated in any public debate on endangered languages in the interests of those who might consider joining in the work.
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c o l e t t e g r i n e va l d 3.4.1. About speakers of endangered languages 3.4.1.1. Typology of speakers of endangered languages 3.4.1.2. About a typology in the first place 3.4.1.3. Types of speakers 3.4.1.4. Projected revisions to the typology 3.4.2. Working with this great variety of speakers 3.4.2.1. Counting the last speakers 3.4.2.2. Evaluating speakers’ knowledge of the endangered language 3.4.2.3. Collecting data from speakers of endangered languages 3.4.2.4. Conclusion: Adapting methodologies for data collection and analysis 3.4.3. About linguists working on endangered languages 3.4.3.1. A certain personality profile 3.4.3.2. Energy, time commitment, and professional risk 3.4.4. An invitation to take up the challenge 3.4.4.1. A collective responsibility 3.4.4.2. More about why we do it 3.4.4.3. A last warning
3.5. A case study of fieldwork on an endangered language 3.5.1. The sociopolitical circumstances of the project 3.5.1.1. Regional autonomy project and linguistic rights in time of war 3.5.1.2. The Rama people and the Rama language 3.5.2. The search for speakers 3.5.2.1. Finding three Rama speakers to work on the Rama language 3.5.2.2. The different skills of the three main consultants 3.5.2.3. Looking for more speakers 3.5.3. Trying to work with more Rama speakers 3.5.3.1. Other native speakers that did not work out as language consultants 3.5.3.2. Working at the margins: rememberers and semi-speakers 3.5.3.3. Cycles of expectation and frustration 3.5.3.4. Dealing with a major contradiction for the language revitalization part of the project 3.5.4. Some figures: time, (wo)manpower, and grant support 3.6. Conclusions
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3.1. Introduction Beyond being convinced of the importance of documenting the diversity of the world’s languages before it is too late, and beyond advocating the involvement of the linguistic scholarly community in the task, it is
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important that we also address the various dimensions of the nature of the fieldwork enterprises for such a task. In the wake of a newly orchestrated dedication to carrying out linguistic work on endangered languages, it would seem essential to consider some of the specifics of fieldwork in such circumstances to be taken into account in the planning and carrying out of such field projects. The position taken here is that while linguistic fieldwork is never an easy task, it happens to become, more often than acknowledged, an especially complex endeavour in the particular case of fieldwork on endangered languages. By considering here some aspects of the fieldwork part of the enterprise, the hope is to contribute to what Fishman (1991) has called the need for “intellectualizing” the developing subfields of linguistics that concern themselves with endangered languages, from their documentation and description to their potential revitalization. The focus here will therefore be on the relation of linguists to the practice of fieldwork on endangered languages, and in particular on some of the psychological, strategic, and methodological dimensions of such types of projects, highlighting certain aspects of the relation between linguists and speakers of endangered languages. The chapter will consider some essentials of projects dealing with endangered languages, such as the fact that (1) field linguists working on endangered languages today often find themselves involved in field projects of wider scope than just the linguistic description they feel best prepared to handle; (2) the complexity of endangered language field situations means dealing with a multidimensional sense of loss, and diverse and strong language attitudes; and (3) working with the many types of speakers of endangered languages leads to a reconsideration of data-collecting methodologies seldom carried out in field methods courses of linguistics departments. The chapter will close with (4) a case study of such a project with the Rama language of Nicaragua, a Latin American country of the Pacific Rim (cf. Ch. 10, this volume), illustrating some of the major points raised earlier. It might be worth underlining from the start that much of what will be made explicit here will most likely appear to be no more than common sense to many experienced fieldworkers familiar with this type of field situation and sensitive to their particularities. But it is assumed that, for readers of vital language communities unfamiliar with such situations and curious of them, articulating what some of this common sense consists of, and what it is meant to respond to, is worth putting down in writing.
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3.2. Working on Endangered Languages: Linguistic Description at the Core The field of “endangered languages” has seen a rapid expansion in recent years, and several major syntheses of general aspects of the issue have come out in the last few years (see for instance Grenoble and Whaley 1998; Crystal 2000; Nettle and Romaine 2000; Hagège 2000). Linguists have also started recounting their field experiences (see papers in Newman and Ratliff 2001 and Austin 2003, for instance) as part of a more or less concerted effort at reflecting on the nature of linguistic fieldwork, in particular fieldwork on endangered languages.1 It is now fairly common for linguistic fieldworkers working on endangered languages to find themselves involved in a variety of types of projects in which the actual component of the linguistic description of the endangered language is considered as more or less central. As opposed to traditional fieldwork of the past century that by and large was concentrated on the single track enterprise of a linguistic description, today the enterprise of producing a mere linguistic description is often embedded into a wider scope project. And although some academic programmes are now gearing up to handle such challenges,2 it remains that most field linguists today are more or less prepared to deal with, or embrace such wider scope projects. This expansion of the scope of many fieldwork situations on endangered languages may actually be more pronounced and widespread in certain parts of the world than in others. It certainly is a common condition of field situations encountered today in the American continent, from its northern to its southern parts (including the Pacific Rim side of the continent, from Alaska and the west coast of Canada and the USA, down along the various Latin American states facing west, such as Mexico, Guatemala, Nicaragua,
1 This chapter is one of a series of papers by the author on the theme of fieldwork on endangered languages, in the context of Latin America in particular. Craig (1993) was an early consideration of the ethical issues of such fieldwork, Grinevald (1998, 2000) an earlier discussion of the relation of foreign linguists to national and regional institutions and their linguists, as well as their own academic institutions, and Grinevald (2003a) was a brief treatment of the variety of speakers of endangered languages, with an introduction of the notions of fieldwork as an art (as per Wolcott 1995) and of fieldwork frameworks defined by the power relations established between field linguists and the community of speakers of those languages. 2 Such as the Hans Rausing Endangered Languages Academic Program of London started at SOAS in London in the autumn of 2003.
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Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru, all the way to Chile—Chs. 9–11 and 21–24, this volume).3 The point to be made here is that no matter what the expanded scope of most projects on endangered languages today, the linguists will always be the academic researchers primarily responsible for the analysis of the linguistic structure of those languages.
3.2.1. Basic Linguistic Descriptive Work Basic linguistic descriptive projects are the kind of projects most familiar to field linguists and the ones most easily validated by the linguistic profession. They involve primarily work in synchronic linguistics which typically (ideally) deals with the triad: grammar + texts + dictionary (GTD). Since the linguistic description of the endangered languages will always have to be the most original contribution of the linguists, who are the only professionals trained for this work, this chapter will focus on this admittedly narrow scope but essential and unique contribution of the linguistic profession. It is from this narrower focus that a sketch of some of what there is to think about when doing fieldwork on endangered languages will be considered here. Such a choice of focus is mostly strategic and certainly does not mean to underestimate other goals; it is a reminder not to forget the challenges of basic linguistic fieldwork at the core of all projects.
3.2.2. Language Documentation Projects For definitions of “language documentation”, see for instance Himmelman (1998) and Woodbury (2003). It would seem that the impetus for the development of this new type of field project stems as much from the increasing availability of new documenting and archiving technologies as from an increasing awareness of the rapid loss of much of the linguistic wealth of the world. The two are now thoroughly intertwined, with the technological part receiving perhaps more attention today than the human relations side of the enterprise considered here.
3 See Grinevald (1997) for an overview of the situation of language endangerment in South America, and the start of a discussion on the possible relations, in that part of the world, of foreign linguists to national linguists and institutions, and to language communities. See also Queixalos and Renault-Lescure (2000) for a thorough introduction to the situation of Amazonian languages today by country, in which Grinevald (2000) is an attempt at articulating the nature of the conflicting pressures put on fieldworkers by their academic ties on the one hand and their commitment to language communities on the other.
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Today, the term “language documentation” seems to cover two conceptions of field projects, which may be distinguished by the scope of the enterprise and the relation that holds between language documentation and linguistic description. A narrower scope approach of description-for-documentation may take the form of an edited and annotated version of the field database which has been collected primarily for the production of the traditional triad grammar/texts/dictionary, while a wider scope approach of documentation-for-description means a radically expanded primary data collection, aided by the descriptive activity of linguists but essentially carried out by a multidisciplinary team of fieldworkers (linguists, anthropologists, ethno-botanists, musicologists, historians …).4 The position taken here is that these two approaches should be viewed as successive cycles of a major process, one that naturally starts with an initial documentation that produces an initial description, this description becoming essential for a wider type of documentation, which itself allows for a more sophisticated and more comprehensive description, in ever widening and deepening cycles. Proposals of documentation projects need to be assessed on the basis of what is feasible for a particular situation at a particular time, a more encyclopedic documentation only conceivable on the strength of pre-existing extensive linguistic description, and long-term working relations of the linguist with (members of) the community that have active participation in the project.
3.2.3. Preservation-revitalization Projects The third type of project in which field linguists working on endangered languages may find themselves involved today is language preservation and revitalization projects, which are, at best, generated and managed by the linguistic communities themselves. See for instance the collection of articles produced by two of the leading North American linguists involved with such projects, and pointedly entitled The Green Book of Language Revitalization in Practice (Hinton and Hale 2001).5
4 Nothing will be said here of the newly developing field of archiving, but it is to be kept in full view as a complementary component of all documentation projects today. 5 Ken Hale, the MIT linguist who helped create summer linguistic institutes for speakers of indigenous languages and trained the first Native American speakers through Ph.D.s in linguistics, and Leanne Hinton, from the University of California at Berkeley, and her Master Apprentice Program for the native languages of California. For a sense of the diversity of ongoing language revitalization programmes in which linguists are involved, see for instance the SSILA newsletter.
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As convincingly discussed by Gerdts (1998) and clear from general work on endangered languages by Nettle and Romaine (2000) and Crystal (2000), the role of linguists in the overall dynamics of such projects may need humbling re-evaluation and readjustment, even though, and once again, one must keep in mind that the original and indispensable contribution of linguists remains the analytical study of the language. It may well be that, in such contexts, the most productive approach to the description of the language is one channelled through the training in descriptive linguistics of linguistic community members, for self-sustaining language work of the kind that can be of use to the community. This means that the field linguists double up as linguistics teachers, or are hired actually as full-time teachers and supervisors of linguistic work done by speakers themselves (the with and by fieldwork frameworks mentioned below on p. 44 at n. 9).6
3.2.4. Conclusion: Multiple Demands but Language Descriptions at the Core The main point of this first section was therefore that linguistic fieldwork on endangered languages may well be cast today within more encompassing documentation and revitalization projects, in which case one of the major challenges for the linguistic fieldworker is to manage a demanding balancing act between multiple demands. This issue has been vividly described by Nagy (2000), who describes her fieldwork experience as wearing different “hats”, among which are the sociolinguist hat, the theoretical linguist hat, the applied linguist hat, and the “techie” hat, with others yet to be considered. This balancing act may well be in fact one of the major field issues to face for linguists working on endangered languages today.
6 See the example of Guatemala and the development of a cohort of Mayan native linguists, and the dedication of a field linguist like Nora England to the training of Guatemalan native Mayan linguists: this included contribution to the production of pedagogical material (England 1992b, 2001) and the creation of a native linguistic research institute, OKMA. See also Yasugi (2003) for ELPR-financed volumes of linguistic materials based on a questionnaire (that of the Archive of Indigenous Languages of Mexico organized by Swadesh) produced by the linguists of OKMA. The special case of linguistics in Guatemala is described in England (1992a, 1997) and Grinevald (2003b). The training effort has continued into the creation of CILLA (the Center for the Indigenous Languages of Latin America— N. England director), to provide graduate training for the likes of the indigenous graduates of university programmes in Latin America (for Mayan speakers, the programmes of CIESAS in Mexico, or of the Landivar and San Carlos Universities of Guatemala).
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3.3. Issues Embedded in the Complex Situations of Fieldwork on Endangered Languages Unlike other disciplines relying on fieldwork, such as anthropology, ethnology, or sociology, linguistics has not had a tradition of discussing much the phenomenon of fieldwork. What is generally lacking is an addition to the standard course on “field methods” with some discussion of the wider context of doing “fieldwork”. This becomes crucial when one is heading for fieldwork in the midst of endangered language communities, with all the specific extra complications such projects may entail. Among the themes that could be raised in such fieldwork sessions, three will be considered below: the importance of grasping the dynamics of a fieldwork project in a time line, from past through the present to the future; understanding and anticipating having to deal with various forms of loss sometimes in unexpected and powerful ways; and the need to cope with the sometimes insidious impact of particular language attitudes on even the simplest linguistic elicitation sessions.
3.3.1. Considering Fieldwork in Time Line: Past–present–future This is a basic issue to always take into consideration when doing fieldwork, but one that is not very familiar to linguists: to become aware of the community’s past experience with linguistically oriented outsiders, of its present concerns and activities about the language, and to work for some possible continuation of the work in the future by the community itself or other outsiders on other projects.
3.3.1.1. Past With respect to the past, the issue is that one may or may not be the first one in the field. Earlier on, when fieldwork was basically a very individual enterprise and field linguists were very scarce, basic attention to this issue consisted in checking whether another academic had already done or was still doing fieldwork at the same site.7 Today, it is best to assume that communities have already had experience with any number of development projects, including some dealing with the language in some fashion. The community’s memory of our predecessor(s) has potentially either a positive or a negative 7 In the case of Latin America one factor considered in the choice of site was and remains to a great extent the established presence of missionary Bible translator linguists, for instance.
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impact. It can actually take a while to figure out, as communities often do not share that information at first with new outsiders, particularly when negative feelings linger on.
3.3.1.2. Present One needs to assess the level of vitality of the language, which is not a simple endeavour, if one considers all the variables judged important (as spelled out in UNESCO 2003). This includes evaluating the level of ethnic consciousness of the community and the level of politicization of its relation to the language. All field projects can benefit from such an assessment, to better evaluate the desirability and feasibility of description and documentation, as well as revitalization efforts. As will be seen below in § 3.4 on speakers of situations of endangered languages, defining the linguistic community of such languages and simply counting its members is already a challenge.
3.3.1.3. Future In the case of work on endangered languages, it is important to consider how one may be the one and only, and, crucially, the last one to work on that particular language. If one is to be the one and last linguist to work on an endangered language, and one should always assume so, it means that the data one will be collecting may well be all that there will be of documentation of the language, unless some native people can be trained to continue collecting material after the departure of the field linguists. Therefore, as spelled out by Mithun (2001), a major issue to keep in mind in collecting data is that one cannot tell what will be of theoretical interest later in the field of linguistics, which means that one becomes accountable for collecting all the data one can, even data in which one may not be personally interested because of one’s own theoretical leaning and interests. A future perspective in terms of the community also means considering the sustainability of the work done on the language, through empowerment of members of the community, particularly in the form of continued training of speakers and semi-speakers capable and interested, and participation and support to the production of language materials, with a view to producing material that is actually usable in the field and by the community.8 8 This author can be critical of too much effort, energy, and funding being spent on the production of technologically highly sophisticated materials of no use at all to communities, in plain truth, for lack of access to electricity, or computers, or computers with the kind of memory capacities required by programmes first world academics have created, or simply for lack of able bodies to be trained locally in using them.
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Such concerns are now integrated in ongoing discussions of what has been labelled as “good practice”, including legal, ethical, and practical issues in a sociopolitical context of support to sustainable community development.9
3.3.2. Dealing with Loss Working on endangered languages has another dimension rarely mentioned in the literature: that it means dealing with ongoing loss. The notion of loss is pervasive in fieldwork on endangered languages, both in a practical and in a psychological, or even an emotional sense. The sense of loss may take many shapes, all with some impact on the experience of fieldwork. This makes the work essentially different from fieldwork in dominant language communities where language is everywhere, choice of speakers is wide open, participant observation is easy to come by, and attitude of speakers toward their language is one of relative confidence. There are losses that have to do with the language to be studied itself, and others that are more tied to the persons of the speakers.
3.3.2.1. Loss of Natural Context for Language Learning and Participant Observation The loss of varieties of language due to the loss of contexts of use, which is the other side of the phenomenon of “language shift”, means fewer opportunities to capture the language in its various forms. It becomes from difficult, to impossible, to record certain varieties in their natural settings, since, by definition, fewer children are learning it—if any at all—fewer elders are passing on the traditional culture, fewer ceremonies are performed so that fewer traditional performing arts can be documented. The loss of the critical mass of speakers necessary to maintain a vital linguistic community translates into less of a chance to observe the language in use, to hear it in its natural use, to learn it by immersion, to practise it. In general, there are fewer opportunities, often no more opportunities, for the last speakers to gather, certainly no more traditional night gatherings typical of winter nights in many places. 9 The notion of “good practice” corresponds to the “empowerment’” framwork discussed in Cameron et al. (1992), who summarized the progression of fieldwork frameworks in the course of the second half of the 20th century in the formula of fieldwork having been earlier on a language, then later on a language and for the community, to develop into fieldwork on a language and with the community, where these frameworks are labelled the “ethical”, “advocacy”, and “empowerment” frameworks, respectively. Actually a further model of work on a language but by the community is the one requested by more and more indigenous communities today, in America at least, as discussed in Grinevald (2000, 2003a).
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3.3.2.2. Loss of a Sense of Norm, and Increased Variation in the Language These are losses typical of those situations that linguists can be very sensitive to. Normally oral tradition languages naturally function with a certain amount of variation that is already hard to handle for linguists, who come from normative language traditions and have been raised in linguistic traditions that primarily consider data of standardized long written tradition languages. But in the case of language obsolescence an additional layer of variation pervades everything: it is the variation caused by the lack of norm enforcement from lack of vitality of the speaker community.10
3.3.2.3. Loss of Choice of Speakers The limitations are obvious when there are few speakers left, and among them older people with physical ailments, although the limitation in number is often compensated by the fact that some of those last speakers are extremely attached to their language, eager to work with a linguist, and excellent speakers. One can evoke for instance the talent of the extraordinary California Yahi man they called Ishi, the last survivor of his tribe and last speaker of his language, who was the unique source of a very rich documentation of his language and culture (Kroeber 1961). Working with as many of the last speakers as possible can help piece together what is left of the language and the knowledge it conveys. It has often been observed that what remains of knowledge of a language can be distributed across speakers, so that it might take working with multiple semi-speakers to complete the study of some aspect of the language.
3.3.2.4. Loss of Linguistic Confidence of Certain Types of Speakers This is a major characteristic trait of the semi-speakers of very endangered languages, as will be considered below in the section on types of speakers of endangered languages. This type of loss has a direct impact on the conduct of elicitation sessions, as it becomes obvious that simple questions may trigger renewed sense of loss, of shame, or confusion in the speakers.
3.3.2.5. Loss of Speakers Retold It is probably worth mentioning another aspect of the sense of loss likely to shock the unprepared fieldworker. It is the possible traumatic catharsis 10 For a discussion of the nature of the multidimensional linguistic variation inherent to such a situation of endangered languages, see Dorian (1982, 1986, 2001 in particular).
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effect of asking last speakers of some language for some personal narratives, and of hearing tales of decimation of their people. One can think of the haunting voice of Ishi recorded on wax cylinders telling the story of the successive massacres that decimated his people. Such an experience can still happen today, as happened, for instance, on several occasions during the campaign for the “normalization” of the alphabets of the Amazonian languages of Bolivia in 1995 and 1996, when several groups of speakers of seriously endangered languages recalled from living memory episodes of the decimation of their people. This is not what graduate students in linguistics usually expect to hear when they ask for a simple personal narrative from native speakers in order to have textual material to study the basic morphosyntax of the language.
3.3.2.6. Loss of the Speakers And there is always the ongoing loss of the old speakers to whom the linguists had become attached as if they were family members, and on whom they were dependent in order to learn about the language. There are common cases of plain mourning one must deal with, but there is also the added dimension for linguists of mourning the death of the language itself. And before the actual death of the old speakers and of their languages with them, there may be painful dealings with the loss of memory or language ability that can accompany old age and ill health.
3.3.2.7. Conclusion: a Pervasive Sense of Loss There is therefore a high likelihood, during fieldwork on endangered languages, of being confronted at some point or another with any combination of these feelings of loss. They may be diffuse enough for us not to be able to put labels on them but their accumulation definitely gives to this kind of fieldwork a very different personal dimension. These feelings of loss can be acute and dramatic when speakers die, but also when our questioning and listening to some of them gives them an opportunity to express the depth of some of their own emotions about it, making us direct witnesses of the human and personal tragedy of language death in some parts of the world.
3.3.3. Dealing with Language Attitudes Actually one always has to deal with language attitudes when working on languages, but these attitudes are not always easy to identify either. In speakers of dominant languages they tend to be a cluster of pride in the language
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and quiet personal assurance of its value and claimed superiority. But with speakers of un-empowered languages, including those of endangered languages, the attitudes are often very mixed: negative attitudes absorbed from the dominant culture that can lead to serious alienation, combined with often hidden positive attitudes that underlie a strong need to identify with that language. Maintenance and revitalization projects must take into account these attitudes because it is clear that they determine, more than scientific studies and modern technologies, the quality of the documentation and the ultimate fate of the language. Dealing with language attitudes can take many forms.
3.3.3.1. Helping Revalorize the Language and the Speakers Linguists contribute to the revalorization of the language itself, by their own scientific work, the proof that the language can be written, is worth studying and is rich in grammar and vocabulary. This revalorization of the language must be addressed both to the community members themselves and to the members of the dominant culture. But revalorization of a language must also pass through the conscious revalorization of its last speakers. Language endangerment created by language shift creates a varied population of speakers with different levels of bilingualism and degrees of alienation to the dominant culture and to their own language and culture. In such situations, a discriminatory attitude is common toward the last speakers of an endangered language, often seen as backward, if not primitive, partly for speaking a denigrated language. If they work with linguists, these speakers can additionally be considered as traitors to the community, accused of selling a good that belongs to the community, even when the community has very mixed feelings about that good. Such contradictory attitudes of non-speakers in a love-hate relation to the language are a disturbing and frustrating attitude for the Cartesian minds of most linguists.
3.3.3.2. Dealing with Normative Attitudes of Language Activists Another aspect of language attitudes that linguists have to deal with is the double challenge of handling the natural variation of the data collected in situations of endangered languages while being confronted with the extreme normative attitudes of some of the leaders of the revitalization projects. Those leaders are generally among the people with the most formal (colonial) education in the community, and they have identified the notion of a language with that of a set of norms to be taught, as was taught to them in the
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dominant colonial language. This normative bend is further complicated by often acrimonious discussions of whose language is the most representative and therefore should be documented and then hopefully taught, between that of the old traditional speakers and that of the young fluent speakers. Attitudes toward language change can also be a real challenge for the field linguists caught between community factions, and navigating between the puristic and folklorizing tendencies of some and the claimed needs of others to modernize the language in order to make it adapt to the present world of its speakers.
3.3.3.3. Facing Language Ownership More extreme yet, one may also encounter community attitudes towards the language that will severely limit data collection, such as communities that have a very developed sense of language ownership and that do not want to teach their ethnic language to outsiders. This is known of some linguistic communities of the south-west of the USA, and is also the basic attitude of some Amazonian communities, for instance.11 Language ownership issues in terms of diffusion of information on the language are also now systematically and pressingly raised by the new archiving projects and use of web technologies.
3.3.4. Conclusions: on the Extra Complications of Fieldwork on Endangered Languages The point of this section of § 3.3 was therefore to reveal some of the hidden dimensions of fieldwork on endangered languages that can make this kind of linguistic work more challenging than most outsiders can envision. The issues faced by field linguists are varied, from understanding their place in the history of the native community’s dealings with outsiders, to facing, sometimes in the most intimate and personal way, the multiple aspects of loss characteristic of such work on endangered to moribund languages, to 11 Ospina Bozzi (2002) is such an instance of fieldwork with one of the last nomadic groups of the Colombian Amazonian region, the Yuhup Maku. It was a very difficult monolingual fieldwork setting that demanded she follow tenaciously the group moving through the forest, leaving her no other recourse than integrating herself in daily activities of subsistence and learning to speak the language by observation and self-teaching. It is difficult to conceive of some major documentation project with teams and cameras under such circumstances. The grammatical analysis found in the doctoral thesis is the result of years of contact with the group and numerous field trips, some of them having been unproductive because the group could not be located in its displacements in the forest: conditions that render any field project difficult to time, and yet the language presents extremely interesting linguistic characteristics well worth any effort at describing it.
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being confronted with the realities of complex and commonly very contradictory attitudes of members of the community, toward speakers, toward language variation and language change, and toward outsiders. A further issue for field linguists is to be confronted with the wide variety of types of speakers one encounters in such situations, which is the topic of the next section.
3.4. Working with Speakers of Endangered Languages As already mentioned in passing, in a situation of endangered languages, not only are there fewer and fewer speakers but, in addition, there are many different types of speakers, of the kind that are not found in situations of full vitality of a language. Following Dorian (1982), it is in addition the position of this chapter that field linguists working with communities of endangered languages should consider taking a wider rather than narrower scope and conception of what constitutes the linguistic community at hand, and include in the process of documentation and description as many types of speakers as possible, including those that, from our common experience with vital language communities, would appear to be at the margins of the linguistic community. They too have their place and their contributions to make, particularly in contributing to the basic social fabric a language needs to survive.
3.4.1. About Speakers of Endangered Languages Speakers of endangered languages are characterized by particular traits which linguists need to take into account in order to handle appropriately the various types of interactions likely to arise, and to identify better the nature of the data they are collecting.
3.4.1.1. Typology of Speakers of Endangered Languages Speakers of a vital language normally present great diversity in their knowledge, attitude, and talent for working on their language. All field linguists know that some speakers can be superb linguistic consultants, while working with others can be difficult, sluggish, and frustrating. The situation is always much more complex when dealing with speakers of endangered languages, both because of the inherent limitation of choice of speakers with whom to work that has already been mentioned, but also, as this section intends to point out, because of the types of speakers one is likely to encounter in these
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situations. What follows is a quick consideration of the types of speakers of an endangered-language-speaker community and the ways in which this diversity relates to the process of data collecting.
3.4.1.2. About a Typology in the First Place Various attempts at building a typology of speakers of endangered language communities are available in the literature, such as Campbell and Muntzel (1989), Dorian (1982, 1989), Dressler (1978), and Sasse (1992). Grinevald Craig (1998) was an overview of this literature at that point. The intrinsic difficulty in establishing a workable typology of speakers resides in the nature of the linguistic community, in particular in the effects of the progressive state of decay of the linguistic social networks and of the reduction of the domains of use of the language. Part of the difficulty in building a typology of speakers of endangered languages comes from deciding whether to approach the task from a linguistic competence perspective or from a language use perspective, i.e. by how well the speaker knows the language, vs. how often and regularly she or he still uses it. The approach taken here is one that attempts to categorize speakers first on the basis of their knowledge of the language; it places the different types of speakers on a continuum from monolingualism in the minority language to practical monolingualism in the socially dominant language, with all degrees of progressive bilingualism in between minority and dominant language. In some ways such an approach would not be very different from a study of language shift in immigrant communities. However, what makes the situation different in the case of endangered languages is the complex interlocking of multiple factors beyond the level of language competence of a particular speaker, such as his or her mode and extent of acquisition, length and type of exposure to the language, community and personal attitudes. The result is that no two speakers will have the same language history, although a categorization of some recurring prototypes may be worked out.12
3.4.1.3. Types of Speakers There seems to be a consensus that the major prototypes of speakers to be reckoned with in situations of language endangerment by language shift can be identified on a primary distinction of three levels of competence,
12 Bert (2001) offers a discussion of the need to consider all these variables based on extensive interviews with over a hundred of the last speakers of Franco-Provençal.
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yielding the types of fluent speakers, so-called semi-speakers, and terminal speakers. Fluent speakers. Among fluent speakers one needs to distinguish two subcategories that have been labelled “old fluent speakers” and “young fluent speakers”, although the labels may be confusing, since they do not appeal directly to the age of the speaker. “Old fluent” are the traditional speakers raised in that language alone, and most secure in it. The expression “young fluent” refers to bilinguals who are still fluent in the endangered language but speak it in a somewhat changed form. By the time a linguist arrives, the language may be so endangered that those speakers are in fact some of the older people of the community. Characteristically the new form of language spoken by these “young fluent” speakers is accepted by the community. As it turns out, discussions of standardization and revitalization often involve choosing between older and younger fluent forms of speech to be taught to the learners. Semi-speakers. The category of semi-speakers, prominent in Dorian’s writing, is the category most emblematic of situations of endangered languages. It is a large category which includes all members of the community with appropriate receptive skills, but varying levels of productive skills. The category includes semi-speakers, who can be fluent but whose changed forms of the language are considered mistakes, and weak semi-speakers with a limited ability to produce speech—speech which tends to be made mostly of frozen expressions. It is worth noting that it is from this generally larger semi-speakers group that some of the most involved activists of language revitalization emerge. Terminal speakers and rememberers. These are members of the linguistic community with very limited productive skills, but some passive knowledge. This very limited knowledge can either be the result of a very partial acquisition of the endangered language, with the effect of producing some form of substratum influence on the dominant language, or the result of an advanced level of language attrition on the part of once very good childhood speakers. Such speakers should not be overlooked in fieldwork, particularly in efforts at gathering speakers, since they may gain back or reacquire some partial active use and can always help reconstitute a sense of community at organized gatherings. They are bound to derive deep satisfaction from the renewed contact with the language, provided they are not too psychologically scarred and scared about that language (such as in the case of survivors of massacres).
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3.4.1.4. Projected Revisions to the Typology This is a working typology and terminology that identifies some major types of speakers of endangered languages that fieldworkers may encounter. The projected revisions will take into account the need to review some of the terminology, such as the contrast between “old vs. young” fluent speakers, often misunderstood; or the key term of “semi-speaker” itself, sometimes taken so literally that it seems to mostly evoke incompetent speakers, even if the category explicitly includes fluent speakers; or the terms “terminal” and “language death”, which have been criticized as being politically incorrect.13 The other revisions of this typology will underline the limitless variety of speakers, in fact their uniqueness in the case of the very last speakers of a language, and work out a set of variables to describe the attributes of those speakers rather than types to box them in. Here is not the place to sort out this problem of terminology and typology, but just to acknowledge the existence of a wide variety of speakers and to consider their interactions with field linguists in the building of a database for the description of an endangered language. As already mentioned, to the extent that the knowledge of the language may linger on in a fragmented way among the various types of speakers, it is important to consult as many speakers of as a many types as possible. Their contributions will be of different types too, but all are valuable, in terms of time depth, coverage of topics, levels of retention of certain aspects of the language, and eventually the study of the process of language degenerescence itself.
13
Dressler (1978) had originally talked of: healthy speakers weaker speakers preterminal speakers better terminal speakers worse terminal speakers
while Campbell and Muntzel (1989) worked with the following categories of speakers: S I W R
= strong, nearly fluent speakers = imperfect but reasonably fluent speakers = weak speakers = rememberers
which Sasse (1992) reorganized as: S = rusty speakers I and W = semi-speakers R = both from rusty speakers and of semi-speakers.
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3.4.2. Working with this Great Variety of Speakers Working with speakers of endangered languages brings about a number of challenges, from identifying them to working with them, some of which are mentioned below.
3.4.2.1. Counting the Last Speakers The nature of the social fabric of the linguistic community is such that it will take time to identify all the speakers, particularly the isolated ones and the ones who have not been claiming to be speakers. It is likely that the speakers themselves do not know who are all the other speakers to the extent that some know the language but do not use it ever, and are not identified as speakers. Identifying speakers is a slow process best carried out over a period of time, as there are usually more last speakers than said.
3.4.2.2. Evaluating Speakers’ Knowledge of the Endangered Language There may be surprises in the evaluation of the knowledge of a speaker. Self-evaluation is based on identity criteria, with common over- and underestimation of that knowledge. Self-claimed speakers can find themselves confronted with their limitations when asked for complete grammatical paradigms, for instance, while self-claimed non-speakers can be heard correcting those speakers from the back of the room without accepting being identified as speakers.14 Dynamics can also be set off in such a way that renewed contact with the language may either reactivate some knowledge in the case of language attrition of rememberers, or provide opportunities for new (re)acquisition in the case of some semi-speakers.
3.4.2.3. Collecting Data from Speakers of Endangered Languages Data-collecting methods need to be rethought for field situations of oral tradition languages in the first place, but the extra dimension of a situation of endangered languages often demands further consideration from a methodological standpoint. Most standard elicitation methods taught in university field method courses need to be adapted, to obtain natural data and to avoid confronting speakers with their limitations, which potentially results in 14 This is the category of “ghost speakers” identified by Bert in his fieldwork on Franco-Provençal of France. They were wives of self-proclaimed speakers who stood in the back of the kitchen watching the interviews and the taping sessions and would correct or complete the answers of their husbands without wanting to be identified as speakers. This points to the fact that there is a social identity of “last speaker” that some endorse and others do not, independent of their level of fluency in the endangered language (Bert 2001).
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psychologically difficult and even painful situations unlikely to arise with speakers of vital languages.15 What follow are some notes on methodological issues to be entertained. Recreating settings for natural language use. Natural data basically means data that are not the product of translation from direct elicitation. They may be spontaneously produced, or they may be produced on the basis of certain kinds of verbal, visual, or manipulated stimuli. Although this requirement is not really specific to endangered languages, the reality of endangered languages is that possibilities to collect natural data may have become so limited that it becomes an absolute necessity to think of how to create settings for natural language use. The basic practice is to bring speakers together in order to provide new opportunities for social gatherings and language interaction, and therefore promote the production of natural speech. This is much easier said than done actually in many extreme cases of language endangerment, because it requires identifying the speakers in the first place, then networking among them to gather them, and strategizing the encounters (like organizing transportation of sometimes geographically distant or disabled people, and providing strategic support for the hosting party). However, the efforts always pay off, as such gatherings may come to mean a lot to the speakers who yearn for some social encounters of the sort in order to have a chance to reuse their language and (re)activate their relation to other speakers. This is valid for all types of speakers, and as valued by semi-speakers as by fluent speakers. When doable, it becomes the most productive approach to (video)taping different kinds of language data.16 These social gatherings create reasons to talk, through shared activities, such as telling stories, including personal narratives, or listening and
15 However, one must cite the now classical and still relevant guide to the experience of linguistic fieldwork by Samarin (1967), which considers the basic issues of fieldwork in situ with good sense, in contrast to the recent book by Vaux and Cooper (1999), which strikes one as being extremely Euro/ USA- (even Harvard-) centric and cast into a surprisingly traditional approach to field methods. Bouquiaux and Thomas (1976) are valuable for ethnolinguistic fieldwork but from quite outdated to downright odd in their grammatical questionnaires. More useful as guide for grammatical work are Shopen (1985) and Payne (1997). The author’s two favourites for good reading on the general topic of fieldwork are from ethnographer Wolcott (1995) already mentioned, and folklorist Jackson (1987). 16 In some circumstances, as in urban settings, the impossibility of physically gathering last speakers may be partly compensated by using some technology such as conference telephone calls and video links, obviously only in the regions where that is feasible. If nothing else is available, one can also play back recordings of some speakers to others, although this will not necessarily work immediately for the reasons discussed below.
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commenting on recordings or videos of other speakers from other places or other times, or talking about still pictures, videos, or handled objects.17 Using a variety of material for stimulating language production. A variety of stimuli can be used to trigger language production in general, and to work on targeted aspects of the language, although, as fieldworkers know, when they are used in communities with no literacy tradition of the kind that relies on formal education and training, those stimuli, particularly the ones relying on purely visual stimuli, may not produce by and large the kind of data they are meant to elicit on very specific topics. But they can be very productive, nevertheless, for simply eliciting natural language material.18 For general linguistic analysis it should not matter that speakers seem to often ignore the story line implicit in the sequential arrangement of videos and books alike, or the main event of a picture, and express much more concern and interest for minute details of the pictures (like musings about the dress of the protagonists, the kinds of flowers and animals of the backdrop, the time of day or season of year it might have been). While attending to those details (in our eyes) they are producing actual coherent sentences that are good data for a descriptive grammar of the language. It is only with longstanding familiarity with the language and its speakers’ community, and once efficient working relations have been developed with some of the speakers, that one could be expected to create appropriate stimuli for a particular type of data, and then to collect reasonably reliable data, in order to produce desired reliable and comprehensive analysis of the data.19 About direct elicitation methods. Although the use of direct elicitation is probably the data-collecting method still most used in the field today and most 17 Since the time of the original conference and the first version of this chapter, the field of language documentation and archiving has largely developed, so that today a discussion of the use of video and new computer technologies would have to be considered, although the focus here is still on the human and social interaction of field linguists with the last speakers of an endangered language. 18 Examples of such stimuli used in cross-linguistic research on specific linguistic traits have been, for instance, the 1970s pioneer “Pear Story video” of W. Chafe (University of California at Berkeley) that was meant to track discourse features, or the 1980s “Chicken video” of T. Givón (University of Oregon) that was meant to elicit serialization data. More recently, the wordless Mercer “Frog Story” children’s books have been widely used for the study of adult and children’s narrative skills, in particular by teams supervised by D. Slobin (University of California at Berkeley). 19 There is also a difference between different types of visual stimuli, from line drawings of simple objects like dictionary illustrations, to more complex drawings of scenes, to still pictures which, when just black and white, can disconcert the speakers. Beyond visual stimuli that are always likely not to produce the expected in illiterate communities, one can turn also to the manipulation of objects as a trigger for the production of language. Some of the better-known cases of the use of varied stimuli are the ones that have been developed by the researchers of the Language and Cognition Group of the Max Planck Institute of Nijmegen for instance, in particular those that were targeting the expression of spatial relations.
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commonly demonstrated in field methods courses in university campus settings, it should clearly be limited to a complementary role in situations of endangered languages at first. Particularly unreliable is the method most used, that of direct translation, which consists of the linguist asking the speaker: “how do you say X?”, X being some artificial sentence out of context built around a grammatical point of interest to the linguist.20 There is no reason why such type of questioning should make any sense to most speakers of oral traditions in their own home environment. Some can be trained to perform, if they happen to be in the small percentage of the natural linguists of a language, but most will never really be. And it can in fact become particularly morally objectionable to confine oneself to this method with linguistically insecure semi-speakers who are then made to feel like failures if they cannot come up immediately with a translation.21
3.4.2.4. Conclusion: Adapting Methodologies for Data Collection and Analysis Much of what was said above is actually, if one thinks about it, common sense, but it is probably useful to articulate these methodological issues because they are still not part of most training for linguistic fieldwork. In order to collect reliable data in situations of endangered languages, the methods to be used must be diversified and adapted for a relatively special population of speakers, because in situations of endangered languages, the last speakers are few by definition, and they are whoever they are and not often likely to become trained to respond to data-collecting strategies developed for vital languages. Even good speakers may not be able to
20 This method is always objectionable in terms of reliability of data when imposed on neophyte linguistic consultants from illiterate cultures. It is only because they have done the adjustments necessary to survive in that dominant culture, including a test approach to knowledge, that linguistic consultants of field methods courses on campuses may give the appearance of responding appropriately to direct elicitation. 21 This is not to say that direct elicitation cannot be very useful, but only as a secondary method, at the service of analysing naturally produced language material, and mostly as an exploration of the glossing process of naturally collected text. It must always be handled with great care, controlled with multiple checking and attention to non-verbal information such as body language cues, and only with speakers with whom one has established a productive working relation. It follows from the above that the use of field elicitation guides in the forms of questionnaires consisting of standard lists of sentences to translate may have something intrinsically inappropriate in approaching a new language, particularly in the case of the type of endangered languages considered here. This is not to say that questionnaires are of no use, but that their use is limited. They make sense for instance when checking the particularities of a variant form of a language or group of languages for which there is already a solid linguistic knowledge, for organizing already collected and analysed data, and for checking for gaps in data on basic grammatical topics which are of interest to other linguists interested in typological, areal, or genetic issues.
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produce narratives, may never really learn to give an exact translation, and will forever ignore the value of a paradigmatic organization of knowledge. As suggested, much of the effort, in the first place, must aim at triggering the production of natural sequences of language, to obtain a certain quantity of data and to ensure the reliability of this data.
3.4.3. About Linguists Working on Endangered Languages Two more aspects of doing fieldwork on endangered languages which are not often made explicit but would certainly deserve more attention will be taken up here. One touches on the kind of personality profile best suited in fieldworkers for this kind of job, and the other on implications of carrying out such field projects from a professional and academic career point of view.
3.4.3.1. A Certain Personality Profile By now it should be obvious that the part of the fieldwork experience which consists in working directly with speakers of endangered language communities in the manner suggested here actually calls for a certain personality profile. The essential personality trait is connected to the fact that much of this approach to fieldwork relies on the ability of the linguist to accept not being in control of the situation, a lack of control which takes many forms. Beyond the usual lack of control of basic fieldwork, which is handled differently by different field linguists, who develop different types of work relations, there is, in the case of work on endangered languages, a much more pervasive lack of control. There are first limitations on when, where, and with whom one can work, and later limitations on what one can do with the speakers with whom one can work. As already mentioned when talking of the issue of data collecting, monitoring the process of data production can be a challenge, once the linguist has managed to get together with speakers. And this process is often more a matter of triggering data production rather than of controlling that process. One must be patient and allow data to trickle in, and one must bear with data one does not know what to do with at first. Because of the complex relation that can hold between those speakers and their ethnic language, it is also both ethically and strategically sound to be particularly aware of the balance of power between the parties and to give to the speakers as much of a sense of control as possible. Relinquishing control is a mark of respect for the knowledge they have of the language, an invitation made to them to become
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invested in the work in whichever way they want or can, and it signals a conscious attention to keeping them feeling as comfortable and successful as possible. Relinquishing control is probably one of the most difficult postures to accept for academics. First-world academia tends to naturally select for, and then preferably promote, highly individualistic, self-motivated, and determined free spirits. This world values most highly the pursuit of “basic research” carried out within paradigms partly defined by a culturally bound sense of efficiency and productivity. All of this can be counterproductive in endangered language field situations, may well actually work against the production of reliable and comprehensive linguistic descriptions of those languages in the first place, and may not respond at all to the needs of the community itself (much of the above has already been discussed in Grinevald 1997, 1998, 2000, and 2003a).
3.4.3.2. Energy, Time Commitment, and Professional Risk Doing fieldwork on an endangered language implies a basic energy and time commitment that also needs to be acknowledged. A reasonable estimate of the length of time for the amount of work it takes to build a basic database with which to produce a reasonably accurate and complete description of an endangered language probably runs around three years minimum, between field time and months of data processing and analysis. It probably also needs to be said here how dangerous fieldwork on a very endangered language may be to the career development of a linguist, particularly graduate students and junior faculty, who are in fact the most likely to commit to it. If this line of fieldwork is time, money, and energy demanding (think of fieldwork in the Amazon for instance), it is also basically risky in many ways. Risky in the sense of the dissonance and alienation mentioned before between academic, financing foundation, field and community pressures. This is particularly the case for linguists involved in major documentation/revitalization projects with strict timetables. Risky in the basic sense of not being able to collect enough data for a doctoral thesis or for publications of the sort valued in promotion procedures, due to the death of speakers or any other factor rendering fieldwork difficult to impossible. Risky in the kind of data collected not providing the materials expected to enter the theoretical debate arena the way it is being set up by linguists working on major vital languages. Risky in the sense of relations to the community always being subject to quick turns because of misunderstandings or disappointments. The academic community of linguists needs to consider those risks and see
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how to best minimize them to protect those that it sends off to do the work of describing and documenting endangered languages.
3.4.4. An Invitation to Take up the Challenge This piece of writing is not meant in anyway to discourage linguists from contemplating doing work on endangered languages, but rather to provide some realistic insights into the nature of the enterprise, for all parties concerned, potential fieldworkers in the first place of course, but also foundations that finance such work, and members of the linguistic profession that advocate such work.
3.4.4.1. A Collective Responsibility The work is important and urgent, and it ought to be the business of all sectors of the profession. Those field linguists available, interested, and willing to take on a part of the daunting task of documenting as many endangered languages as possible before it is too late need to be nurtured by the profession. They should be first adequately prepared and trained; then, while they are doing the work, they should be as well supported as possible—financially, psychologically, and academically—and their place in academia should be assured so they can pursue this line of work. Unless we commit collectively to all those aspects of nurturance we really have no business making much of a fuss advocating saving and documenting endangered languages.
3.4.4.2. More About Why We Do it I would therefore strongly encourage those engaged in such work to tell those interested in doing such work what sense of profound satisfaction and what occasional exhilaration obliterate all the moments of frustration, confusion, and heartache that are an inextricable part of the enterprise. We should all tell our future colleagues how it feels to be opting to be a linguist in the real world, dealing concretely with the very real catastrophe of the accelerated loss of the majority of the languages of the world. In so doing we are privileged to discover the riches of yet undescribed languages by working with speakers and communities that can be profoundly grateful and proud to contribute to the salvage of their endangered ancestral language. Some of the last speakers may have dreamed of it and may have hoped for it for a long time and will convey to us how extremely relieved they are to be given a chance to participate in some project to describe and document it. Those are strong moments in a linguist’s life, the priceless
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human dimension that keeps fieldworkers going back in spite of it all. Any fieldworker familiar with this kind of fieldwork is certainly able to communicate, to anyone interested in hearing about it, how this human dimension of fieldwork amply makes up for all the kinds of headaches and heartaches that have been spelled out in the previous sections of this paper.22
3.4.4.3. A Last Warning However, in the end, and to be honest, fieldworkers also need to warn about the challenge of becoming a tightrope walker between the ivory tower of academia and the first-world values of financing foundations where the discipline of linguistics develops and is supported, and the realities of often embittered linguistic communities of endangered languages, with their complex sociopolitical set-ups where the last speakers can be themselves very marginalized. And this needs to be said maybe more so as time passes and the topic of language endangerment reaches beyond academia and acquires a certain veneer of hype within a developing public discourse of saving the biolinguistic diversity of the world.
3.5. A Case Study of Fieldwork on an Endangered Language What follows is a descriptive account of the development of one such field project on a very endangered language of Nicaragua. It is the story of a salvage linguistic project for a moribund language, but in fact a linguistic project embedded in a revitalization project of much larger scope, itself conceived within major political dynamics at the time in the country. The narrative will first situate the project in its specific sociopolitical context and will then focus on the main topic of this chapter, that of working with speakers of endangered languages. It will recount moments of the search for speakers and try to give a flavour of the strong mixture of contentment and frustrations that characterized the data-collecting phase of the project.
3.5.1. The Sociopolitical Circumstances of the Project The Rama Language Project (RLP) of Nicaragua took place in the context of the Sandinista Revolution of Nicaragua, as described in Craig (1992b), and stretched over a period of ten years starting in 1984. 22 Newman and Ratliff (2001) is a good place to hear about linguistic fieldwork and the relation of linguists to speakers, in a number of chapters on speakers of endangered languages.
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3.5.1.1. Regional Autonomy Project and Linguistic Rights in Time of War The Rama project was initiated in response to demands expressed to the Sandinistas by Rama community leaders claiming their new linguistic rights granted to all ethnic groups of the region by the new Autonomy laws. That region was then called the “Atlantic Coast” and was the half of the country where indigenous populations were still speaking various indigenous languages (Miskitu, Sumu, Rama). The Ramas were concerned that they had lost their ethnic language and were asking for help to bring it back for ethnic identity purposes. The linguistic description component of the Rama Language Project was therefore cast from the start at the core of a much wider project, conceived by the Rama community and the authorities at all levels as a language and culture revitalization project. This was happening at the time of the so-called Contra War, a war waged against the Sandinista government by anti-Sandinista forces (largely financed, supported, and led by the USA government). The Rama population, as often happens in such conflicts, was caught between the two sides, and the Rama language project was conceived in part as a gesture of peace.
3.5.1.2. The Rama People and the Rama Language The Rama people themselves were considered then as the most marginalized population of a multiethnic autonomous region, below Spanish-speaking Mestizos and English-speaking Creoles, and below other indigenous people of the regions, the Miskitus and the Sumus they dominated. There were less than a thousand Ramas in total. The language of the Rama population was a form of the English Creole of the region known as Miskitu Coast Creole (MCC), and very few could speak Spanish. The Rama language is a Chibchan language, of a large family of languages spoken from Honduras in the north to Colombia in the south, and no study of it was available. At the time of the request made by the Ministry of Culture to the present linguist in 1985, it was said to be spoken by only three old men of the island of Rama Cay, the only Rama community known to the outside.
3.5.2. The Search for Speakers As it turned out, for complex political and sociological reasons, and to the lingering dismay of the linguist, none of the three old men of Rama Cay participated in the Rama Language Project and their actual knowledge of Rama was never assessed.
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3.5.2.1. Finding Three Rama Speakers to Work on the Rama Language The first speaker of the project was actually located indirectly through academic networking, by connecting to a fellow Amerindianist, Lyle Campbell, who had done a survey of the endangered languages of Central America some years before and connected the linguist to an ex-research assistant of his field project, Barbara Assadi, who had stayed behind in Nicaragua and had integrated into the Rama community for a while. She in turn provided information and contact for a good speaker of the language, said to be eager to tell about her language. An initial visit to Bluefields a year into the process allowed for a first contact with this speaker that sealed the fate of the project. Miss Nora, as she is widely known now, who was first located as a destitute refugee from the war in the grounds of the Moravian church of Bluefields, later turned into the inspired leader of the whole project (Craig 1992a; Grinevald 2003b; Grinevald and Kauffmann 2004). Work on a grammar of the language was finally initiated with that one speaker the following summer, with research funds secured from the National Science Foundation. The first summer of linguistic work with Miss Nora revealed that she was a fluent but semi-speaker of the language, and an excellent language consultant. So, for the next field trip, Miss Nora had recruited her daughter-in-law Cristina Benjamins to help her out with the linguistic study of the language. This native speaker from the mainland who used Rama every day of her life became the main source of data for the study of the grammar of Rama. The third main language consultant has been Walter Ortiz, one of Miss Nora’s nephews. He was a young fluent speaker, in his fifties then, who was considered by all to be the one “intellectual” and scholar among the community of Rama speakers because he was (and still is) the only Rama speaker with some literacy skills (and at that only in Spanish, the national language). He was the hope for back-up and leadership of the team of speakers of the project who eagerly awaited his return from Costa Rica for several years. He joined the project after the completion of the grammar, at the time of the dictionary project.
3.5.2.2. The Different Skills of the Three Main Consultants The Rama language project leader, known as Miss Nora (her full name being Leonora Rigby), lived for her dream of documenting the language so it would not disappear without leaving a trace. A dignified woman with a vision for what could and should be done in the reticent community of Rama Cay, she was the daughter of the last Rama shaman who “talked to the
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tigers in the Tiger language”. She had learned Rama at the age of 10 when she had gone to live in the jungle with her father and stepmother, both monolingual Rama speakers; she later married a pure Rama and raised her children on the mainland. She produced short narrative texts after some coaching, and regained higher fluency throughout the project. She was an excellent linguistic consultant, a natural linguist type of speaker. She corresponded to the type of native person known in the literature on fieldwork as “foreigner seekers”: in her case it was her third serious try in ten years at having the Rama language documented by a foreigner.23 Cristina Benjamins was a young fluent speaker who uses Rama to this day on a daily basis. She was a challenging language consultant at first, because she was too much of a natural language user to accommodate easily to the artificiality of linguistic elicitation. She initially had great difficulty at a number of tasks. One, for instance, was to sit still in the office during work sessions, a non-activity she was totally unaccustomed to, being the mother of eight children and spending her days in numerous physical activities to attend to the needs of her family. She furthermore had great difficulty concentrating on repeating exactly what she had said on the tape recordings (why repeat the same since it had clearly not been understood! was her attitude), and did not have patience with the task of translating exactly what she had actually said (preferring to add additional information to complete the narration). The first work sessions were very intense (because of her rapidfire native way of talking) and very tense (because she did not see the purpose of staying since she felt she was not doing what was wanted of her). She was by far the best speaker of Rama available, and luckily she stayed (at the urging of Miss Nora) and became over time a very valuable linguistic consultant, including for direct elicitation work. She contributed the bulk of the narrative collection which is the basis for the grammar description; she was best with personal narratives, in the course of which she talked of the way of life of the Ramas of the mainland, but had only fragmented knowledge of the main oral tradition of the Rama known as the Adam cycle. Walter Ortiz is a native speaker from the mainland, with very basic literacy skills. Unlike Miss Nora, he never developed much ease with grammatical elicitation, and, unlike Cristina Benjamins, he did not manage to contribute any narratives for the textual database. He was, on the other hand, invaluable for dictionary work, patient and detailed in his terminology
23 Previous attempts were with Barbara Assadi, and a German volunteer early in the Sandinista times (see Craig 1989).
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and descriptions, particularly of his surrounding world and male survival activities. He is a quiet and private man, and his dream has been that some day a younger man will approach him and tell him he wants to learn to really speak Rama, the way he himself had learned the intricacies of it from his uncle, living with him alone in the jungle.24
3.5.2.3. Looking for More Speakers Identifying the last speakers of Rama took several field trips over several years. First, Barbara Assadi on a trip to Bluefields helped work out with the first two Rama speakers available a list of the other last speakers of Rama. Some of those last speakers were brought to the Bluefields CIDCA office to be interviewed,25 and trips around the Bluefields lagoon were organized to visit others. Later, as a considerable number of the mainland Ramas had taken refuge from the war in neighbouring Costa Rica (the Rama land borders on Costa Rica and reaching Costa Rica by sea is relatively easy), among them a number of the native speakers of the language, a trip was arranged to make contact with them in Costa Rica.26 Finally, as the project took on more visibility with work sessions on Rama Cay, and with Miss Nora beginning to fulfil her dream of teaching some Rama to the kindergarten children of Rama Cay, rememberers and terminal speakers began to make themselves known on Rama Cay. Three years from the start of the project, thirty-six fluent speakers had been identified (thirty-two mainlanders and four islanders), with an additional twenty-two limited speakers, for an actual total of fifty-eight speakers. These figures were a matter of both good news and bad news. The good news was that there was a much higher number of speakers than expected, and not
24 A dream of a one-dyad master–apprentice programme of the kind Leanne Hinton has been setting up in California for some of the most moribund languages that some communities want saved. Today Walter Ortiz has taken over from Miss Nora the teaching of some Rama in several grades of the elementary school of the island; he shares his time between Rama Cay and the mainland where he likes to retreat from everything and cultivate land for as long a time as his duties in the school and the increasingly dangerous situation on the mainland permit. 25 The Rama Language Project was locally sponsored from the start by a research centre specializing in the affairs of the region, the Center for the Documentation and Research of the Atlantic Coast (CIDCA). An office for the project was set up in Bluefields, not far from the Rama Cay community. 26 Easier said than done. Costa Rica was the base for the Contra activities from the south, and some of the Ramas were involved in Contra war activities. This meant negotiating permission for the trip, and official support to try to convince Rama speakers to come back to Nicaragua, at the expressed request of their relatives involved in the project. Offers for amnesty and recognition of refugee status with corresponding material support upon return, from Nicaraguan officials supporting the Rama Language Project, were transmitted to the Ramas of Costa Rica. A good number of them did return. But it did not translate into more speakers for the study of the Rama language, with the exception of Walter Ortiz.
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just an old population of speakers (fourteen speakers were below 44 years of age, eight below 64, and only five above 65). The bad news for the linguistic description of the language was that work turned out to be impossible with most speakers. A striking characteristic of the profile of the last fluent and even native speakers was, for instance, that the male speakers (in a striking dominant ratio of male to female speakers of 22M/9F) were also by and large single men living by themselves deep in the jungle, with no descendants, and inaccessible in all senses of the word.27 An interesting feature of this sociolinguistic profile of Rama speakers, arrived at through many work sessions and interviews of speakers themselves, coupled with multiple checks and counterchecks over the years, is that it has never been accepted or acknowledged by the wider community, neither local, regional, nor national, in spite of repeated publications of the figures and numerous public interventions. To this date, the Nicaraguan myth of the Rama language spoken by only three old men of Rama Cay tenaciously lives on.
3.5.3. Trying to Work with More Rama Speakers Of the fifty-eight speakers recounted, twenty-five were contacted and visited, and thirteen were interviewed in some capacity; of those interviewed, only eight provided some language data, and generally only very little, so that, in the end, the description of the language had to rely on the three speakers already presented. A rundown of all the speakers considered will give below a sense of the diversity of speakers contacted and of the types of language information they could and could not give.28
3.5.3.1. Other Native Speakers that did not Work Out as Language Consultants As already mentioned, the three famous old men of Rama Cay said everywhere to be the last speakers of the Rama language apparently only spoke Rama anymore when drunk. Although they had apparently participated some years before in a previous attempt at documenting the language with a
27 The majority of these had fled to Costa Rica and did return to Nicaragua but went back to live in the jungle. 28 While the three major speakers that have been the main consultants of the project are identified by their names because they have been identified in all writings on the language, in recognition of their active contribution to the salvaging of their language, the other Ramas mentioned will not be personally identified to respect their privacy.
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young German male anthropologist, they ended up having no contact with the project and their actual fluency could not be assessed. Two mainland native speakers eager to participate in the project were considered but their contributions could not be processed and did not become part of the database for the grammar. One was a young fluent speaker, sister and daily companion of Cristina Benjamins, whose texts did not cohere and whose ability as a linguistic consultant remained too limited for language analysis. The other was an old monolingual man who had lived for decades isolated in the jungle and spoke what the others labelled “real Rama”. He was considered by all to be the “best speaker” and agreed to tape interviews on the “old ways” and traditional place names.29 Those interviews took place at the CIDCA office, and turned into major social gatherings for Rama speakers who had not been together for a very long time and had not talked to him in a long time either. It first appeared that these hours of tapings would provide the core of the database. Unfortunately that could not be the case, as they turned out to be too difficult to transcribe and to translate, for reasons that remain unclear to this day. None of the speakers present, including the two main consultants of the project, could repeat what he had said, although his rapid slurred and toothless speech had not seemed to be an obstacle to their enjoyment of his recountings. The interaction had been joyful and intense, communication seemed to have been happening, as witnessed by the laughing and questioning captured on tape, but it sadly yielded nothing for the linguistic analysis of the language.30 More disappointment for the linguist in search of good data ensued when several mainland native speakers in the old fluent speaker category took part in some of the project activities but watched and said nothing, or so little so whispered and so mumbled that the data were not usable either. For instance, the brother of the old monolingual speaker of the gatherings just mentioned clearly enjoyed immensely being there, smiled and laughed, but never uttered a word. And a married couple of old fluent monolinguals, whose participation had been eagerly anticipated, looked bewildered and apprehensive all through the interviews they had agreed to. Direct interaction between them 29 As a matter of fact, these interviews took place in a dramatic way. He was on his way back down to the jungle after a long hospitalization in Bluefields, as he had asked to be taken back to Rama land feeling he was soon going to die. He did not die, and lived a few more years, settled at the mouth of a major creek where Ramas would stop and care for him before going further up the creek to their settlements. 30 Years later, when asked also to listen to the tapes, Walter Ortiz, the third consultant, could hardly make out some stretches of recording now and then. The mystery therefore remains as to what really happened then.
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and the linguist turned out to not be possible, and even coaching by Rama speakers did not help either. In the midst of the Contra War, the trip to Costa Rica had provided direct contact with one more native speaker, beside Walter Ortiz already mentioned. He was Miss Nora’s elder brother; he listened attentively to her taped message in Rama asking him to return and join the project, but he did not return to Nicaragua for years. When he did, he went back deep into the jungle and was never interviewed again.
3.5.3.2. Working at the Margins: Rememberers and Semi-speakers The Rama speakers from the island of Rama Cay included a number of rememberers and terminal speakers. The female rememberers identified were relatives of Miss Nora, who described them as native speakers who had been fully fluent decades before, but who had been traumatized into hiding their knowledge of the language. One was an old woman who, as a teenager, had accompanied Miss Nora, her younger cousin of 10 years of age then, for the first months she had gone to live with her monolingual father and stepmother, in order to help her as an interpreter. Although this elder cousin denied knowledge of Rama for the first years of the project, she later became eager to become involved, but she could never recover much fluency and died a few years into the project. Two young rememberers, nieces of Miss Nora, also denied knowledge of any Rama for years, in spite of Miss Nora vouching that they had been very good speakers; they never agreed to join any activities of the project.31 A considerable number of other Rama speakers with more limited knowledge and practice of Rama participated actively in the revitalization part of the project. They included schoolteachers eager to introduce some Rama in their classrooms, high school youngsters who wanted some Rama phrases to impress people with them in the streets of Bluefields, community members with some links to the Rama language, rememberers, and maybe even shy semi-speakers who filled the schoolroom on Rama-language Sunday meetings. One of the semi-speakers worth mentioning, because of his key support to the project from the start and his new leadership role now, after the death
31 The two of them were typical cases of trauma-induced severe language attrition, the trauma being a case of a dramatic family situation, and discrimination against tiger people on Rama Cay, rather than a case of outside attack on the community (as in some cases of ethnic massacres).
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of Miss Nora, is Pedro MacCrea, her eldest son and Cristina Benjamins’s husband. He was key to the project as boat captain, providing transportation for speakers between jungle, island of Rama Cay, and town of Bluefields; he was also an excellent spokesperson for the project. Interestingly he became more fluent in Rama as the years passed, reaching the point of carrying out interviews with monolingual speakers. He is today the most visible and charismatic representative of the Ramas in their battle to protect their land, dealing with authorities and international consultants, and appearing in different media speaking (sentences of) Rama.32
3.5.3.3. Cycles of Expectation and Frustration What this rundown on speakers has emphasized is the difficulty of finding a number of speakers who could function as linguistic consultants, even if there were a certain number of speakers still. The point is that this case study is not necessarily a very special situation for a case of extremely endangered language. On this backdrop of a constant search, one can probably imagine the cycles of excitement and frustration, of tediousness and confusion common to most of these field situations. But one has to also mention, hidden behind such a list of helpful and not so helpful speakers, the weaving of strong bonds with a community in search of its last speakers. Somehow it is the interaction of all those speakers that produced eventually a more or less accurate picture of the linguistic community of this very endangered language, a picture quite different from the popular view outsiders had of that community, in fact. Although the complexity of the Rama field situation exposed above is probably fairly typical of many cases of extreme language loss, it feels most important in closing to underline one aspect of this project. It is how both the production of the descriptive grammar of the language and the apparent success of the larger Rama language revitalization project of which it was a part are a tribute to the intelligence and the tenacity of one old woman, herself a fluent semi-speaker but with a vision and a natural linguist talent. There is no doubt in the mind of anybody that came close to her that Miss Nora was the real Rama language rescuer and that nothing much would have happened without her, as argued in Grinevald and Kauffmann (2004).
32 His leadership status of today is reminiscent of the phenomenon described by Evans (2001), of the emergence of new leaders and new last speakers, as the most visible and prestigious one leaves the scene and others find their place.
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3.5.3.4. Dealing with a Major Contradiction for the Language Revitalization Part of the Project The sociolinguistic study showed that the Ramas were divided into two distinct communities: the majority of the population, the only Ramas recognized at that time, lived on an island in the lagoon of Bluefields called Rama Cay, while a much smaller group of a few dozen still lived on the mainland, along small creeks and on the ocean coast. The community of native speakers of Rama that still existed was from the mainland, and it is with members of that community that the description and documentation of the Rama language took place. As it turned out, for the whole duration of the project, this division of the Rama community into two communities (island and mainland) was a major dimension to be constantly factored in. The prejudice the islanders felt toward the mainlanders was extreme, and resulted in the former systematically ignoring the existence of the latter in their report on the Rama community to the Sandinistas. The other way around, the mainlanders, including members of the last community of speakers of Rama, avoided contact with the islanders for that same reason. The scenario was therefore complex: the demand for the revitalization of Rama came from the leaders of Rama Cay, islanders who only spoke English Creole and actually deep down had very mixed feelings about the Rama language. They were inclined to despise it as being a “primitive” language, as they had been told it was, and referred to it as the “tiger language”, saying of the speakers of Rama that they were “tiger people”. They had therefore wanted the revitalization to come from people of Rama Cay and were for that reason at first unwilling to accept language materials coming from the mainlanders, at the same time as the mainlanders did not want to set foot on the island, for that same reason. 33 Therefore to the already negative attitudes of the general Nicaraguan population towards indigenous languages, and the particularly negative 33 Today, twenty years later, the two communities are banding together, partly around the issue of a shared Rama language and culture revitalization vision that has been sharpened by a sense of doom and threat to their land base and all traditional ways of living. There is both severe threat of cultural (Rama Cay) and even physical extinction (mainland). The acculturation of islanders to the linguistic community of Bluefields is fast accelerating, as more families come to take refuge or settle there, many in hopes of providing secondary education to their children. But most acute today is the threat to the mainland community of more traditional Ramas created by the advance of the agricultural frontier from inland and of major international construction projects coming from the sea. A plan to build a railway (called the “dry canal”, a replacement for the now obsolete Panama canal) across the traditional (and officially protected) Rama land threatens to cut off the last speakers to the south from the more numerous Rama community of Rama Cay to the north. Land speculation has already resulted in physical attacks on the Rama population (Mueller 2001).
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attitudes of the people of the region for the Rama people, the Rama themselves added another layer of self-discrimination that rendered the project particularly difficult at first.
3.5.4. Some Figures: Time, (Wo)manpower, and Grant Support To the extent that fieldwork projects on endangered languages are somewhat of a mystery to outsiders, a few figures from the Rama Language Project will be given here. It was of course just one in an infinity of possible projects, but it included major ingredients always necessary in such projects. Some of the dimensions of the project will be outlined in figures, and some of its characteristics will be underlined. The production of the Rama grammar took six field trips, about ten months of actual fieldwork in total after the initial exploratory trip. It took three years of steady work by a team of three linguists. The principals of this team were three academics coming from the USA: a project coordinator and main fieldworker (Grinevald, at that time Craig), a data-processing specialist, linguistic fieldworker, and coordinator of the production of materials for the community (Bonny Tibbitts), and a community contact (Barbara Assadi) who offered fieldnotes, conducted the census of the last speakers (among whom she had lived for several years), and checked the data for cultural accuracy. A number of graduate and undergraduate students processed data. The funding sources for the project were a combination of academic grants, from the National Science Foundation, Wenner-Grenn for Anthropological Research, and University of Oregon Research Funds for the grammar, to the National Endowment for the Humanities for the dictionary. As often calculated, applying for such grants, monitoring them, and reporting on the activities and results required about a third of the total time and energy invested in the project.34
34 To be honest to the end, for the sake of the reality check that is the purpose of this chapter, and for the benefit of those embarking on such kinds of projects and taking risks, it is also necessary to say that the actual production of the dictionary was not completed within grant time, due to a combination of personal and political changes of circumstances. The Hans Rausing Endangered Language Documentation Project is therefore hereby acknowledged for its willingness to financially support the completion of the dictionary project, and the archiving of the materials of the first phase of the project, ten years later. Independent of the reasons for not completing this particular project as per grant deadline, it might be worth taking the occasion to raise a taboo subject, which is that such things happen more often than admitted with field projects, particularly complex ones like this one, which demand more time and energy than is realistically factored into the grant schedules. It may be one of the responsibilities
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Beyond numbers, this project was clearly cast in a particular fieldwork framework worth noting in the end. Although the list of speakers given above did not do justice to the level of involvement of the community of speakers and non-speakers, the enterprise was clearly cast into an “empowering fieldwork framework” with a clear ethical view of working on the language for and with the speakers. The circumstances of this project, one of the projects of “Linguists for Nicaragua” of Sandinista times, were described in Craig (1992b). It might be worth mentioning finally that the bulk of the material produced for the community was the work of student volunteers from the University of Oregon,35 and that the community part of the project received financial back-up from private human rights and solidarity groups, active in defence of the development programmes for the indigenous population at the time of the Contra War.36
3.6. Conclusions This chapter has concentrated on the data-collecting issue for the description of endangered languages, taking into consideration three aspects of it in turn. The first point was that linguistics fieldwork projects aiming at producing a description of an endangered language are today in most parts of the world more and more often woven into wider types of projects, which themselves may largely overlap: projects of linguistic description, language and culture documentation and language and culture maintenance or revitalization. Admittedly, this particular view of the likely type of field situations field linguists encounter today may be strongly biased by the author’s experience with Native American situations of the Americas (North, Central, and South), and may not apply as much to certain other parts of the world (yet). It would seem necessary that the new granting agencies preoccupied with the fate of endangered languages have a clear grasp of the realities on the of senior members of the profession, such as the present author, to help raise the issue of probably very unrealistic output expectations of granting agencies now engaged in documentation of endangered languages on a large scale, particularly if the projects are indeed to be of equal benefit to the academic and the speaker community. There is much pressure on junior members of the academic linguistic profession, if to boot the documentation has to be pluri-disciplinary and multimedia. 35 By the dozens over the years of the project, recruited in undergraduate courses such as “Introduction to linguistics” or “Languages of the world”, skilled and eager to participate in a research project. 36 Most noticeably the Council for Human Rights in Latin America of Oregon, Linguists for Nicaragua, and Witness for Peace.
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ground of such larger scope projects, beyond facing the already strenuous concerns of the more technological aspects of documentation and archiving. And what was not raised explicitly but remains to be fully considered is the challenge to some collective professional thinking of how to best support the fieldworkers who have to balance the demands of both academia and the field, demands that are often contradictory and pressing, and always time and energy consuming beyond what is usually acknowledged by office- and library-bound linguists. The second point was that it will always remain the professional linguists’ responsibility to produce an analytical study of the language. That is what the profession is about at heart and what we must not lose sight of, particularly once we embark on wider community projects. This requires preparation in appropriate linguistics and field methodology. As mentioned also, training speakers wherever and whenever possible should always be a priority, particularly to empower those speakers with native talents, as it is fundamentally more ethical to share our knowledge with those who are interested in it. And if one needs to drum up other arguments, one can also say that it opens up the possibility of sustainable work, particularly in wider scope documentation projects. Such projects are best conceived as genuinely collaborative, best handled by members of the community at the ground level, who will always have better opportunities to work with speakers that field linguists may not have access to. It would therefore appear to be an all around sound strategy. But it is unfortunately still too rarely embraced as the main approach, probably because it calls for a heavier time investment initially, because it may appear at first to slow down the process of gathering data for a description of the language, and because it demands much more personal investment on the fieldworker’s part. The third major point was the existence of a wide variety of speakers in endangered language communities, and the need to consider them all for the different types of information they can provide on the language, whether linguistic or sociolinguistic. It was noted that some awkwardness remains in the terminology in use, such as the terms old and young fluent speakers, semi-speakers, and terminal speakers, and intrinsic difficulty in establishing a typology was pointed out, as partly due to the many variables to be handled to account for the uniqueness of each speaker. It crucially called for great care in handling the pervasive condition of linguistic insecurity of the semi-speakers, for human reasons as much as for the sake of the reliability of data being collected.
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On the background of this diversity of speakers, the next section emphasized the need to reconsider data-collecting methods. This could be said of all linguistic projects in any case, and of all linguistic field situations, but it was argued that such a reconsideration becomes crucial when dealing with endangered languages. For if the database to be produced is to remain the main information on the language for the future, it needs to be as complete as possible; and if the description is to capture the genius of the language and to do so with reliable data, the task is to collect natural language data. But as stated, this is not so easily done with speakers of endangered languages, and a variety of methods were proposed: mainly those of creating gatherings of speakers and of using various types of stimuli. While all the above may sound like common sense not worth writing about, it is obvious that it is not yet the practice of the majority of linguists, as evidenced by the type of data used in publications. Of course, this overall methodological approach is nothing new, but has been forgotten rather, as the task of linguistic fieldwork has passed from an anthropological tradition more attentive to such issues, to strictly linguistic circles dominated by a certain approach to theory building bent on the notions of native intuition and ideal speaker. The last section presented a case study of one project of language description and revitalization that served the purpose of illustrating how some of the issues raised earlier in the chapter played themselves out in a particular situation, as unique as all endangered field situations can be, but also as universal as they are in their complexity. In the end, it is hoped that these notes on one of the many aspects of fieldwork on endangered languages will provide material for a necessary confrontation of our discipline with some of the realities of the work it wants to promote.
References Assadi, B. (1983). “Rama Cay Creole English: Sociolinguistic History; Text RCC: 1 ‘Rama Cay Neighbors’ ”, In J. Holm (ed.), Central American English: Varieties of English around the World. Text Series 12. Heidelberg: J. Gross, 115–23. Austin, P. (ed.) (2003). Language Documentation and Description, vol i. The Hans Rausing Endangered Documentation Project; London: SOAS. —— (ed.) (2004). Language Documentation and Description, vol. ii. The Hans Rausing Endangered Documentation Project; London: SOAS. Bert, M. (2001). “Rencontre de langues et francisation: l’exemple du Pilat”, Ph.D. thesis, Sciences du Langage, Université Lumière Lyon 2, France. Bouquiaux, L., and Thomas, J. (1976). Enquête et description des langues à tradition orale, i: L’enquête de terrain et l’analyse grammaticale; ii: Approche linguistique;
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iii: Approche thématique. Paris: Société d’etudes Linguistiques et Anthropologiques de France. —— (1992). Studying and Describing Unwritten Languages. Dallas: SIL. (Translation of Bouquiaux and Thomas 1976.) Cameron, D., et al. (1992). Researching Language: Issues of Power and Method. London: Routledge. Campbell, L., and Muntzel, M. (1989). “The structural consequences of language death”, in N. Dorian (ed.), Investigating Obsolescence: Studies in Language Contraction and Death. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 181–96. Craig, C. (1989). Review of N. Rigby and R. Schneider, Dictionary of the Rama Language:Rama–English–Rama–Creole–Spanish/English–Rama. Speaking with the Tiger, vol. ii. Berlin: Dietrich Reimer Verlag, International Journal of American Linguistics, 56/2: 293–304. —— (1992a). “Miss Nora, rescuer of the Rama language: A story of power and empowerment”, in K. Hall, M. Bucholtz, and B. Moonwomon (eds.), Locating Power: Proceedings of the Second Berkeley Women and Language Conference, Berkeley, i. 80–9. —— (1992b). “A constitutional response to language endangerment: the case of Nicaragua”, in K. Hale, M. Krauss, L. Watahomigie, A. Yamamoto, C. Craig, J. La Verne Masayesva, and N. England (eds.), 11–16. —— (1993). “Fieldwork on endangered languages; a forward look at ethical issues”, in A. Crochetière, J. C. Boulanger, and C. Ouellon (eds.), Proceedings of the XVth International Congress of Linguists, vol i. Saint Foy: Les Presses de l’Université Laval, 33–42. Crystal, D. (2000). Language Death. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Dimmendal, G. J. (2001). “Places and people: field sites and informants”, in P. Newman and M. Ratliff (eds.), 55–75. Dixon, R. M. W. (1984). Searching for Aboriginal Languages: Memoirs of a Field Worker. St Lucia: University of Queensland Press. —— (1997). The Rise and Fall of Languages. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Dorian, N. (1982). “Defining the speech community to include its working margins”, in S. Romaine (ed.), Sociolinguistic Variation in Speech Communities. London: Edward Arnold, 26–32. —— (1986). “Gathering language data in terminal speech communities”, in J. Fishman et al. (eds.), The Fergusonian Impact, ii: Sociolinguistics and the Sociology of Language. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, 555–75. —— (1989). “Introduction”, in N. Dorian (ed.), Investigating Obsolescence: Studies in Language Contraction and Death. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1–10. —— (1992). “Working with endangered languages: privileges and perils”, in A. Crochetière, J. C. Boulanger, and C. Ouellon (eds.), Proceedings of the XVth International Congress of Linguists. i. Saint Foy: Les Presses de l’Université Laval, i. 11–22. —— (2001). “Surprises in Sutherland: linguistic variability amidst social uniformity”, in P. Newman and M. Ratcliff (eds.), 133–51. Dressler, W. (1978). “Language shift and language death: a protean challenge for the linguist”, Folia Linguistica, 15/1–2: 5–27. England, N. (1992a). “Doing Mayan linguistics in Guatemala”, Language, 68/1: 29–35. —— (1992b). Autonomía de los idiomas mayas: historia e identidad. Rukutamil, Ramaq’il, Rutzijob’al: Ri Layab’ Amaq’. Guatemala: Editorial Cholsamaj.
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—— (1997).“Mayan efforts toward language preservation”, in L. Grenoble and L. Whaley (eds.), 99–116. —— (2001). Introducción a la gramática de los idiomas mayas. Guatemala: Editorial Cholsamaj. Evans, Nicholas (2001). “The last speaker—long live the last speaker!”, in P. Newman and M. Ratliff (eds.), 250–81. Fishman, J. (1991). Reversing Language Shift: Theoretical and Empirical Foundations of Assistance to Threatened Languages. Clevedon: Multilingual Matters. Gerdts, D. (1998). “Beyond expertise: the role of the linguist in language revitalization programs”, in N. Ostler (ed.) Endangered Languages: What Role for the Specialist. Bath: Foundation for Endangered Languages, 13–22. Grenoble, L., and Whaley, L. (eds.) (1998). Endangered Languages: Language Loss and Community Response. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Grinevald, C., and Kauffmann, M. (2004). “Meditaciones en la sombre”, Wani: Revista del Caribe Nicaragüense, (Managua), 38: 34–48. Grinevald Craig, C. (1997). “Language contact and language degeneration”, in F. Coulmas, (ed.), Handbook of Sociolinguistics. Oxford: Blackwell, 257–70. —— (1998). “Language endangerment in South America: a programmatic approach”, in L. Grenoble and L. Whaley (eds.), 124–60. —— (2000). “Los lingüistas frente a las lenguas indígenas”, in F. Queixalos and O. Renault-Lescure (eds.), 37–53. —— (2002). “Linguistique et langues mayas du Guatemala”, in J. Landaburu (ed.), MésoAmérique, Caraïbes, Amazonie: Faits de langues. 17–25. —— (2003a). “Speakers and documentation of endangered languages”, in P. Austin (ed.), 52–73. —— (2003b).“Educación intercultural y multilingüe: el caso de los ramas”, Wani: Revista del Caribe Nicaragüense, (Managua), 34: 20–38. Hagège, Claude (2000). Halte à la mort des langues. Paris: Editions Odile Jacobs. Hale, K., Krauss, M., Watahomigie, L., Yamamoto, A., Craig, C., La Verne Masayesva, J., and England, N. (1992). “Endangered languages”, Language, 68/1: 1–42. Himmelman, N. (1998).“Documentary and descriptive linguistics”, Linguistics, 36: 161–95. Hinton, L. (1994). Flutes of Fire. Berkeley: Heyday Books. —— and Hale, K. (eds.) (2001). The Green Book of Language Revitalization in Practice. San Diego: Academic Press. Jackson, B. (1987). Fieldwork. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. Kroeber, T. (1961). Ishi in Two Worlds: A Biography of the Last Wild Indian in North America. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. Mithun, M. (2001).“Who shapes the record: the speaker and the linguist”, in P. Newman and M. Ratliff (eds.), 34–54. Mueller, G. (2001). “Defending Rama Indian community lands. Florida: Four Directions Geographic Consulting. 4DGC, 77, http://lic.law.ufl.edu.academics/conservation/ projects_i_rama.htm Nagy, N. (2000).“What I didn’t know about working in an endangered language community: some fieldwork issues”, in N. Dorian (ed.), Small Languages and Small Language Communities, 32. International Journal of the Sociology of Language, 144: 143–60. Nettle, D., and Romaine, S. (2000). Vanishing Voices: The Extinction of the World’s Languages. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Newman, P., and Ratliff, M. (eds.), (2001). Linguistic Fieldwork. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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Ospina Bozzi, A.-M. (2002). Structures élémentaires du Yuhup Makú, langue d’Amazonie colombienne: morphologie et syntaxe. Paris: Université Paris VII. Payne, T. (1997). Describing Morphosyntax: A Guide for Field Linguists. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Queixalos, F., and Renault-Lescure, O. (eds.), (2000). As linguas amazônicas hoje: The Amazonian Languages Today. São Paulo: IRD, ISA, MPEG Instituto Socioambiental (distribution: www.socioambiental.org). Rice, Keren. (2001). “Learning as one goes”, in P. Newman and M. Ratliff (eds.), 230–49. Samarin, W. (1967). Field Linguistics: A guide to Linguistic Fieldwork. NewYork: Holt, Reinhart and Winston. Sasse, H.-J. (1992).“Language decay and contact-induced change: similarities and differences”, in M. Brenzinger (ed.), Language Death: Factual and Theoretical Explorations with Special Reference to East Africa. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Shopen, T. (ed.) (1985). Language Typology and Syntactic Description, vols. i–iii. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. UNESCO (2003). Language Vitality and Endangerment. Report from the Intangible Cultural Heritage Unit’s Ad Hoc Expert Group on Endangered Languages. Approved 31 March 2003 by the Participants of the International Expert Meeting on the UNESCO Programme Safeguarding of Endangered Languages. Paris-Fontenay, MS, 25 pp. Vaux, B., and Cooper, J. (1999). Introduction to Linguistic Field Methods. Munich: Lincom Europa. Wilkins, D. (2000). “Even in the best of intentions: some pitfalls in the fight for linguistic and cultural survival”, in F. Queixalos and O. Renault-Lescure (eds.), 61–85. Wolcott, H. (1995). The Art of Fieldwork. London: Altamira Press, Sage Publications. Woodbury, T. (2003). “Defining documentary linguistics”, in P. Austin (ed.), SOAS, 35–52. Yasugi, Y. (ed.) (2003). Materiales de lenguas mayas de Guatemala, vols. i–iv. ELPR 2003 A1–007.
4
Language Policy and Language Rights David Bradley
4.1. Policy and reality 4.1.1. Western Pacific Rim 4.1.2. Southern Pacific Rim 4.1.3. Eastern Pacific Rim 4.2. Can policy change reality? 4.3. Conclusion
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4.1. Policy and Reality In most countries along the Pacific Rim, there is an increasing mismatch between official policy, which has become progressively more liberal and supportive of minority linguistic and other rights, and the reality of continuing loss of indigenous minority languages. This is partly because assimilationist policies, explicit or implicit, had been under way for centuries or millennia before recent changes; and because members of minority groups themselves choose for economic and social reasons to continue to assimilate, despite now having nominal linguistic rights. As countries develop and economic security is approached, many governments allow their minorities the luxury of some language and cultural rights. This does not change the underlying attitude of the majority group, and it also does not necessarily lead to a positive change in the attitudes and choices of members of minority groups. The following sections briefly trace and compare recent language policy developments for minority languages in the countries of the Pacific Rim. For some more detailed studies of language policy in South-East Asia, see Bradley (1985).
4.1.1. Western Pacific Rim In Japan,1 the long-standing policy of separation between majority Japanese and the Ainu in the north of the country changed during the nineteenth century. Up to 1855, access to the Ainu in their main territory of Hokkaido I gratefully acknowledge the funding support of the UNESCO Endangered Languages programme and of the Australian Research Council (A59701122, A59803475, A00001357). 1 I would like to thank Theresa Savage and Hiroshi Nakagawa for information on the Ainu.
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was mediated through the Matsumae regional feudal lords. By this time, many Ainu had doubtless already assimilated into the Japanese majority, especially in northern Honshu, and Ainu in Hokkaido began to learn Japanese after 1799. Especially after 1869 when Ainu land rights were eliminated, with further assistance from the assimilationist Aborigines Protection Law of 1899, there was very rapid in-migration of majority Japanese, catastrophic economic and cultural change, and breakdown of intergenerational language transmission in most areas. This is why the most fluent Ainu speakers are now very old people, the last generation to learn the language as children in a family setting in the early twentieth century. The Ainu from the Kurile Islands were moved to Hokkaido in 1884, and those in southern Sakhalin were moved to Hokkaido in 1945. With the Ainu Cultural Protection Law of 1997, the official policy has changed, and there is a small-scale cultural revival under way, led by official bodies (museums and cultural centres) funded by the central, Hokkaido prefecture, or local governments, as well as some commercial touristoriented ventures and individual craftsmen. Over the last twenty years, the number of language revival initiatives has multiplied, with fourteen centres now teaching Ainu language in a limited way, though not yet in school to Ainu children. For more details, see Chapter 19 (this volume, by Nakagawa and Okuda). Korean is the national language of the two Koreas, and is also the language of large minority groups in adjacent areas of China and Russia, as well as migrants in Japan and the United States. Koreans in China have national minority status, and there are special provisions for Korean education, including language maintenance, in various overseas countries. While there are lexical and other differences within Korean, the language is not endangered, though some Koreans feel that English influence is too great in the South. The vestiges of ancient and long-standing Chinese influence, as in Japan, remain extensive, both culturally and linguistically, though the use of Chinese characters is much less than in Japan. Not having any indigenous minority languages, the two Koreas obviously have no policy for them. The former Soviet Union implemented its nationalities policy from the 1920s, dividing its ethnic groups into 130 nationalities, including some which were more advanced in the western and central part of the state. Many others, including all those in the Pacific Rim area, were less advanced. For them, the Soviet period led to major advances: the creation and dissemination of writing systems, support for literary and cultural activities,
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the development of an elite group within each nationality, and varying degrees of political autonomy. The nationalities policy in the Soviet period was initially formulated by Lenin in 1922, and implemented more or less immediately. A nationality required four characteristics: a language, a territory, a culture, and a means of economic production. There was an explicit policy of unifying small related groups into larger nationalities, which was carried even further in designating the national minorities of China in the early 1950s. In the Pacific Rim area of the Soviet Union, various Palaeosiberian and Tungusic nationalities were recognized, along with Nivkh (Gilyak; Ch. 19). Nivkh and the Tungusic languages, along with most Palaeosiberian languages in eastern Russia, are now vanishing, despite the efforts of Soviet linguists and educationists, as discussed in Chapter 20 (by Tsumagari, Kurebito, and Endo). One of the reasons for the break-up of the former Soviet Union was precisely the national aspirations of the larger nationalities. The fifteen nationality-based areas which had full Soviet Union Republic status, including Russia, are now independent states. Many of the smaller nationalities in the twenty autonomous republics, eight autonomous regions, and ten autonomous areas within Russia and some other independent states are in the process of seeking greater autonomy; for example, Chechnya in the Caucasus area of Russia, or South Ossetia in Georgia, among others. The nationalities policies of the various communist states in East and South-East Asia derive directly from those of the Soviet Union. Russian anthropologists and linguists were directly involved in the initial surveys and classification work. In China four of the nationalities were recognized under the Republic of China after 1911, but fifty-one more national minorities received their official recognition only during the 1950s, after the creation of the People’s Republic of China. In Vietnam the full classification and recognition of fifty-four minority ethnic groups took place during and after the struggle for independence and unification, in the North after 1954 and in the South after 1975. In Laos, the recognition of forty-seven ethnic groups including the majority Lao took place after the unification of the country under the Pathet Lao government in 1975; a new list of forty-nine has recently been approved, with some amalgamations and deletions. In these nations, the national language and main medium of education and administration is the language of the majority group: Mandarin Chinese in China, Viet in Vietnam, and Lao in Laos. For more details on vanishing languages in these and other other East Asian states, see Chapter 17 (Poa and LaPolla).
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There are four other areas with a mainly Chinese population: Taiwan, Hong Kong, Macao, and Singapore. After its return to China in 1945, Taiwan became the sole remaining area controlled by the Republic of China when the People’s Republic of China was established on the mainland. The policy is that Mandarin2 is the national language, but in Taiwan this is called Guoyu (national language), while the similar variety chosen as the standard in China is called Putonghua (common speech). Another standard variety of Mandarin is one of the four official languages of Singapore, where it is called Huayu (Chinese speech). In China over 75 per cent use a Mandarin subvariety as mother tongue, but other important varieties of Chinese are used in the coastal provinces. Both in Taiwan and in Singapore, the vast majority of the population speaks other types of Chinese, not Mandarin, as their traditional mother tongue. The overall unity of Chinese, despite mutual unintelligibility between major spoken varieties, is maintained by its shared writing system, history, and culture. For further discussion of Chinese language policy, see Bradley (1991). The use of indigenous Minnanhua (Southern Min speech) in Taiwan has never ceased, and indeed seems to be spreading. Knowledge of Japanese from the pre-1945 period is receding. In addition there are fifteen indigenous Austronesian languages still spoken on the eastern side of Taiwan, as discussed in Chapter 15 (by Tsuchida and Tsukida); many of these are vanishing, and some others have already disappeared. The Austronesian languages of Taiwan are also spoken by very small groups on the mainland, where they are classified in a single Gaoshan (high mountain) national minority. Hong Kong was established under British rule in 1841, with a short interlude of Japanese occupation from 1941 to 1945. Since the return of Hong Kong to China in 1997, the local Yue dialect is continuing in use, but the use of Mandarin is spreading. Cantonese, the common English name of Yue, is derived from the English name of the nearby city Guangzhou, formerly also known as Guangdong, which is now the name of the entire adjacent province. In nearby Macao, since its return to China after many centuries of Portuguese rule in 1999, the local Yue speech also remains in use, with Mandarin on the rise. Unlike Hong Kong, where the former colonial language is still widely used and studied, in Macao the study and use of Portuguese has greatly decreased, and the indigenous Portuguese creole of Macao is rapidly vanishing. Also disappearing are the indigenous non-Yue 2 Mandarin or guanhua (official speech) is the mother tongue variety of the north, west, and southwest of China, spoken by the Han Chinese majority. The standard is based on the speech of Beijing.
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speech varieties of Hong Kong, in particular Hakka. In Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Macao, the use of traditional full-form Chinese characters continues. However, China and Singapore now use simplified characters as implemented in China in 1957. Singapore, established by the British in 1819, rapidly became a majorityChinese trading port. Most (77 per cent) of its resident population is ethnic Chinese, with smaller Malay (14 per cent), Indian (8 per cent), and other groups. It was one of the British-ruled Straits Settlements surrounded by various Malay states in treaty relations with the British, like them was occupied by Japan from 1942 to 1945, joined the Malaysian Federation in 1963, but left it in 1965 for independence. The national languages are English, Mandarin, Malay, and Tamil. Singapore English is a New English, indigenized and very widely spoken. The main policy initiative in Singapore has been to spread spoken Mandarin and simplified characters at the expense of the mother tongue south-eastern Chinese “dialects” since 1978. The national language of Cambodia is Khmer, which is used for all purposes within the country. Cambodia has no explicit policy for minorities; this is because the minorities there are a small part of the population, live mainly in the most remote areas of the north-east of the country, and have been under the political and cultural sway of the Khmers for at least a thousand years. The French colonial period from the mid-nineteenth century to 1954 added French to the mix, but otherwise made little difference, since the French classified all non-majority groups in all of Indochina (including Laos and Vietnam) as “montagnards” (hill people). This is not to say that the French were not aware of the ethnic diversity of Indochina; rather, they chose to ignore it administratively, and govern through the majority groups. In the post-Khmer Rouge period since 1979, at least the minorities are not being targeted and hunted down, as some were, but there are still no policies or efforts to maintain minority languages. Burma (Myanmar) became a British colony gradually during the nineteenth century, with the process completed in 1885, and the British implemented a policy similar to that of India. This gave some political autonomy to local princes who had been in a tributary relationship with the Burmese monarchy. The British classified minority ethnic groups according to the over-general traditional categories of the majority Burmans. After independence in 1948, there was a nominally federal system with seven minoritybased states (Arakan, Chin, Kachin, Shan, Kayah, Mon, and Karen), but with continuous ethnic rebellions since 1948 and unbroken military rule since 1962, the nation now promotes only the Burmese language. The teaching of
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minority languages has long been illegal during normal school hours. In the early 1990s a new classification of the nation’s ethnic groups gave a total of 135, including the majority Burmans, the seven with separate states, and 127 others. From the mid 1990s, a series of truce agreements with many of the ethnic rebel groups led to the spread of central administration and Burmeselanguage education into areas which had been off limits to the government for up to fifty years. Thailand has never been a colony, and the Thai ethnic group comprises the vast majority. Their language is one of the core elements of Thai national identity. In-school education in other languages, notably Chinese for ethnic Chinese, was long illegal but tolerated. Official figures used to recognize nine tribal groups, mainly in the north, but the most recent have increased this to sixteen, including three types of Thai-related languages from adjacent countries. The national language of Malaysia is Malaysian, derived from traditional Malay as spoken by the majority, especially in West Malaysia. Various types of Chinese are also spoken by urban groups; Portuguese creole is still spoken in Melaka (Malacca) by some descendants from the Portuguese colonial period (1511 to 1641). In West Malaysia, there are small indigenous Orang Asli (original people) groups, mainly speaking Austroasiatic languages, and in East Malaysia there are other indigenous Austronesian-speaking groups. Malaysia was created in 1963 by uniting various Malay states in treaty relations with the British, the former Straits Settlements colonies, as well as Sarawak (formerly run by a British family) and Sabah (formerly British North Borneo, run by a British company) in East Malaysia. Brunei remained outside this federation and is still an independent Malay-ruled state, and Singapore withdrew from Malaysia in 1965.
4.1.2. Southern Pacific Rim A long-term Dutch colony, Indonesia was granted nominal independence under Japanese occupation from 1942 to 1945. A struggle against the Dutch led to independence in 1949, at first in union with the Netherlands, but since 1954 complete. One of the main platforms of the national struggle, and one of the five pillars of pancasila (five pillars), the national philosophy, is the Indonesian language, a codified version of Malay. Initially this was the mother tongue of very few Indonesians, but it has been spread throughout Indonesia, with most people now either bilingual in Indonesian and a traditional language, or monolingual in Indonesian. A compromise spelling
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which unifies the representation (but not the vocabulary!) of Indonesian and Malaysian was implemented in 1972, and also adopted for Malay in Brunei. Eight other major languages have also received limited official status in Indonesia, but these are not among the many Austronesian languages throughout the country and Papuan languages in the east of the country which are endangered. The spread of education and administration in Indonesian is increasing the pace of their disappearance, and even some languages with rather large numbers of speakers may be potentially endangered, for example Sasak of Lombok Island with over two million ethnic group members. Timor Leste (East Timor) was a Portuguese colony until 1975, was then invaded and annexed by Indonesia, then taken under United Nations stewardship in 1999, and achieved independence in 2002. The independent state has chosen Portuguese as its official language, but English is also widely used, and a distinct variety of indigenous Austronesian Tetun is used as a lingua franca in some areas, notably the capital, Dili. Hajek (2002) traces the history of language policy and language endangerment in Timor Leste, noting that several of the indigenous Papuan and Austronesian languages are endangered, and some may have vanished during Indonesian occupation. After centuries of Spanish rule, the Philippines were sold to the United States in 1898 and eventually achieved independence in 1946. All the indigenous languages of the Philippines are Austronesian, with a great deal of diversity. The language of the Manila area, Tagalog, with some input from regional languages, has been developed into the national language, Pilipino, which over the last fifty years has spread from an original quarter of the population to be nearly universal either as first or second language, especially among the young and the educated. Under American rule and with many American teachers, English also became very widespread, and now Philippine English is one of the major New Englishes. Tagalog/Pilipino uses an amazing number of English loan words, and there is also very frequent code switching between Tagalog/Pilipino and Philippine English. Nine other regional languages have local official status in their regions, but many other indigenous Austronesian languages are endangered to various degrees. Some Spanish creoles which had developed during the Spanish colonial period are now extinct. In the late nineteenth century, the island of Papua was divided between the Dutch in the west, the Australians in the south-east, and the Germans in the north-east. From 1914 to the independence of Papua New Guinea in 1975, all of the eastern half and nearby islands to the north-east were under
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Australian administration. In addition to English, the Australians used Motu, an Austronesian language of the capital, Port Moresby, as a lingua franca along the south-eastern coast; they also took over from the Germans the use of the developing Pacific Pidgin, and this has since spread throughout the country. The western half of Papua passed to Indonesia after 1962 and is now known as Irian Jaya (West Irian). Indonesian has become the national language there, and is endangering many indigenous languages which have no official recognition. Papua and some adjacent islands to the west in Indonesia are the area of greatest linguistic diversity in the world, with many hundreds of indigenous Papuan languages in a large number of unrelated families, as well as many Austronesian languages. Papua New Guinea, the Solomons, Vanuatu, and adjacent areas are also the focus for the expansion of Pacific Pidgin, which as Tok Pisin has official status in Papua New Guinea, as Bislama in Vanuatu, and as Solomon Islands Pidgin in the Solomons. Pacific Pidgin arose during the plantation period from the late nineteenth century, then creolized and spread widely after workers returned home. In many cases, indigenous languages are being replaced by Pacific Pidgin, as is also the case among some Aboriginal populations in north-eastern Australia, where the creole Broken is spreading in the Torres Strait and the northern tip of Queensland, and Kriol is taking over in north-west Queensland and some northern parts of the Northern Territory. The numerous Pacific island states with their various Austronesian languages went through various colonial hands, and in each case the colonial period left an influence on language policy. Some were under German rule briefly before 1914. New Caledonia and French Polynesia remain under direct French rule, and Guam, Western Samoa, and Hawaii are under United States rule, so French and English are replacing indigenous languages there. Easter Island, whose Austronesian language has vanished, is under Chilean rule. The Federated States of Micronesia were first German, then Japanese, and finally American before their independence. Prior to independence in 1968, Nauru was under British and then Australian rule; some smaller islands such as Christmas, Cocos, and Norfolk are still administered by Australia. The Cook Islands, Niue, and (Western) Samoa were controlled from New Zealand up to the 1960s or 1970s, Fiji, Kiribati, the Solomons, and Tuvalu went through periods of British rule, with independence in the 1970s. Tonga remains a British protectorate under its indigenous monarchy, and Pitcairn is still a British colony. Vanuatu was a joint British/French condominium up to independence in 1980. The more easterly Pacific states with
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single indigenous Polynesian languages are linguistically more unified, while there is extreme internal diversity even among the Austronesian languages of Micronesia and especially Melanesia (Vanuatu, New Caledonia, the coastal areas of Papua New Guinea, and so on). With official policies in favour of colonial or ex-colonial languages and the spread of Pacific Pidgin, Melanesia is an area where many indigenous languages are vanishing. However, some initiatives are under way to reverse this situation, such as the development of orthographies for over a hundred additional languages in Papua New Guinea (Easton 2003), the development since 1977 of the Vanuatu Cultural Centre and linguistic training for members of indigenous communities in Vanuatu, and so on. For more details on the language situation in the Pacific area, see Chapters 7 (by Ehrhart and Mühlhäusler) and 14 (by Sakiyama). English was finally recognized as the national and official language in Australia in 1988, but this had long been the policy in any case. Australia only gave full civic rights to its Aboriginal population in 1967. As Walsh outlines in his chapter (Ch. 12), the previous policy, with honourable exceptions at some missions which were based on one language area, was one of rapid assimilation and exploitation at best, extermination at worst. In particular, the Stolen Generation of mixed-race Aboriginal children were removed from their mothers and communities systematically up until the 1960s; a very effective way to break language transmission! In many areas, people from a variety of language backgrounds were mingled together on missions and reserves, and strongly discouraged from using any traditional language. There are now strong incentives for language maintenance. Since 1992 the basis for successfully claiming land rights under the Australian High Court’s Mabo decision3 is a continuous association with traditional land and its traditional language and culture. Since 1967, and especially with the initiatives of the national language policy from 1988, major efforts have been made to document surviving languages and provide two-way (bilingual) education where appropriate. Language revival efforts are also under way in some areas where the pre-1967 policy was sadly effective, and many communities are receiving support for initiatives such as dictionaries and other materials. The best-documented revival is of Kaurna in Adelaide (Amery 2000). For further details, see Chapter 12 (by Walsh). New Zealand has only one large indigenous group, the Maori with their Polynesian language. The policy in New Zealand since 1987 is that both 3 The late Eddie Mabo successfully claimed land rights over Murray Island in the Torres Straits in a decision of the Australian High Court released 3 June 1992.
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English and Maori have official status. Due to its history of colonial tutelage of various other Pacific states to its north and east, there are also substantial migrant populations from other Pacific island groups (Cook Islands, Niue, Samoa, Tonga, and so on). Until the 1960s, assimilation was the official policy, and the proportion of Maori who could speak Maori was rapidly decreasing. From 1981, the 1840 Treaty of Waitangi4 was revisited, and the government started to support Maori language maintenance. The te kohanga reo (language nest), preschool centres where young Maori children are taught through language immersion by Maori elders who, unlike most of the children’s parents, can speak Maori fluently, are one successful initiative which has been widely imitated in language revival efforts around the world.5 Grandparents as secret weapon for language maintenance are a widely neglected resource, also used in many school-based and extracurricular activities in education for Australian Aboriginal communities, or in the United States master and apprentice system of intensive one-on-one training by a tribal elder.
4.1.3. Eastern Pacific Rim Policies along the eastern Pacific Rim have been even more assimilationist than the western Pacific Rim policies. In Canada, Original Nations now have increased legal and territorial rights, and in the United States, tribal rights originally based on territorial reservations have gradually improved in recent years. In both, the former catastrophic policy of forced assimilation by removal of generations of children to English-only schools away from traditional areas, paternalistically intended as an acculturation and linguistic assimilation device, has gravely damaged the transmission and viability of most indigenous languages. Now there is a major effort under way, partly through indigenous networks and partly through educational institutions, to reinvigorate many of these languages. However, the English Only movement in the United States is making such efforts more difficult. The four chapters (Chs. 21 to 24) discuss the North American situation. The original inhabitants of the fiftieth state of the United States, Hawaii, were speakers of the Polynesian language Hawaiian. Massive immigration
4 This treaty between the British crown and the Maori chiefs permitted and led to the settlement of large numbers of English-speaking settlers, soon greatly outnumbering the existing Maori population. 5 The first hundred te kohanga reo were established in 1982. By 1994 there were 800, with 14,000 children attending, and over 60,000 graduates.
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from the western Pacific Rim and from the continental United States has made them a minority on the main islands, but some outer islands still have a Hawaiian majority. The language was in severe decline, but is undergoing a revival, with large numbers of young Hawaiians studying the language in school, at university, and elsewhere. They benefited from official bilingual education policies for a number of years, until these were revoked under the Reagan administration. There is also a substantial positive effect for attitudes about Hawaiian identity from cultural tourism activities. In western Latin America, the hegemony of Spanish has been extremely forceful, though not quite as locally intense as in the United States or Canada. This was partly due to the initial adoption of many indigenous languages by the Catholic Church. The remaining population of Indian descent is also a much larger proportion of the overall population than in North America, and in many cases they are geographically concentrated in areas with a much smaller population of Hispanic descent. For these reasons, some of the indigenous languages of Latin America are less endangered than those in North America. Recent policy changes are not helping, however; education and other government activities continue to be almost exclusively Spanish-medium, and centuries of intermarriage and the increasing development of mainly Spanish-speaking urban centres are continuing to erode the indigenous language speaker populations. Again, the three chapters (Chs. 9 to 11) provide more details for the Pacific Rim in Central and South America. Overall, increased minority linguistic and other rights have been officially implemented in most countries around the Pacific Rim, but so far with limited positive results. Languages nevertheless continue to vanish, and linguistic documentation remains an urgent priority.
4.2. Can Policy Change Reality? The most important factor in language maintenance, and an absolutely crucial one in cases of language revival from near-extinction such as Ainu in Japan, is the attitude of the minority community as a whole; see Bradley and Bradley (2002a) for fuller discussion. For a language to survive or reemerge and develop into wider use in its traditional community, a viable core group of individuals in the community must be willing to make the effort to implement a language programme, and enough motivated participants, including children, must be involved. This effort must be sustained,
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and official resources should be drawn upon where possible. The strategies for such activities are discussed much more fully in other chapters of this volume. Of course it is much easier to have a positive attitude and support folkloristic heritage activities (songs, dance, crafts, festivals, and so on) than it is to maintain or revive a vanishing language. I do not wish in any way to denigrate the importance of such heritage activities, which have been so effective in keeping some Celtic communities strong in the face of the advance of English and French. They are also a powerful weapon in the revival of languages such as Manx and Cornish, or revitalization efforts for Welsh and Breton. It seems that it is usually only after increased economic and social security have been achieved that a minority group choose to go back to a language they had lost or were losing. Revival to date has mainly been successful in developed first world countries: Hebrew in Israel and Welsh in Wales are the prime examples. Hebrew was a liturgical language which became a modern spoken language over the last century, and the language of an independent nation since 1948. Welsh was a retreating minority language used in increasingly restricted domains until the 1960s, but its domains have now greatly expanded and it has a high public profile. Even those groups who are reclaiming their traditional languages in Australia and North America live within prosperous nations which give substantial support for such measures. The problem is that most endangered languages are spoken in less prosperous nations which not unreasonably choose to devote scarce resources mainly to education in the national language. Another fundamental problem is that many nations still have a covert if not overt assimilationist policy, and the negative attitudes to minority languages which often accompany this.
4.3. Conclusion Does it matter if a language dies? For the yes case, there are four main arguments (Bradley and Bradley 2002b: pp. xi–xii). 1. Linguistic: each language is a unique system of human communication; 2. Ethical: language is part of community heritage and access is an essential right; 3. Scientific: each language encapsulates unique knowledge of the natural world; 4. Symbolic: group identity and self-esteem is tied to language.
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The most important of these to an individual community is probably the symbolic argument: preservation of a positive group identity and positive self-esteem. Also important is the scientific argument for maintenance of traditional cultural knowledge, and the ethical argument of connection with the community’s roots. Does it matter if the official policy is negative? Obviously yes, because this means that majority and minority attitudes are likely to be negative, and the minority languages will be used in increasingly restricted domains. Government resources will not be available, and in particular schools and dealings with the government will become a means of linguistic assimilation. In turn, many parents will make what they believe to be a rational economic decision, not to transmit the traditional minority language, believing that their children will do better in school and advance further in society with the national language. Sadly, the bilingual advantage—the fact that bilinguals tend to do better at a second, national language than monolinguals— is something we as linguists have not yet managed to spread into public consciousness. Once the national policy becomes more positive for language maintenance, as it now has in most countries in the Pacific Rim, each minority community with an endangered language is faced with a decision: do they take action and implement measures to preserve their language and culture? Do they insist that schools should become not just a place for assimilation, but also a place for keeping their language and culture alive? Do they make other efforts to maintain and develop their traditional life in as many settings as possible? Do they persevere and succeed? And how is such success to be measured? It is solely for the community itself to decide how to proceed. Ladefoged (1992) makes the case for allowing languages to die quietly, according to the wishes of their speakers. Thieberger (2002) points out that it is selfinterested and often unrealistic for linguists to insist on full-blown language maintenance programmes directed at all children, and that communities must decide themselves what to maintain and how to go about it. I believe our role as linguists is to document languages in cooperation with the speech communities, and try to help them to do what they want with our results and their own knowledge. Sometimes we must wait for the community to be ready for language maintenance. One such instance is further discussed in my chapter on South-East Asia (Ch. 16). If this kind of work is done well, fewer languages will vanish, knowledge about the past will survive, and positive feelings based on traditional heritage will persist in the hearts of many more communities.
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References Amery, R. (2000). Warabarna Kaurna! Reclaiming an Australian Language. Lisse: Swets & Zeitlinger. Bradley, D. (ed.) (1985). Language Policy, Language Planning and Sociolinguistics in South-East Asia. Papers in South-East Asian Linguistics 9. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics A–67. —— (1991). “Chinese as a pluricentric language”, in M. G. Clyne (ed.), Pluricentric Languages. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, 305–24. —— and Bradley, M. (eds.) (2002) Language Endangerment and Language Maintenance. London: RoutledgeCurzon. —— and Bradley, M. (2002a). “Language attitudes: the key factor in language maintenance”, in D. Bradley and M. Bradley (eds.), 1–10. —— (2002b). “Introduction”, in D. Bradley and M. Bradley (eds.), pp. xi–xx. Easton, C. (2003). “Designing orthographies through community interaction: Alphabet Design Workshops in Papua New Guinea”, paper presented at Conference on Language Development, Language Revitalization and Multilingual Education in Minority Communities in Asia, Bangkok, Thailand. Hajek, J. (2002). “Language maintenance and survival in East Timor: all change now?”, in D. Bradley and M. Bradley (eds.), 310–28. Ladefoged, P. (1992). “Another view of endangered languages”, Language, 68/4: 809–11. Thieberger, N. (2002). “Extinction in whose terms? Which parts of a language constitute a target for language maintenance programs?”, in D. Bradley and M. Bradley (eds.), 182–202.
5
Using Written Records to Revitalize North American Languages Toshihide Nakayama
5.1. Introduction 5.2. Impact of unpublished materials on the study of endangered languages 5.2.1. Significance of the archived records: the case of Sapir’s Nuuchahnulth materials 5.2.1.1. Sapir’s work on Nuuchahnulth 5.2.1.2. Value of the fieldnotes 5.2.2. Challenges in utilizing archived materials 5.2.2.1. Issues in locating archived materials 5.2.2.2. Issues in extraction of information from archived materials 5.3. Maintaining a field philological chain: from the past to the future 5.3.1. Field philological approach to the past 5.3.2. Extending a field philological approach to the future 5.4. Conclusion
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5.1. Introduction In research on endangered languages it is relatively common to downplay the value of written records or any other second-hand attestation of the actual uses of the language as a source of information. This tendency undoubtedly has to do with the fact that the collection of primary data has been felt to be more important and urgent than devoting time to secondary records of the language when endangered language communities are going through drastic and rapid acculturation. This feeling has been strengthened by the fact that many of the previous records were of inferior quality, especially in terms of phonetic accuracy. The tendency for the researchers to rely so heavily on the data which they themselves collect has led to a feeling that their field records are mainly notes for themselves. Moreover, within the tradition of descriptive linguistic studies, it is the completed analysis that has generally been considered the most I would like to thank Ives Goddard, M. Dale Kinkade, Thomas Hess, Victor Golla, Marianne Mithun, Osahito Miyaoka, and Michael Krauss for their helpful comments and guidance regarding earlier versions of this chapter. All omissions and errors are mine alone.
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valuable—fieldnotes and other records have value only in their relation to the final analysis. Thus, the combination of a strong emphasis on fieldwork and the exclusive focus on completed analysis has contributed to the peripheral (underappreciated) status of field records, which is the case with the study of endangered languages of North America (a similar concern was raised for the research in Australia by Austin (2002)). The records themselves are not felt to be inherently valuable, nor is information regarding the creation of these records considered to be very important. Following this line of thinking, field records are essentially not much more than private records of the fieldworker’s research activities, and the primary value of the materials is historical or autobiographical in nature. However, as the seriousness of language endangerment has intensified around various parts of the world, the collection of data directly through fieldwork has become increasingly difficult. In many cases the traditional languages exist only in the memories of a small number of elders, the languages having long since passed from daily use. Stories and words might be remembered, but only as historical artefacts, rather than as part of a living tradition. Under such circumstances, it is difficult to collect rich information about the actual use of the languages. Consequently the records of previous fieldwork constitute an important, and sometimes the sole, source of information regarding a traditional language. In other words, such records cease to be a mere snapshot of reality and have become one-of-a-kind materials and a primary object of study. The validity of the records can no longer be examined easily against real world facts. Instead, the original facts have to be surmised on the basis of these records. Thus, the role of the records in understanding facts about the language shifts from that of “reflection of reality” to “basis of a (reconstructed) reality”. This change in the role of field records necessitates a change of emphasis in the study of endangered languages. It has become necessary to direct attention to the documents themselves and also to the process of creating and interpreting the documents. In interpreting such data, we need to adopt an appropriate methodology for evaluating documents and extracting information about a language without the possibility of directly observing its actual use. Essentially, descriptive linguists need to bring in a philological perspective and conduct their research in a correspondingly rigorous way. That the study of endangered languages has philological aspects has already been pointed out by some scholars in their analyses of the state of the study of North American Indian languages (Goddard 1973; Miyaoka 1992; Watanabe 1996). In this chapter I will
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discuss the importance of a philologically enlightened approach to the study of endangered languages and also to language revitalization efforts.1 Here I will adopt Miyaoka’s (1992, 2001: 13) term “field philology” to refer to such an approach. All descriptive linguistic research is of course fundamentally philological in a broad sense. As Goddard (1973: 727) points out, “[w]hether the linguist works with his own fieldnotes or three-hundred-year-old manuscript dictionary, he must base his analysis not on the actual, internalized, language—nor even on the actual ‘performance’ of speakers—but on a record, a second-hand attestation, of a finite number of verbal manifestations of the language.” It is nonetheless necessary to discuss the need for a philological emphasis, especially in relation to the work on endangered languages. The attention and care that are required for proper handling of field records are far from trivial, and it takes conscious and organized efforts to bring philological rigour to the treatment of field materials. In addition, as the amount and range of information that can be collected through direct fieldwork become more limited, we need to explore ways to creatively maximize the usefulness of written records. Although the notion of philology typically suggests a relationship only to the past, it should be noted that the need for adopting a philological approach is not limited to the aspects of our research that look back to the past. Field researchers are users of previously collected materials, but at the same time they themselves are creators of field documents that are objects of philological research. They stand not only at the end of the material utilization cycle as users and information-miners, but also at the beginning of the cycle as creators of materials. As researchers engage in efforts to collect information in fieldwork, they create one-of-a-kind materials about a language, in some cases the only source of information, for future researchers and descendants of the community members. As contributors to future philological research, it is important for field researchers to be conscious of both the significance and the problems associated with field philological research. They should make a conscious effort to ensure that
1 Discussion in this chapter is limited to written field records, due to space constraints. However, basically the same discussion applies to audio and visual recordings created in fieldwork. Compared to written records, audio and visual recordings are less abstract forms of recordings and as such they may be less prone to ambiguities and misinterpretations. Still, any kind of recording, written or audiovisual, is inherently selective in terms of space and time, and what is captured is merely a slice of a life observed from a certain angle. Without accurate and adequate information regarding the situation of the recording, interpretation of the record can easily go amiss.
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their contributions last as long as possible and are as helpful as possible for future users of their materials.
5.2. Impact of Unpublished Materials on the Study of Endangered Languages In many parts of the world, endangerment of indigenous languages is at a critical state, and the prospect of obtaining new primary data from these languages is rapidly diminishing. Previously collected field materials therefore play a crucial role in the documentation and revitalization of endangered languages. In this section I will first illustrate, citing Sapir’s Nuuchahnulth materials as an example, the potential of archived materials to make a significant impact on efforts to document and revitalize endangered languages of North America. I will then discuss practical challenges that are typically faced by researchers seeking information in archived field materials.
5.2.1. Significance of the Archived Records: The Case of Sapir’s Nuuchahnulth Materials Edward Sapir (1884–1939) is one of the most influential scholars in the linguistics and anthropology of Native American Indians. He carried out indepth studies on a wide variety of languages, including Wishram Chinook, Takelma, Yana, Southern Paiute, Nuuchahnulth, Navajo, and others. The quality of his data and the sharpness of his insights are well proven in his voluminous published work. However, the information ingeniously laid out in such publications only represents a portion of what this remarkable scholar accumulated in his notebooks and file slips. The rest, just like gold trapped in ore, is still waiting to be processed and utilized. His materials on Nuuchahnulth serve as a good example. I will illustrate below the richness of the unpublished materials left by Sapir by drawing on my own experience working with his Nuuchahnulth materials.
5.2.1.1. Sapir’s Work on Nuuchahnulth Sapir conducted fieldwork on Nuuchahnulth in the early 1910s right after he had become chief of the Anthropological Division, Geological Survey of Canada. In September 1910, Sapir spent several months in the Tseshaht community in Port Alberni, British Columbia, collecting information on
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the language and ethnography of Nuuchahnulth. He returned to the field for a longer period from September 1913 to February 1914. During his two field trips, which amounted to approximately a year, Sapir filled twentyfour notebooks with numerous texts, lexical items, and ethnographic notes. In addition, on his second trip he successfully trained two young Nuuchahnulth interpreters, Frank Williams and Alex Thomas, to transcribe texts phonetically so that they could continue collecting information after Sapir had left the field. The contribution of Thomas was particularly great. Thomas continued to send texts to Sapir, which ultimately more than doubled the amount of Nuuchahnulth text materials available to him (Golla 1991). Moreover, Thomas’s materials added the perspective of a community member to the text collection. True to the Boasian tradition of field research, information collected by Sapir covers a wide spectrum of linguistic and cultural phenomena. Particularly notable are numerous ethnographic texts, including myths, legends (e.g. about extraordinary hunters and family origins), ethnographic accounts of various facets of traditions (e.g. rituals, marriages, feasts, warfare), and tales of extraordinary experiences. What makes these texts exceptionally valuable is the fact that these are accounts provided by native speakers in their own language. These texts, therefore, can project a fairly detailed and rich picture of the traditional Nuuchahnulth ways as the Nuuchahnulth people themselves understood them to be. This large collection of extended narrative texts is valuable also as a linguistic resource, providing a wealth of naturally occurring, in-context examples. The texts that Sapir collected were analysed and edited for publication in collaboration with Morris Swadesh (1909–67), who was a student of Sapir. Of these texts forty-four were published in 1939 along with a grammatical sketch and a glossary (Sapir and Swadesh 1939). Work on the Nuuchahnulth textual materials halted for some time due to the death of Sapir and to the Second World War. Then during 1946–8 Swadesh devoted much of his time to arranging and editing these texts for publication (Klokeid 1971). A second volume of Nuuchahnulth texts was published in 1955 with thirty-four texts, most of which were collected by Alex Thomas (Sapir and Swadesh 1955). There was a plan for a third volume that would have contained sixtyseven texts (thirty-four texts collected directly by Sapir and thirty-three texts written by Thomas), but that volume was never completed. Although the two published collections of texts made available a substantial amount of valuable material, over half of the texts still remained unpublished, along with virtually all Sapir’s ethnographic notes. There is, thus, much to recover from Sapir’s field records.
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Fortunately, a large amount of Sapir’s unpublished materials on Nuuchahnulth is archived at the American Philosophical Society Library (in the Franz Boas Collection, Philadelphia) and at the Canadian Museum of Civilization (formerly the National Museum of Man, Ottawa). By far the most valuable items among them are Sapir’s own field notebooks, which were deposited in the American Philosophical Society Library by the Sapir family in 1972. The material consists of twenty-four notebooks with over 2,800 pages and approximately 750 file slips of Nuuchahnulth personal and place names. Nuuchahnulth forms in the fieldnotes were transcribed phonetically, and transcriptions are detailed and very accurate. Texts are written on every other line and for the most part they are accompanied by interlinear word-by-word translations. All the Nuuchahnulth data are put only on the right-hand pages, and relevant linguistic and ethnographical notes are on the facing pages. Also found in the archives are various secondary materials that derived from the fieldnotes. Among the important materials in this category are the typescripts of the texts that were prepared for the planned third volume of the Nuuchahnulth text collections. Although these typescripts do not have interlinear translations or free translations (with a few exceptions), they greatly facilitate efforts to complete the halted publication project. Another set of important materials is comprised of categorized ethnographical notes. These notes were extracted mostly from the fieldnotes, and they were typed and categorized into about 30 topics, probably in preparation for an ethnographical study of the Nuuchahnulth. In addition, there is a large collection of file slips (approximately 65,000) containing morphemes and word forms.
5.2.1.2. Value of the Fieldnotes The contribution that Sapir made through his numerous published papers and monographs to the study of Nuuchahnulth and beyond is both remarkable and important. Sapir’s analyses brought out his genius most dramatically and inspired many later studies. However, what he left in the form of fieldnotes is by no means any less significant than his published work. The field materials complement and enhance the published work in several ways. They contain a large amount of information that was left unpublished. They also retain the extra information that was filtered out in the process of preparing the data for publication. In particular, field materials are closest to the primary data in terms of the amount of phonetic details included in the representation of language forms. The phonetic details in textual data
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are typically reduced in publications in favour of a phonemic representation. These details, however, are crucial for some studies, such as those on phonetics, language change, and dialectal differences. The major advantage (and disadvantage) of field materials as a source of information is that information contained in fieldnotes has not been processed and organized for a particular purpose. The materials, consequently, can be utilized for a wide range of purposes. Sapir’s field materials on Nuuchahnulth can make significant contributions in the following areas among others: Linguistic studies
• • • •
Detailed phonetic studies; Corpus-based descriptive and theoretical studies on grammatical phenomena; Studies on language change (through comparison with present-day data); Dialectal studies (through comparison with data from other dialects).
Ethnographical studies
•
Comprehensive ethnography.
Teaching materials
• •
Creation of language teaching materials; Creation of cultural readers.
5.2.2. Challenges in Utilizing Archived Materials It is relatively easy to see the ultimate value of field materials for language documentation and revitalization efforts. However, when one actually tries to use the materials, one quickly realizes that it is far from a straightforward process to locate relevant archived materials and harvest necessary information from them. Researchers face challenges both in locating the needed resources and in extracting information from the materials.
5.2.2.1. Issues in Locating Archived Materials Catalogues and finding aids that are well maintained and widely accessible are crucial for locating archived materials efficiently. Traditionally, even for preliminary surveys of contents, it was necessary for researchers to visit archives in person to consult card catalogues or finding aids. In recent years we have been seeing a notable improvement in this regard, as printed catalogues and finding aids are converted into electronic formats. Now several large-scale archives provide on-line access to their electronic catalogues and
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finding aids, allowing focused searches in their collections.2 The on-line search services allow researchers to conduct preliminary surveys off-site and to make their visits to archives efficient and productive. Conversion of printed card catalogues and finding aids is definitely a general trend, and a rapidly increasing number of collections are becoming searchable over the Internet. However, as of this writing, fully searchable electronic catalogues and finding aids are still emerging services. Another factor that is hindering efficient searches for archived materials is the lack of a standard in archiving practices, including classification schemes and keywords. Different archives have developed idiosyncratic archiving practices that are totally incompatible with each other. Thus, researchers cannot transfer the knowledge and skills gained in the experience with one archive over to the work on another. This problem is also inhibiting development of a mechanism for allowing cross-archive global searches.
5.2.2.2. Issues in Extraction of Information from Archived Materials In addition to the challenges in searching and locating materials, researchers face challenges in finding and extracting information from the archived materials. Generally speaking, it is difficult to extract information that the researcher needs for a specific purpose from fieldnotes and other archived materials. Even with a fairly detailed index to the contents of the materials, it is still a very time-consuming task to work through materials that are not necessarily organized in a logical order. Moreover, information contained in the fieldnotes is not “tuned” for any specific uses; and, therefore, the user is required to do (possibly extensive) “preprocessing” before the information can be utilized for an actual project. This is a problem inherent in the nature of fieldnotes, and it is the flipside of the unique advantage of field materials (i.e. flexibility in use due to the unprocessed nature of the data in fieldnotes). This issue is particularly difficult to resolve. Accessibility to information can also be hindered at the most basic level due to indecipherable handwriting and to idiosyncratic transcription and abbreviation conventions. Some of these difficulties can be reduced dramatically by publishing the materials with prudent editing. In such projects it is important, although
2 Good examples include the National Anthropological Archives (Washington DC), the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (Canberra), the Bancroft Library at University of California (Berkeley), and the Canadian Museum of Civilization (Ottawa).
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difficult, to strike the right balance between the amount of processing done on the original in order to enhance usability of the materials and closeness to the original. Examples of excellent editing of field materials can be seen in the series The Collected Works of Edward Sapir (published by Mouton de Gruyter). Unfortunately, publication cannot be a widely available solution to the problem of inaccessibility of field materials. In order to assist potential users of archived materials, it is ultimately more practical either to have them form a partnership with those having the necessary skills and resources or to provide them with the necessary set of skills to work with the materials by themselves.
5.3. Maintaining a Field Philological Chain: From the Past to the Future Research on endangered languages is situated in social and academic dynamics that are very different from those surrounding research on major languages, and researchers of endangered languages are subject to special expectations and responsibilities arising from this unique situation. The most important facts are that there are only a very limited number of opportunities to collect data directly from people who lived using a traditional language, and that there are and will be a limited number of records available regarding these languages. In dealing with a major language with a healthy community of active speakers, data are typically collected for the exclusive use of the researcher. New data can be obtained easily, and it may even be desirable for researchers to collect data independently so that the description of the language as a whole will be based on a larger, more diverse database. When working with endangered languages, on the other hand, new language data are, or will soon be, a rare commodity. Since the sources of information on these languages are so limited, we cannot afford to overlook even information jotted down on a small corner of the beaten-up notebook of a fieldworker. Field researchers do not necessarily create their fieldnotes as public documents, but they should, nonetheless, be conscious of the fact that their notes will be one of the few and precious sources of information on the language in question. There is a strong possibility that knowledge about many endangered languages will be passed on to future generations only through these records and documents, and field researchers should take care to maximize the amount of
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information that can be passed on successfully. Field documents provide the physical basis for a link of knowledge from the past to the future; but such documents themselves can never be an automatic guarantee of successful transmission of all the richness of a language that the documents attempt to capture. What we need are research strategies with a philological rigour that focus on the fact that there are a finite number of documents of the language available, and that it is becoming continuously more difficult to examine the information contained in the documents against the actual language facts. As Goddard (1973: 742) points out, “[i]t is necessary to make the fullest and most careful use of what there is, and to exercise the greatest diligence in preserving this corpus for the future in the most useful possible form.” Thus, a field philological approach consists of a battery of strategies to minimize loss and distortion of original knowledge and to maximize the chance of transmission of this knowledge in a form as close to the original as possible.
5.3.1. Field Philological Approach to the Past This section deals with a field philological approach to records from the past. Specifically, we discuss possible strategies to make maximum use of previously recorded data. (i) Careful treatment of the records. Written notes, as opposed to audio-visual recordings, are a highly selective and abstract form of recording. In addition, there are various conventions even now for writing down speech sounds. These two factors make the representational connection between the written symbols and the phonetic facts rather precarious. Written records are more like highly ambiguous clues than unambiguous, universal representations of the facts. Given the precarious nature of this connection, it is crucial not to contaminate the original records through careless editing or normalization. Even adjustments that seem innocent can add an extra layer of ambiguity and uncertainty into an interpretation of the records.3 Editorial adjustments can be justified when they bring out facts that are otherwise hidden, but the fact that the adjustments have been made should be clearly stated with indication of the original form. This point is crucial where it is difficult to verify data against primary facts, as is often the case with seriously endangered languages. (ii) Refining techniques of extracting information. In dealing with records, it is not possible to increase the amount of recovered information by improv-
3
Such danger is discussed in detail by Goddard 1973: 729 ff.
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ing on the original. It is, however, possible to refine tools and techniques to deduce reliably more information than is directly represented in written records. In particular, computer-based processing of a large amount of data makes possible many new ways of extracting information from records. For example, the strategic use of a concordance can facilitate the identification of morphemes and their glosses, even when they are not directly provided in the original records.4 It can greatly extend usefulness of the original field material. (iii) Active, creative use of written documents in supplementing and enhancing the current database. It is possible to broaden the use of old records in creative ways. One example is to use old records to jog memories that have faded away into the periphery of a speaker’s consciousness. This type of prompting can greatly assist speakers who otherwise have trouble recalling the past, and it thereby increases the number of speakers who can contribute to the data collection. Such prompting is becoming increasingly important as the traditional languages fall into disuse. (iv) Training for utilization of field materials and information extraction. Another strategy to maximize use of field materials is to increase the number of people who can utilize the records. Typically, archived records are examined by only a limited number of professional researchers. Considering the value of information contained in archived records, it is obvious that such records are under-utilized. It is particularly regrettable that endangered language communities have not been able to make use of these archived records for their language documentation and revitalization efforts. Needless to say, this is not the fault of the communities. As discussed in § 5.2.2, access to archived materials is anything but straightforward in many ways, especially for non-specialists. As it is, there is not much that members of endangered language communities can do other than wait for the information buried in the archived records to trickle out through professional researchers’ publications. An ideal solution to this problem is to train members of endangered language communities to equip them with the necessary knowledge and skills so as to glean for themselves the information sought. Often the needs and priorities of language communities are different from those of researchers, and the exact kind of information that a community seeks may not
4 The Yahi translation project (directed by Leanne Hinton) at the University of California, Berkeley, provides a good example. The textual data of Yahi were collected by Edward Sapir in 1915 from the last and only-known speaker of the language, Ishi (Kroeber 1961). Due to Ishi’s minimal English proficiency and his sudden death, a large portion of the texts was left untranslated. However, in the Yahi translation project, translation and analysis of the texts are in progress through extensive use of a concordance built though computer-based text processing (Golla 2003).
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5.3.2. Extending a Field Philological Approach to the Future While engaging in descriptive research and other language revitalization activities, researchers naturally tend to focus on how they can utilize old records for their ongoing activities. However, as pointed out above, descriptive linguists conduct their own fieldwork, and therefore, they are also creators of source documents for philological research of the future. Adoption
5
http://linguistics.berkeley.edu/lingdept/Current/research/bol.html (accessed on 30 May 2005).
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of a field philological approach by creators of documents amounts to assuming the responsibility of leaving field records for later generations in as useful a form as possible. It is not necessarily obvious or natural for field researchers to view their own fieldnotes as one-of-a-kind precious materials that need to be preserved for posterity. In an academic context the significance and value of research activities are measured and evaluated in terms of descriptive or theoretical synthesis made on the basis of data (i.e. grammars and papers). The data are, of course, important. However, they are important only as empirical support for syntheses, and they themselves cannot be the goal of research. Because of this academic paradigm, field researchers often feel that fieldnotes are nothing more than notes to themselves for writing grammars and articles, and they do not see further significant value in their fieldnotes, especially after they write a grammar. It is, therefore, important to reaffirm that the fieldnotes of researchers on endangered languages are part of a very limited number of irreplaceable records, and that these records are often as close as one can get to the primary facts about the languages in question. When researchers view their work and records within this wider context of documentation and revitalization of endangered languages, they should be able to understand that the value of their fieldnotes extends far beyond their private use. What is most important in the interest of future field philological work is for field researchers to deposit their fieldnotes ultimately in an appropriate repository for proper care and preservation. In order to make field records “philology-friendly”, field researchers should pay attention to two aspects of record making. One is record keeping of the data collection process. Ideally, records contained in fieldnotes are self-explanatory and self-contained, in the sense that they can be interpreted unambiguously and accurately without relying on knowledge other than that obtainable from the fieldnotes themselves. The meaning of a performance, linguistic or otherwise, is relative to space, time, and context (social, cultural, and interactional). Information regarding the surroundings of the recording, therefore, is crucial in accurate interpretation of the record. Such contextual information should be contained in the fieldnotes along with the data. Also important to be included in field records is an explanation about the spelling conventions and use of symbols. The other aspect of record making that requires careful consideration is the recording format and medium. With paper documents, quality of the paper and writing instruments can affect the longevity of the record significantly (Kenworthy et al. 1985). Especially, it is important to use acid-free
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paper. The recording format is quickly becoming a major and complicated issue, as more and more data are acquired and stored in digital formats. Digital records revolutionize processing, storage, and utilization of information. They are undoubtedly making a significant positive impact on descriptive linguistic research and language revitalization efforts. At the same time, however, this digital revolution has introduced a major issue for record archiving with respect to longevity and reusability of the records.6 As pointed out by Bird and Simons (2003: 557), this is a problem of portability in a broad sense: across different software and hardware platforms; across different scholarly communities; across different purposes; and across time. This portability problem is succinctly summarized by Bird and Simons (ibid.): “Today’s linguists can access printed and hand-written documentation that is hundreds (sometimes thousands) of years old. However, much digital language documentation and description becomes inaccessible within a decade of its creation. The issue is acute for endangered languages. In the very generation when the rate of language death is at its peak, we have chosen to use moribund technologies, and to create endangered data. When the technologies die, unique heritage is either lost or encrypted.” As digital technologies constantly and rapidly evolve, it is not yet possible to determine the ultimate solution to this problem of portability of records. It is therefore crucial for researchers to stay focused on the portability of records and make informed decisions regarding the technologies to embrace. The Electronic Metastructure for Endangered Languages Data project (E-MELD), a five-year project funded by the National Science Foundation of the United States, represents an important initiative that specifically addresses this issue. The project aims to develop, support, and promote the best practices in language documentation and data archiving in order to make the data maximally durable, accessible, and useful.7
5.4. Conclusion None of the points or suggestions made in this chapter is necessarily new. However, they are yet to be integrated into a systematic approach that 6 The shift to digital technology has also affected audio-visual recording drastically in both positive and negative directions: digital recordings are less prone to degradation of quality over time; they can be reproduced, distributed, enhanced easily; but, on the other hand, the issue of format incompatibility is paramount, as the digital technology in the audio-visual domain is changing even faster than it is in the textual domain. 7 For further information, consult the project website (http://emeld.org/).
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focuses on the limited availability of records. It is time to pay due attention to field documents as a major, and sometimes the sole, carrier of knowledge of endangered languages and cultures. In this chapter, I have suggested adoption of a field philological approach. In essence, this means to situate our research activities within the continuity of knowledge bridged by records from the past to the future. In order to maximize the chance of successful preservation and transmission of knowledge, we should utilize records from the past with the utmost care. At the same time, we should also strive to make every bit of our field research efforts count for as wide a range of uses as possible. After all, our field research represents a few precious opportunities to see a language in action, not only for field researchers ourselves, but also for any linguist, present or future. Each note a fieldworker takes in the field is a small window through which people can catch a glimpse of the language in action. In many ways, our research and the records resulting therefrom are not for ourselves alone.
References Austin, P. K. (2002). “Developing interactive knowledgebases for Australian Aboriginal languages – Malyangapa”, MS, University of Melbourne, 14 pp. Bird, S., and Simons, G. (2003). “Seven dimensions of portability for language documentation and description”, Language, 79/3: 557–82. Broberg, B. (2003). “Keeping their words”, Columns, Dec. Seattle: University of Washington Alumni Association (accessed on-line on 30 May 2005 at: www. washington.edu/alumni/columns/dec03/languages01.html). Goddard, I. (1973). “Philological approaches to the study of North American Indian languages: documents and documentation”, in T. Sebeok (ed.), Current Trends in Linguistics, x: Linguistics in North America. The Hague: Mouton, 727–45. Golla, V. (ed.) (1991). The Collected Works of Edward Sapir, Vi: American Indian Languages 2. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. —— (2003). “Ishi’s language”, in K. Kroeber and C. Kroeber (eds.), Ishi in Three Centuries. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 208–25. Kenworthy, M. A., et al. (1985). Preserving Field Records: Archival Techniques for Archaeologists and Anthropologists. Philadelphia: The University Museum, University of Pennsylvania. Klokeid, T. J. (1971). “The West Coast (Nootka) text manuscripts: a report to the National Museum of Man”, MS, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 19 pp. Kroeber, T. (1961). Ishi in Two Worlds: A Biography of the Last Wild Indian in North America. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. Miyaoka, O. (1992). “Kiketsu Harinton o meguru kyoshotachi [Intellectual Giants surrounding Harrington]”, in C. Laird, Ikareru Kami to no Deai: Jonetsu no Gengogakusha Harinton no Shozo [Encounter with an Angry God: Recollections of my Life with John Peabody Harrington], trans. M. Ichinose. Tokyo: Sanseido, 261–99.
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Nakayama, T. (2001). Nuuchahnulth (Nootka) Morphosyntax. University of California Publications in Linguistics 134. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. —— (ed.) (2003). George Louie’s Nuu-chah-nulth (Ahousaht) Texts with Grammatical Analysis, ELPR A2–028. Sapir, E., and Swadesh, M. (1939). Nootka Texts: Tales and Ethnological Narratives with Grammatical Notes and Lexical Materials. Philadelphia: Linguistic Society of America. —— (1955). Native Account of Nootka Ethnography, International Journal of American Linguistics, 21/4, pt. 2. Watanabe, H. (1996). “Tekisuto no Shushu to Riyo [Collection and utilization of texts]”, in O. Miyaoka (ed.), Gengojinruigaku o Manabu Hito no Tame ni [An Introductory Reader on Linguistic Anthropology]. Kyoto: Sekaishisosha, 143–57.
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Indigenous Voices and the Linguistics of Language Revitalization Marcellino Berardo and Akira Y. Yamamoto
6.1. Introduction 6.2. Voices of Native American teachers and parents 6.3. Community-wide teamwork in language revitalization 6.4. Issues in language revitalization 6.4.1. Ethical questions and issues of ownership: whose language is it? 6.4.2. Training members of the language team: introducing linguistics and language description 6.5. In closing: community voices
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6.1. Introduction This chapter emphasizes the linguists’ task to provide diverse linguistic data for scientific purposes, and, equally important, to make available rich language materials to the endangered language communities from whom we obtain the very linguistic information. We also address issues that arise when working with endangered languages and in endangered language communities. When we work with endangered languages, we are committing ourselves not only to documenting and describing the languages, but also to meeting the linguistic, social, and educational needs of the communities. Thus, it is especially important for us to listen to the voices of indigenous peoples. For this reason, our discussion draws heavily from our experiences with endangered language communities in North America.
6.2. Voices of Native American Teachers and Parents A survey of American Indian opinion leaders by Indian Country Today on the state of Native languages found that, despite language programmes being offered by 71 per cent of respondents’ tribes, a substantial 64 per cent indicated they know only a few words of their Native language (Indian Country Today, 6 Dec. 2000). Under these conditions, teachers in endangered language communities are striving toward designing effective language programmes (including
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different levels of immersion programmes), developing language curricula, and creating language-teaching materials. Here, the need is acute for linguists to go beyond documentation and description of endangered languages and to begin language revitalization with the communities. Faced with rapid language shift, Native peoples are reflecting on their attitude toward their languages and are reasserting the importance of their linguistic heritage. Many agree that they must stop blaming outsiders and that they themselves are responsible for the maintenance and perpetuation of their languages. The following points recently were made by Native American participants of the American Indian Language Development Institute (AILDI), the focus of which is to provide linguistic and educational training to the teachers of Native American languages. The AILDI participants believe that language is a part of being human. They say: We believe that our language is a gift from our Creator: • if we don’t use it, we are not fulfilling our responsibility, • if we don’t give life to it, we are neglecting to perform our duties. Native teachers know there has been enough talk about what to do and how to do it. Now, they declare it is time to start a programme to fulfil their “responsibility”. The goal of the teachers is high and they urge their community people to remember that, together, they need to plan for how, why, when, where, and for what purposes, they should revitalize their language. The teachers propose the following: Start small, • through children, get their parents involved; through parents, get their parents involved—start small and expand the circle, • start with your own family, get one more family to join you, and another; soon you will have your own speech community, but • don’t wait for someone else to start speaking the language. Native teachers have realized that it is not absolutely necessary to have a school to teach a language. Someone’s home can be an excellent place to begin language teaching. They say:
• • •
don’t wait until you have your own class, if you do speak your language, speak it to your children and your children’s friends, even if they say, “I don’t understand what you are saying,” don’t switch to English,
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if you don’t speak the language, ask someone to talk with you in the language, but if you don’t have a learner, speak to yourself, to your dog, your cat, and practice how effectively you can teach your language.
In many communities, the reality is that the only fluent speakers are the elderly. They will not wait for their community to get organized, obtain funding, recruit language workers, provide training in how to document, analyse, and describe the language, create curricula, and develop teaching materials. Native teachers realize that the situation is urgent and, against various odds, they try to obtain training in language teaching. They recognize that someone being a speaker of a language does not mean this individual is naturally a teacher. There must be some training in linguistics, language teaching, and education, which complement the ways teachers attempt to breathe life into their languages. The following statements are also from AILDI participants. When we teach a language in a situation of less than perfect immersion, • let’s get to know how our language is structured, • let’s get to know how language works, • let’s learn to plan how our language can be presented, • let’s use anything that will help us understand: gestures, things around us: pictures, books, computers, videos—anything, • let’s teach our language without using English or Spanish, and • let’s do things in our own language. Language teachers constantly engage in self-reflection on the manner in which they teach their languages. “Teasing”, for example, as a traditional way of teaching the young may not be the best method. They recommend that: When your learner tries to speak the language, • don’t criticize saying “you don’t speak our language correctly,” • don’t make fun of mistakes, • encourage the learner to be a risk-taker—look at our children and learn from them, and • be a model for good language use. They reassure: Learning is fun. Don’t kill it by making it “difficult” and “boring”, • use gestures, facial expressions, body movement, • use games, skits, songs, and dances, and • show you are enjoying your language.
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They warn their people:
• • • • • • •
having our language in classrooms helps, but it is not enough, having community language programs helps, but it is not enough, putting our language in the computer helps, but it is not enough, videotaping elders speaking our language helps, but it is not enough, having a dictionary helps, but it is not enough, having a grammar helps, but it is not enough, and talking about our language helps, but it is not enough.
They urge their people:
• •
we must bring our language back to our homes and to our communities, and we must create an environment where our language is the language of thinking, creating, and communicating.
The teachers promise that when this revitalization is successful:
•
we will have two languages in which we think, create, and communicate. We want our Native language and English, not our Native language or English. Then, we will all be bilingual.
Listening to these voices, we elaborate on issues of language revitalization from the perspective of local communities with which we are familiar.
6.3. Community-wide Teamwork in Language Revitalization Revitalizing a language on a community-wide scale requires a teamwork approach. To facilitate the revitalization process, the team should include mutually supporting speakers, elders, community leaders, community language advocates, teachers, learners, and linguists. The team undertakes a task with at least three interrelated and ongoing parts (Berardo 2002). First, the language must be documented and described so the language team knows what teachers must include in order for the learners to have as much knowledge of the language as possible. The resulting grammar may be called a Language Revitalization Reference Grammar or LRRG. The LRRG is not intended to be used to teach learners to become fluent speakers. Instead, it catalogues and illustrates phonological and grammatical phenomena in the language. Second, the team turns to curriculum design, which may include a pedagogical grammar. The purpose of a pedagogical grammar is to teach learners to read, write, and speak the language rather than catalogue and illustrate the sound system and
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grammar. Also considered in curriculum design are language materials for teaching all ages and levels, a dictionary and/or pictionary, texts, and teaching methods, which will efficiently and effectively produce new speakers of the language. Third, the language revitalization team needs to reintroduce the language into the homes, circles of friends, and community. This, of course, is the reason for the revitalization effort. Even when many community members are involved, there still are inherent difficulties with (re)introducing the language into the home and community. Today, interactions that family and community members have with one another often take place automatically and subconsciously in English. To reintroduce and reinforce the heritage language in the homes and community, the subconscious expectation of speaking English must be replaced by a conscious expectation of speaking the heritage language until there is an automatic, unspoken expectation that conversation with family and friends will be in the heritage language. Ultimately, families and community members will need to address this sociolinguistic process in order for the language to be revitalized.
6.4. Issues in Language Revitalization The desire to revitalize a heritage language must originate from within the local community and products of revitalization efforts must be relevant to that community. Previously, academic researchers wrote for other academic researchers and as a result local communities often did not benefit from such research because it was impenetrable, filled with jargon, and organized in ways that mostly benefited academia. Grammatical sketches, for example, were not guided by ethical issues of language ownership and by the need for an integrated team that includes speakers, non-speakers, teachers, political leaders, and other community members. The following sections briefly describe some of the ethical issues and linguistic training issues for those engaged in language revitalization. These issues are considered important to creating useful, relevant, and meaningful materials in an ethical way for the local community as well as academia.
6.4.1. Ethical Questions and Issues of Ownership: Whose Language is it? The language belongs to the people. It is a part of who they are. Thus, there arise some basic ethical questions of ownership of language that underlie
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language revitalization work. Relevant questions include: (1) Who should and should not learn the language? (2) What needs to be documented and how? (3) Who should teach it? (4) How should teaching materials be prepared? (5) What should the materials consist of? (6) What variety or dialect of the language is to be documented and described? (7) What should the writing system represent: allophones, phonemes, syllables, lexemes, or a mixture of phonological and morphological elements? (8) Who makes the decision on these and related matters? There are no easy answers to these questions, in part, because they touch on highly complex issues of people’s attitudes toward language, identity, and the responsibility of language maintenance. (See Cameron et al. 1993 for further discussion.) Issues brought up by these questions require sensitivity, especially on the part of linguists coming from outside the community. The language does not belong to the linguist, but the methodology used by the linguistic researcher to discover how the language works is cast in linguistic terminology and shaped by linguistic and anthropological traditions of language description. Linguistic methodology, terminology, and tradition may give the impression that the linguist is imposing artificial categories on the language, which may seem unnatural, confusing, or inappropriate. In fact, the linguist does impose a linguistic approach to language description, which has been developed outside the values, attitudes, beliefs, assumptions, and traditions of the local culture. Because a linguistic approach to language description was developed specifically for an academic audience, some members of a language revitalization team may have concerns about its relevance, especially if local views on language are not consulted. For this reason, linguistics in a language revitalization framework focuses on learning the local perspectives on the language from the language community and educating the team about linguistics to make clear the intent of the linguist and underlying assumptions associated with a linguistic approach. It is especially important for the linguist to know the local community’s view on language ownership and how that perspective may impact academic research. Some communities may consider ownership of language as a ban on any public (non-tribal) discussion concerning the language, including presentations at professional conferences and academic publications as well as informal discussions on teaching methods or teaching materials the tribe uses. This understanding of ownership of language may seem to conflict with academic values of scholarship, including the idea that collaboration
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with other academic colleagues, irrespective of their linguistic and ethnic heritage, is essential for high-quality, ongoing research in language description and teaching.
6.4.2. Training Members of the Language Team: Introducing Linguistics and Language Description As stated earlier, it is important for community members, including elders, speakers, political leaders, learners, language educators, and linguists, to participate as much as possible in the preparation of the Language Revitalization Reference Grammar. In this process, participants can learn to see how linguistic methods help describe language. Examples from the Algonquian language Potawatomi can serve to illustrate this point. In word-initial consonant clusters where the first consonant is as sonorous or more sonorous than the second, the perception of both sounds in the clusters may be difficult for untrained English speakers to hear. Consider the following Potawatomi words from Buszard-Welcher (2003: 15) and Potawatomilang.org (www.potawatomilang.org/Reference/Grammar/Morphology/Inflection/verbinflintro. html#anchor1450326, July 2005). mtek bkwezhgen gdewabdan
“tree” “bread” “You see it.”
English phonology does not allow word initial clusters such as mt-, bk-, and gd-. Untrained English speakers may hear these clusters as single consonants t-, k-, and d-, respectively. If members of the language team cannot hear all sounds in such clusters, they may reasonably object to documenting them in the description of the language. In such cases, a linguistic test that can tease off the initial consonants is needed. A linguistic test, here, refers to putting the relevant words in a linguistic context that will make all sounds in the cluster more salient. For the words above, the “determiner test” and “negation test” may re-syllabify the clusters, changing syllable structure to a more identifiable CVC syllable instead of the more complex CCVC or CCCVC syllables. Naming the tests makes for easy reference and ultimately the language team will be able to develop and apply appropriate tests to other phonological and grammatical constructions.
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Determiner tests: The gi-test and i-test 1. gi-test
a. mtek b. gi mtegok c. [gim.tegok]
“tree” “these trees” “these trees”
(Word-final devoicing changes the final -k in (1a) to -g- in (1b) and (1c). Word-final devoicing is irrelevant to the point of this example.) 2. i-test
a. bkwezhken b. i bkwezhken c. [ib.kwezhken]
“bread” “the bread” “the bread”
When the determiners gi and i are introduced in (1c) and (2c), the initial consonant of the mt- and bk- cluster may syllabify with the preceding determiners resulting in the syllables gim and ib, respectively. These tests may make the initial sounds of such clusters more salient for the language team and therefore facilitate a more accurate description of the language. (Note that since only the initial syllable in (1c) and (2c) is relevant, the rest of the word is not separated into syllables.) Negation test: the “no/not-test” 1. jo-test a. gdewabdan “You see it.” b. jo gdewabdasin “You don’t see it.” c. [jog.dewabdasin] “You don’t see it.” The negative particle, jo, may also associate with the initial consonant of the following gd- string, resulting in the syllable jog that brings out the word initial g- in the gd- cluster. The jo-test is another test that can make the initial consonant in these clusters easier for the language team to hear and therefore contribute to the quality of the description of the language.
6.5. In Closing: Community Voices Throughout the twenty-six years of AILDI and ten years of collaborative projects with the Oklahoma Native Language Association, we have experimented with a variety of ways to work with language teachers, school administrators, community members, and political leaders. The key to success of
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any language revitalization effort is for the people themselves to want their language back in their homes and communities. Here we see how some Native Americans regard their roles in revitalizing their own languages. The Native language teachers at AILDI say: A. As a speaker, 1. stimulate the desire to learn/teach by having fun with the language, 2. be creative in the use of the language—create stories, “turn-around” stories, songs, books, radio programs, TV programs, and others, and 3. keep using the language no matter what other people think and say. B. As a learner, 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
make a commitment to learn the language, continue to show enthusiasm, keep learning the language and/or keep talking, learn how to appreciate the language, show you’re having fun with the language, and try to use what is learned.
C. As a member of a family and a community, 1. start with your family—keep talking in the language even when they answer you in English—don’t switch to English, 2. keep nagging your family to speak in the language even when they say, “oh, not you again,” 3. keep talking in your language to your baby, to your mother, to your father, to your aunts and uncles, and 4. gradually enlarge your circle to your neighbours. D. As a teacher, 1. make a commitment to teach the language no matter what, 2. get training to learn what to teach and how to teach the language, and 3. work toward certification. E. As an advocate, 1. initiate formation of a language team or a support group that will promote the language, 2. be a part of the team, or 3. carry out a community survey and/or create strategies for raising community awareness, 4. plan community-wide language activities, and 5. just do it! F. As a program administrator, 1. administer a language survey:
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to grasp the language situation, to raise awareness of the language, to recruit supporters, to recruit potential teachers, and to recruit language learners,
2. design a teacher recruiting program, 3. design teacher training programs, and 4. provide facilities. G. As a community leader, 1. make a commitment to funding, 2. recruit teachers and supporters, and 3. support all levels of language work—documentation, curriculum development, language materials development, use of technologies, etc. H. As members of a human community, they affirm: 1. our Creator has created for us the world through language. So, 2. if we don’t speak it, there is no world.
Linguists’ work with Native American languages has a long history. We are at a time when collaborative and cooperative efforts among Native language speakers, linguists, educators, and advocates can lead to successful Native language revitalization, maintenance, and fortification.
References Berardo, M. A. (2002). “An organizational model for community-wide language revitalization: a perspective from Native American languages”, Thule, 12/13: 21–47. Buszard-Welcher, L. A. (2003). “Constructions polysemy and mental spaces in Potawatomi discourse”, dissertation, University of California, Berkeley. Cameron, D., Frazer, E., Harvey, P., Rampton, B., and Richardson, K. (1993). “Ethics, advocacy and empowerment: issues of method in researching language”, Language and Communication, 13: 81–94. Dick, G. S., and McCarty, T. L. (1996). “Reclaiming Navajo: Language renewal in an American Indian community school”, in N. H. Hornberger (ed.), Indigenous Literacies in the Americas. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, 69–94. Dorian, N. (1998). “Western language ideologies and small-language prospects”, in L. A. G. and L. J. Whaley (eds.), Endangered Languages: Language Loss and Community Response. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 5–21. Grenoble, L. A., and Whaley, L. J. (eds.) (1998). Endangered Languages: Language Loss and Community Response. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Grinevald, C. (1998). “Language endangerment in South America: a programmatic approach”, in L. A. Grenoble and L. J. Whaley (eds.), Endangered Languages:
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Language Loss and Community Response. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 124–59. Hale, K., Krauss, M., Watahomigie, L., Yamamoto, A., Craig, C., Jeanne, L. M., and England, N. (1992). “Endangered languages”, Language, 681: 1–42. Hinton, L. (1994). Flutes of Fire. Berkeley: Heyday Books. —— and Hale, K. (eds.) (2001). The Green Book of Language Revitalization in Practice. New York: Academic Press. —— with Vera M., and Steele, N. (2002). How to Keep your Language Alive: A Commonsense Approach to One-on-One Language Learning. Berkeley: Heyday Books. Indian Country Today (2000). “Ideal and reality”, Indian Country Today (6 Dec.). Linn, M., Berardo, M., and Yamamoto, A. Y. (1998). “Creating language teams in Oklahoma Native American communities: a process of team-formation”, International Journal of Sociology of Language, Special Issue on the Sociology of Indigenous Language Use and Change in the Americas. McCarty, T. L., and Zepeda, O. (eds.) (1998). Indigenous Language Use and Change in the Americas (International Journal of the Sociology of Language, 132). Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. —— Watahomigie, L. J., and Yamamoto, A. Y. (eds.) (1999). “Reversing language shift in indigenous America: collaborations and views from the field”, Practicing Anthropology, 20/2: 2–47. Parks, D. R., Kushner, J., Hooper, W., Flavin, F., Bird, D. Y., and Ditmar, S. (1999). “Documenting and maintaining Native American languages for the 21st century: the Indiana University model”, in J. Reyhner, G. Cantoni, R. N. St. Clair, and E. P. Yazzie (eds.), Revitalizing Indigenous Languages. Flagstaff: Northern Arizona University, 59–83. Payne, T. E. (1997). Describing Morphosyntax: A Guide for Field Linguists. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Skutnabb-Kangas, T., and Phillipson, R. (eds.) (1995). Linguistic Human Rights: Overcoming Linguistic Discrimination. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Yamamoto, A. Y. (1998). “Retrospect and prospect on new emerging language communities”, In Endangered Languages: What Role for the Specialist? Proceedings of the Second FEL Conference, University of Edinburgh, 25–7 Sept. Bath: Foundation for Endangered Languages, 113–20. —— (1999). “Introduction: reversing language shift in indigenous America: collaborations and views from the field”, Practicing Anthropology, 20/2: 2–4. Potawatomilang.org. www.potawatomilang.org/Reference/Grammar/Morphology/Inflection/verbinflintro. html#anchor1450326, June 2005.
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Pidgins and Creoles in the Pacific Sabine Ehrhart and Peter Mühlhäusler
7.1. Introduction 7.2. Difficulties in compiling an inventory of existing pidgins and creoles 7.2.1. Historical circumstances of development 7.2.2. Substratum language(s) 7.2.3. Superstratum language(s) 7.2.4. Stages of development 7.2.5. Degree of vitality or the threat of extinction for the language 7.3. Pidgins in the context of language endangerment in the Pacific: social classification 7.3.1. Beach community languages 7.3.2. Administrative languages 7.3.3. Military pidgins 7.3.4. Shopkeeper-pidgins 7.3.5. Trade pidgins 7.3.6. Mixed types 7.3.7. Households and work situations 7.3.8. Boarding schools and missions 7.3.9. Varieties with lexifier languages other than English and French 7.3.9.1. Spanish 7.3.9.2. Pidgins based on local languages (especially inter-village trade languages) 7.3.10. Different stages of development 7.3.11. Vitality 7.4. Creoles in the context of language endangerment in the Pacific 7.4.1. Definition 7.4.2. Visualization of the dynamics 7.4.3. Examples of creoles in the Pacific context 7.4.3.1. Tok Pisin 7.4.3.2. Solomon Islands Pijin 7.4.3.3. Bislama in Vanuatu 7.4.3.4. Boarding schools and mission creoles 7.4.3.4.1. Tayo 7.4.3.4.2. Unserdeutsch 7.4.3.4.3. Australian Kriol 7.4.4. Torres Straits Broken 7.4.5. Cotabato Chavacao 7.4.6. Creoles of island utopias 7.4.6.1. Pitkern and Norf’k 7.4.6.2. Palmerston English 7.4.6.3. Ngatikese men’s language (Ngatik Pidgin English) 7.5. Conclusions
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7.1 Introduction During the twentienth century, there was a long tradition of neglecting the study of pidgins and creoles in linguistics and it is only in recent decades that publications in the theoretical domain have begun to fill the gap. Pidgins and creoles are still not highly regarded either by their speakers themselves or in publications on language rights. For example, Skutnabb-Kangas (2000) only mentions Nigerian Pidgin and refers to Hawaiian English as a regional accent. Pidgins are defined as structurally and functionally reduced second languages used for communication between interlocutors who have no language in common. As long as these contacts are not institutionalized, idiosyncratic interlanguages prevail. As the social context becomes better defined, social norms for lexicon and grammar develop. Where contacts
Figure 7.1. Changes in the ecology of Pacific pidgins and creoles
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become permanent, pidgins become creolized, i.e. they extend their functional range and acquire structural complexity. As in environmental biology, there is a danger of linguists focusing on charismatic “pure”, “authentic” species. Thus, the reasons for pidgins and creoles being under-documented include that they were associated with undesirable social processes such as slavery and disintegration of traditional societies. Generally, the speakers of pidgins and creoles have not had positive attitude towards their languages and, having internalized what Keesing (1990: 149 ff.) refers to as the “colonial ideology”, they often do not consider them as autonomous linguistic systems. Pidgins and creoles that emerged in colonial contexts have often been identified as the principal cause of disappearance of traditional vernacular languages, for instance by Tok Pisin researchers working in Papua New Guinea (Mosel 2002; Wurm 2001; Mühlhäusler 1993). The negative impact of these languages is only one part of the picture, however. As observed by Drechsel (1997), they can also fulfil an important role in maintaining diversity in complex language ecologies. Nowadays, with global languages making inroads into the former domains of pidgins and creoles, languages that could have been a threat to others are often threatened with extinction themselves. We shall focus on the pidgins and creoles of the Pacific Ocean and will not comment on sign languages such as “Hawaii Pidgin-Sign Language” (see Grimes 2001: ch. 5.9).
7. 2 Difficulties in Compiling an Inventory of Existing Pidgins and Creoles Knowledge of Pacific pidgins and creoles has increased rapidly since the publication of Hancock’s (1971) inventory of about twenty-five languages. More than ten times that number are listed in Wurm et al. (1996). It is difficult to compile an exhaustive inventory since the number of names available does not necessarily match the number of languages. Thus, some are almost invisible to their environment, partly because there are no proper names for them or because they are portrayed as inferior versions of other languages (e.g. broken English, français mal tourné, petit nègre). Ironically, the discovery of new pidgins and creoles has tended to coincide with their rapid decline. We shall not provide an exhaustive listing here but rather deal with the question of how different types of pidgins and creoles are differentially
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susceptible to functional and structural attrition. In order to give a comprehensive classification of the existing linguistic contact varieties, several parameters need to be taken into account (Mühlhäusler 1997: ch. 3).
7.2.1. Historical Circumstances of Development Traditionally, pidgins and creoles are described according to successive stages of their development. Whether the endpoint of this developmental scale is reached depends on geographical, demographic, and sociological factors and to what degree learning and/or teaching is targeted.1 The distinction between société d’habitation (where white settlers outnumber introduced labourers) and société de plantation is central to the description of plantation creoles (Chaudenson 1992). Baker (2001: 44–5) distinguishes three types of creoles according to the linguistic attitudes and speakers’ objectives as language learners: homestead creoles,2 school creoles, and true creoles.
7.2.2. Substratum Language(s) Substratum languages are spoken by socially less powerful groups and superstratum languages by the dominant group. In the Pacific, the main substratum languages are the Oceanic (Austronesian) languages of the smaller islands and the numerous families of Papuan and Australian Aboriginal languages. Typically the many languages of the colonized are opposed to the single or few languages of the colonizers. The relative importance of substratum and superstratum languages in pidgins and creole development remains hotly debated. Two factors need to be considered: (a) the stage of language development at which influence from substrate or superstrate becomes important and (b) causes of similarities between a pidgin/creole and its substratum and superstratum languages. Longitudinal studies of the Melanesian pidgin Englishes appear to suggest that substratum influence was less in evidence in the early formative years than during their later expansion. Thus, in Tok Pisin’s direct predecessor, the Samoan Plantation Pidgin English spoken by Melanesian workers in Samoa before 1914, no distinction between inclusive and exclusive first person plural pronouns 1
See Mühlhäusler (1997: ii. 57) and Baker (2001: 42). “A common factor in the socio-historical circumstances in which these originated is that the first European male settlers had non-European consorts” (Baker 2001: 42). 2
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is found nor are there dual pronouns. The inclusive–exclusive distinction was firmly established in New Guinea Tok Pisin from around 1910, though the full paradigm of dual pronouns took longer to emerge. Similarities between a pidgin/creole and substratum languages can have many sources: accident, inheritance from a common source, typological convergence, and others. As shown by Baker and Mühlhäusler (1996a, 1996b), many of the features of Melanesian Pidgin English labelled Melanesian “substratum” by Keesing (1988) were already found in New South Wales Pidgin English in 1820, i.e. fifty years before Melanesians acquired Pidgin English on the plantations of New South Wales and Queensland. Classification and naming by both creolists and general linguists tends to emphasize regional influence in the formation and development of a new language, as is evidenced by Hockett’s statement (1958: 424): “Note the pattern by which ‘Pidgin’ and ‘Creole’ are used in the designation of specific languages of the sort: X-Pidgin-Y or X-Creole-Y means a Pidgin or Creole based on Y as the dominant language which has supplied at least the bulk of the vocabulary, with X or the languages of the X-region, as most important second contributing factor.” However, pidgins and creoles have a very high mobility, “they can fly” (Mühlhäusler 1997: 15) from one place to the other.3
7.2.3. Superstratum Language(s) Generalizations about the role of superstratum languages in pidgin and creole development are difficult to make as such influences can vary greatly. Moreover, many past claims that a creole has directly developed from a European language have been ideological rather than factual. Traditionally, superstrate influence has been claimed for pidgins and creoles derived from European languages. This view does not fully satisfy as it does not consider the linguistic ecology as a whole (Mühlhäusler 1996d). There is another danger: as the majority of researchers stem from the linguistic areas of the main European languages, pidgins and creoles that are based on non-European elements tend to be overlooked. In order to construct family trees, the existence of one lexifier language per creole has been privileged by creolists and conventional classifications speak of English
3 So for instance, the contact languages from Pitcairn and Norfolk have an Atlantic influence due to the origin of one of the mutineers of the Bounty (St Kitts), and Tok Pisin of Papua New Guinea crystallized on the Polynesian island of Samoa among indentured Melanesian workers.
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creoles, French creoles, etc. This does not account for creole development in complex multilingual societies. For instance, the many inter-village pidgins of Papua New Guinea (Mühlhäusler et al. 1996a) are lexically and structurally more mixed than pidgins “based” on a dominant European language. Relexification is a particularly important factor in pidgin/creole development and again illustrates the importance of political power. Relexification can occur when one dominant lexifier group is replaced by another one (e.g. in German New Guinea a pre-existing Pidgin English changed into a Pidgin German). Relexification appears to be a gradual process, but because of poor documentation, the transitional stages are rarely documented.
7.2.4. Stages of Development Not all contact-induced linguistic systems follow the life-cycle “jargon–pidgin– creole”;4 there are cases where creolization may have occurred without prior pidginization (Australian Koinés, Réunionnais) and others of jargons and pidgins that do not reach the stage of creoles (Fijian Pidgin). Moreover, a linguistic system which is used as a creole by one speaker may be a pidgin for another one.
7.2.5. Degree of Vitality or the Threat of Extinction for the Language Wherever linguistically mixed populations were brought together for joint tasks, pidgins emerge. The duration of their existence coincides with their usefulness. As long as German planters employed Melanesian workers in Samoa, Samoan Plantation Pidgin was a vigorous language. When in 1975 Mühlhäusler interviewed the last Melanesians in Samoa, the language was no longer actively used. The same scenario was encountered when Laycock interviewed New Guineans who had worked for the Japanese during the Second World War (Mühlhäusler and Trew 1996). The number of pidgins that must have disappeared is probably quite large and their existence can be verified only from fragmentary references in archival sources or remnants of language remembered by speakers once involved in enterprises such as phosphate mining on Clipperton and Matakea Island in French Polynesia or the pearl diving industry of Western Australia (Hosokawa 1987). One of the difficulties of identifying pidgins has been that they are not tied to well-defined user groups and territorial boundaries. Over 4
According to the life-cycle theory developed by Hall (1962).
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a couple of decades the Aboriginal Pidgin English of New South Wales spread to Queensland (Mühlhäusler 1996a) where it was adopted by introduced workers from Melanesia and renamed Canefields English. This Canefields English was transported to the Torres Straits from the 1880s where it came into contact with Papuan Pidgin English, and eventually became creolized. To identify distinct varieties in such a situation is very difficult. Chinese Pidgin English (CPE) illustrates such problems. This label is conventionally applied to all varieties of Pidgin English spoken in China or by Chinese. However, the linguistic nature of CPE changed dramatically after the Opium War of 1842 without a change in substratum or superstratum languages (Baker and Mühlhäusler 1990), and the Pidgin English spoken by Chinese in places such as Nauru (Siegel 1988) or in Western Australia (Mühlhäusler and McGregor 1996) differs from China coast CPE. In short, the difficulties experienced in identifying, delineating, and naming pidgins and creoles in the Pacific are comparable to the problems universally experienced when trying to draw boundaries in complex multilingual ecologies. To give a definite number for endangered Pacific vernaculars is as impossible as giving a precise number for endangered pidgins and or creoles. It is essential, however, for language maintenance purposes, that the visibility of pidgins and creoles be enhanced by giving them names and stating boundaries, as support from governmental and other organizations depends on their being perceived as well-defined languages.
7.3. Pidgins in the Context of Language Endangerment in the Pacific: Social Classification Whereas structural properties have received most attention from creolists, they are poor indicators of the social life of these languages. Their viability is not determined by structural properties but by historical contingencies. The principal parameter for distinguishing different pidgin types is their domain of use.
7.3.1. Beach Community Languages These languages date back to the late eighteenth century when ships’ crews set up communities with indigenous women. The prototypical beach
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community is that of Pitcairn Island where the Bounty mutineers and their Tahitian consorts created a new society (Mühlhäusler 2004). Other beach community languages are found on Ngatik (Tryon 2001), the Bonins (Long 1999), and Palmerston Atoll (Ehrhart 1996). In this group, very diverse degrees of vitality are represented, coinciding partly with the stability of the societies in which they were employed.
7.3.2. Administrative Languages Administration of highly multilingual areas such as Melanesia requires careful planning. Throughout the nineteenth century the colonizers generally took a dim view of pidgins derived from their own standard languages whilst not wishing to grant the colonized peoples access to the latter (Mühlhäusler 1996b, 1996c). As a consequence, they had to find other solutions to the problem of cross-lingual communication. The Dutch model (creating an elaborated variety of an existing local pidgin (Bazaar Malay)) was adopted in several places. Some of these planned languages were short-lived (e.g. simplified Tolai in German New Guinea) and others remained local (e.g. Dani Valley Police Talk in West Irian—Mühlhäusler et al. 1996b: 446). By contrast, Hiri Motu (Police Motu) gained considerable acceptance by the population of Papua and in 1975 was declared one of the official languages of Papua New Guinea. Despite its official recognition the number of its speakers in Papua is rapidly decreasing and Tok Pisin has become a strong competitor.
7.3.3. Military Pidgins The Japanese presence in Micronesia from 1914 till 1944 gave birth to a variety of military pidgins. Toki (1994) describes the remnants of Japanese amongst old people. See also Shibuya (2001) as to the remnants of Japanese in Palau. There is no future for these contact languages. The presence of large numbers of American military in the Second World War, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War brought into existence pidgins such as Bamboo English or Thai Pidgin English, none of which has been documented in detail and all of which have since disappeared from daily use.
7.3.4. Shopkeeper-pidgins Shopkeeper-pidgins are a common type of contact language but are poorly documented. Due to the high motivation to communicate they
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tend to adapt rather quickly to the surrounding languages, but in some instances they become institutionalized, as in the case of Parau Tinito (Chinese speech) of Tahiti (Mühlhäusler et al. 1996b) or Nauruan Pidgin English.5 The contact languages of the Chinese shopkeepers in Queensland, Wallis and Futuna, or Samoa by contrast have been almost completely lost.
7.3.5. Trade Pidgins One can distinguish between pre-colonial and colonial trade pidgins. Commodities such as salt, food, or pottery were traded over long distances in pre-colonial societies. The linguistic means employed in such transactions included silent barter, bi-and multilingualism, or pidgins. The best-known Austronesian trade pidgins in New Guinea were Mekeo Pidgin (Jones 1985), the Siassi trading language (Harding 1967), and Trade Dobu. Remnants of Papuan-based trade pidgins in the Sepik river area (e.g. Pidgin Yimas) have been described by Foley (1988). Perhaps the best-known colonial trade pidgin is CPE which developed around Macau and Canton in the late eighteenth century. A Portuguese trade pidgin was once widely spoken all over South-East Asia, but when the Dutch, French, and English became the dominant trade nations, it rapidly declined. A small number of the inhabitants of Macau and Malacca used to speak it as a creole but changing lifestyles and resettlement led to its decline (Baxter 1990). Far less long-lived was Pidgin Hawaiian, which was used in the fur trade and in whaling (Drechsel and Kane 1982). Pidgin Hawaiian was supplanted by Pidgin English (Roberts 2000). Whaling was the rationale for English-based pidgins from the 1820s. However, as other commodities (sandalwood and trepang) became commercially more important, the domains of Pacific Pidgin English changed.
7.3.6. Mixed Types Frequently, contact languages are used in a range of domains and functions. This can strengthen the language under conditions of stable diglossia or polyglossia. Pre-colonial pidgins tended to be used in well-defined narrow domains. Colonial pidgins by contrast developed in conditions of rapid 5
Tryon and Charpentier (2004: 11).
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social and economic change and their survival depended on constant adaptation to new functions. A pidgin such as Queensland Kanaka English, the Plantation Pidgin spoken by Melanesian indentured labourers (Dutton and Mühlhäusler 1984), was used as a working language on small farms where it was used primarily in vertical (master–servant) communication. It then became the (horizontal servant–servant) language of the large coastal sugar plantations of Queensland; its functions expanded when it became the principal language of proselytization by the Queensland Kanaka Mission. It fossilized, contracted, and eventually died out in Queensland following the discontinuation of the labour trade in 1904. The same pidgin expanded functionally and structurally in the Solomons and Vanuatu, whither it was transported by returning labourers.
7.3.7. Households and Work Situations Employment of domestics in European households was an important raison d’être for pidgins of the Pacific area. CPE was at its strongest when it was the language of regular intercommunication between Europeans and their Chinese servants. Similarly, the Pidgin German of New Guinea was almost exclusively a kitchen language on large mission stations which, like the Español de cocina of the Spanish Philippines, lost its usefulness when the colonizers departed. Two other languages that have originated in the domestic domain are Taj Boi, a contact language between French and Vietnamese, and Petjo, a Dutch–Malay creole in Batavia.6 The social context of their use (shared work in household and administrative areas) has disappeared since decolonization resulting in the extinction of the contact language.
7.3.8. Boarding Schools and Missions Boarding schools and missions were important catalysts of linguistic innovation in that they uprooted speakers from their traditional language ecologies and promoted new language contact systems. Depending on the number of students and the quality of teaching the learners could either get very close to the target language or end up speaking a pidgin (Mühlhäusler 1998).7
6 Petjo was still in use for some time after Indonesian independence; it has now been replaced by Bahasa Indonesia as a common language for the population (see Rheeden 1995). 7 For more on this point see § 7.4.
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7.3.9. Varieties with Lexifier Languages other than English and French
7.3.9.1. Spanish The Spanish-based pidgins in the South Pacific have varied origins and some of the Philippines varieties may be relexifications of a pre-existing Portuguese creole. All of these creoles are declining, to various degrees. They are not protected through the education system.8 For more information on pidgins and creoles with Spanish as a lexifier see Lipski et al. (1996).
7.3.9.2. Pidgins Based on Local Languages (Especially Inter-village Trade Languages) The notion of pidgins being “based on local languages” refers to lexical affiliation, not to socio-historical events. Some such languages developed only in colonial times (e.g. Police Dani, or Pidgin Fijian) as new ways of life brought together people who previously did not need to intercommunicate. Some pidgins and creoles based on non-European languages were introduced to the Pacific from other parts of the world, e.g. pidgin varieties of Hindi spoken on the Fijian plantations and subsequent koineized Fiji Hindi (Moag 1977). The extent to which indigenous pidgins developed and were used and possibly creolized in the Pacific area remains a mystery as almost all of the known ones disappeared when colonization gained momentum.
7.3.10. Different Stages of Development It is important to note that the distinction between pidgins and creoles is not easy to make in the Pacific context as there are numerous situations where the creole of one section of the population is used as a pidgin by another group. This is the case for instance with Tok Pisin. The notion of a creole is becoming more generally applied to situations where a second language Pidgin becomes the primary language of a group of people, as with Solomon Pijin in Honiara, the capital of the Solomon Islands, which is taking over functions and domains from the numerous vernaculars spoken by urban immigrants. 8 In other regions of the world, there are thriving contact varieties between Spanish and local languages. Examples include the Amerindian–Spanish contact vernaculars of Middle and South America (Panama, Colombia) and the various Spanish–English contact languages in North America (Chicano, Tex Mex).
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There is another terminological issue that needs to be mentioned. Whereas creolists have relatively well-defined labels for developmental stages of viable pidgins and creoles (e.g. jargon-stable pidgin—expanded pidgin—creole etc.), similarly clear characterizations for stages of decline are as yet not in existence.
7.3.11. Vitality The vitality of any language is determined by its ecological support system, which varies from language to language. Pidgins are not special (as was argued by Hall in his life-cycle paper) but merely a more visible case of dependency on external conditions. Neither the passing on of a pidgin between consecutive groups of L2 speakers nor the transmission of an L1 creole (or indeed the majority of the world’s languages) from one generation to the next can be taken for granted. In the case of Pacific pidgins, the main causes for extinction have been: (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) (f )
Loss of traditional economic behaviour and lifestyles; Introduction of asymmetrical power structures; Imposition of political boundaries; War; Major economic changes; Prohibition and persecution of languages.
For creoles, one of the principal reasons for language attrition has been the education system. Thus, the English-based creoles of Hawaii, Norfolk, the Solomon Islands, the Torres Straits, and to a lesser extent Bislama have been affected by systematic attempts by educators to eradicate any informal variety of English. Plantations count among the most important factors in the development of contact languages of the Pacific region. One can distinguish between plantations that relied on short-term indentured labourers (e.g. Samoa, Queensland, New Caledonia) and plantations that were staffed by permanent immigrant groups (e.g. Hawaii, Fiji). The Plantation Pidgin English of Samoa has been studied by Mühlhäusler (1979). The situation on the Fijian plantations was quite complex (Siegel 1992). At different times and at different stages in the social and economic development of Fiji, several contact varieties existed. Pidgin Fijian and, to a lesser extent, Pidgin Hindustani were the contact languages rather than Pidgin English. The most stable period lasted from 1865 to 1920, when it was the lingua franca of the European plantation owners and their workers. After
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1920, the variation of the features was much more pronounced: “At the end of the plantation period, most Pacific Islanders were repatriated and those that remained married Fijians and spoke more standard Fijian. As more Fijians went to school, English was more commonly used for communication with Europeans. However, Pidginized Fijian continued to be used for communication mainly between Fijians and Indians and also Chinese” (Siegel 1992: 3). Up to 1904, Queensland Kanaka English was spoken on the coastal plantations of eastern Australia (Dutton and Mühlhäusler 1984). Its viability took a fatal blow when the government banned labour recruiting and insisted on the return of all Melanesians to their homelands. A small number of Melanesians were either allowed to stay or became illegal migrants. However, they soon shifted to standard English and little of the original Kanaka English is remembered by their descendants (Jourdan 1983). The Cattle Station Pidgin of Central Australia (Mühlhäusler 1997: 14) was the most important means of intercommunication between white cattle station workers and Aboriginal labourers. It also became the working language of black labourers from many different linguistic backgrounds. When in 1964 the Australian government introduced legislation that guaranteed equal pay to white and black workers in the cattle industry most black workers lost their jobs and a mode of living that had become institutionalized over about 100 years came to an abrupt end.
7.4. Creoles in the Context of Language Endangerment in the Pacific 7.4.1. Definition Creoles come into being when mixed pidgin-using populations become permanently relocated. In the Pacific this happened in Fiji and Hawaii, in a number of Spanish and Portuguese garrison settlements, various mission stations, and increasingly in the context of large-scale urbanization of indigenous people throughout the region. Most of the cases of contact can be described as gradual creolization in highly multilingual contexts. The Melanesian Pidgin that developed amongst the indentured Melanesian labourers of the Pacific plantation industry of Queensland, Samoa, New Caledonia, and Fiji belongs in this category: At the termination of their contracts these labourers returned to their highly
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multilingual homelands where they spread knowledge of Melanesian Pidgin. The usefulness of this language over the years has led to considerable functional and structural expansion. Until the 1980s this expansion was not at the expense of local languages. More recently, an increasing number of urban dwellers have shifted to Melanesian Pidgin English as their first language and, even in remote areas, languages such as Tok Pisin have begun to replace local languages. During colonial days Melanesian pidgin Englishes enjoyed great prestige as they were associated with work opportunities, travel, and European possessions. Attempts by subsequent governments to eradicate them met with little success. Their decline coincides with the end of colonialism and the replacement of a strictly hierarchical society by an upwardly mobile one. In spite of the communicational usefulness of Melanesian pidgins, they lack the prestige of English and consequently have themselves begun to be eroded structurally.
7.4.2. Visualization of the Dynamics The combinations of different historical (§ 7.2) and social (§ 7.3) factors define the dynamics (life cycle) of a linguistic system; changes and variations lead either to the spread of a language or to its weakening and eventual extinction. Figure 7.2 shows the different domains of contact as presented in § 7.3. The main fields of contact are the home (with the contact languages of the beach communities), work (with the contact languages born for the needs of trade and the different types of agriculture) and law and order (with the contact languages used for military and for missionary reasons). There are also contact languages with a mixed-type origin: domestic pidgins between home and work, administrative languages between work and law and order, and the contact languages developing at school and especially at boarding schools can be situated between law and order and the home. Figure 7.3 shows the intensity of contact in the simplest case where speakers of two groups are entering into contact. The speakers of L1 have more power to influence the language choice. So the probability is high that their choice of a linguistic system will prevail. At the meeting point of the two coordinates, the communication is most dense and the mutual respect at its highest point, and bilingualism is possible. The intensity of communication is steadily decreasing according to the distance from the starting point and weaker contact varieties appear. It
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Types of language contact: domains Domestic pidgins
Trade pidgins
Cattle and plantation contact languages
WORK
Administrative languages
HOME Beach communities
School creoles boarding schools
Military languages
LAW + ORDER Mission languages
Figure 7.2. Domains of contact
is important to distinguish between the targets of the two (groups of) participants in the interaction: does the speaker of L1 want to share his or her language completely with the exogenous group and does the L2 speaker
low contact
intensive contact
Access to L2 for L1 speaker
Resulting linguistic situation
Full
restrained
limited
small
very small
Bilingualism------Creoles--------Pidgins-------Jargons----Isolated linguistic elements
Figure 7.3. Intensity of contact
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really wish to have a L1-like command of the foreign language? The target is of course closely related to the domain of exchange and the duration of the contact. Figure 7.4 shows the types of unbalanced language contact (i.e. without formation of bilingualism) according to the parameters of contact intensity and domain of contact. The different groups are: Type 1: The strongest case of contact beach communities where the language contact takes place at home between family members stemming from different language groups. This is the field where creoles can most easily arise. Type 2: This transitional type is situated at the connection between the different fields: home + work for domestic servants and home + law and order for the boarding schools, often under the authority of missionaries. Here pidgins are most likely to arise. Type 3: Plantation languages: they need a high amount of communication without specialization in the lexicon. Pidgins are likely to arise between the different levels of hierarchy and creoles in the domestic area. Type 4: This transitional type is situated at the connection between the different fields law and order + work, and concerns the mission languages and the languages used for administration. The type of language is most likely to be somewhere between a pidgin and a jargon.
L2 speaker’s target decreasing
Plantation contact languages
Domestic pidgins
Cattle contact languages
WORK
Trade pidgins
Administrative languages
Unstable Stable Beach communities
School creoles boarding schools
Military languages
LAW + ORDER Mission languages
Bilingualism--------------Creoles------Pidgins----------Jargons---------H I G H E R <- S T A B I L I T Y -> L O W E R
Figure 7.4. Domains & intensity of contact
L1 speaker’s target decreasing
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Type 5: Unstable varieties: military languages and trade pidgins. They arise quickly and are linked with a vital need to survive, but they can disappear as quickly as they came. Type 6: The weakest point is extensive agriculture (cattle) that needs less communication than plantation work and very little exchange. Some words helped by gestures may be sufficient.
7.4.3. Examples of Creoles in the Pacific Context
7.4.3.1. Tok Pisin Tok Pisin has been recognized as a national language in Papua New Guinea and as yet remains strong, though its demise has been predicted many times. A recent study by Smith (2002) highlights a number of factors that could impact on its viability. They include (a) an increasing dependency on English for lexical and structural growth, (b) a lack of planning which prevents its use in more formal settings, and (c) growing regionalism which reduces its usefulness as a nationwide lingua franca.
7.4.3.2. Solomon Islands Pijin Solomon Islands Pijin is spoken by the majority of the population of the Solomon Islands. It is used by the media, the Christian missions, and more recently has also become one of the languages used by the government. English is still the language of education. The language is not immediately threatened by extinction, but Tryon and Charpentier (2004) mention the widening gap between urban and rural Pidgin which in the long term might lead to disintegration.
7.4.3.3. Bislama in Vanuatu Bislama in Vanuatu is one of the very few English-lexifier pidgins to have been accorded the status of national language. However, the reality is different from the administrative frame given by the official instructions. Thus, schools use English and French as teaching mediums and Bislama is excluded from these premises. Furthermore, there is no official spelling system either and Bislama is still mainly used only in oral communication. Because of its strategic position as the only common language of almost all the inhabitants of the country (there are about 120 different local languages and the population is split between English and French as access languages to either culture), Bislama is not threatened in the near future. Nevertheless, its long-term future may well not be so secure.
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7.4.3.4. Boarding Schools and Mission Creoles The role of boarding schools and orphanages in the development of Pacific creoles remains poorly documented. Creolists often neglect the role of language creation within educational establishments. Hawaiian Pidgin, for instance, may well have derived its creolization from its use among children from numerous ethnic backgrounds in the school grounds (Reinecke 1969). Northern Australian Kriol became a first language of the children from a number of Aboriginal remnant groups who were brought together in the boarding school of Roper River mission (see Munro 2000). The continued existence and spread of this language is in part due to the fact that the mission generated a written standard variety and accepted Kriol as one of the classroom languages. Similarly, Torres Straits Broken became creolized at the Anglican St Paul’s boarding school on Moa Island. However, whilst Broken got recognition in the Torres Straits, the majority of islander families have moved to the Queensland mainland where the children are educated in monolingual English-medium schools. 7.4.3.4.1. tayo Tayo is a creole language spoken by people living in the Melanesian village of Saint-Louis in New Caledonia (Ehrhart 1993; Ehrhart and Corne 1996). It developed as a lingua franca at the Marist training centre for catechists after 1855. According to the documents, the very first Kanaks of the settlement spoke a variety close to French. With a bigger number of settlers and a change of objective—instead of flocking to the remote regions of New Caledonia, they decided to stay, to settle down, and to get married—several Melanesian languages were used for internal communication, especially the languages of Touho (with a large number of speakers) and those from the south (where Saint-Louis is situated). French in a more or less pidginized version was used in the contact with the Marists. In several families, the women were children of mixed couples (European-Melanesian) and were educated by the nuns also situated at Saint-Louis. Oral tradition in the tribe says that they taught French to their husbands and that the children of the first generation were still fluent in several Melanesian languages. The second generation of children born after 1920 is reputed to be the first creole-speaking one. Despite its location in the suburbs of Nouméa, Saint-Louis has maintained its creole language up to the present. The price for this is isolation and extreme violence in its surroundings. Since 1970, a village of Polynesian immigrants from Wallis and Futuna has sprung up in the close neighbourhood. This community developed very quickly from one person in 1970
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until more than 1,000 people occupied the place. The relationship with the Melanesian village was always strained despite the common school for the children (where the Polynesians learned the creole as a L2). The tensions developed into a civil war. As a result, all Wallisians were relocated elsewhere. This experience was a traumatic one for the families, the last of whom left in mid 2003. It will be interesting to see whether they retain the creole language. 7.4.3.4.2. unserdeutsch Unserdeutsch is a German creole which developed at the Vunapope Boarding School for orphans in German New Guinea and became the first language of the mixed race community of Rabaul. It was still used daily as an in-group language until Papua New Guinea’s independence in 1975 when most community members dispersed to the Australian mainland (Volker 1982). It is no longer being passed on to the next generation. 7.4.3.4.3. australian kriol The large-scale dispersal and resettlement of Aboriginal people of Central Australia motivated government and missions to create new settlements where the remnant populations could be protected. One of these was the Roper River mission in the Northern Territory which commenced in 1908 and where by 1909 200 Aboriginals belonging to eight different language groups had gathered. According to Sandefur (1991) their children communicated in Pidgin English, which soon creolized and has since become the most important language for Aboriginal people in northern Australia. However, large speaker numbers, official support by the missions, and the education system have not removed the stigma which adheres to this language and its survival is not guaranteed.
7.4.4. Torres Straits Broken Pidgin English was introduced to the Torres Straits by Pacific Islanders working in the sea slug and pearling industries. One of the principal centres for the creolization in the 1890s of Torres Straits Broken was St Paul’s Anglican Mission. Over the last two decades the language has gained considerable status in education and public communication but the effects of this late recognition have been counterbalanced by two developments: the increasing outmigration to the Queensland mainland and globalization. Shnukal (1991: 193 ff.) discusses its growing role as a marker of identity but is uncertain whether the language will remain viable.
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7.4.5. Cotabato Chavacao Spanish-based Cotabato Chavacao was once spoken around Cotabato City in the Philippines and it owes its existence to the Jesuit Order who around 1870 ransomed 100 Muslim children from the local slave market in order to educate and missionize them in their boarding school. A distinct Spanish-based creole developed there. After the American takeover of the colony in 1899 the children were taken to Zamboango where they mixed with the speakers of Zamboangeño and where their language lost its distinctiveness.
7.4.6. Creoles of Island Utopias
7.4.6.1. Pitkern and Norf ’k The mixed language that developed among the descendants of the Bounty mutineers has coexisted with standard English in a stable diglossia from its inception. Only about 20 per cent of the Pitcairners on Pitcairn (population 47) and Norfolk Island (population 900) still speak the language in its traditional form and it is not passed on to the next generation in many families, in spite of its recent revaluation as a language of identity. Recent external pressures on this community may reinforce the use of Pitkern as a language of identity or may lead to the abandonment of the island. The majority of Pitcairners live on Norfolk Island, where they constituted the majority until the 1950s. The island has become increasingly dominated by Australia. This factor together with the demands for fluency in English in tourism and employment constitutes a threat to its survival (Mühlhäusler 2002).
7.4.6.2. Palmerston English Palmerston English (PE) spoken on Palmerston Island (Cook Islands) combines elements from a variety of mid-nineteenth-century British English (with Gloucestershire and Yorkshire varieties being mentioned in the oral tradition) and Polynesian, especially in its variants of the islands of Manihiki and Rakahanga in the Northern Cook Islands. In the bilingual Marsters family, Polynesian speakers were compelled by the English-speaking family head to give up their mother tongue and to use English. The linguistic features of PE show evidence of the modification of English used as a L2 by L1 Polynesian speakers. Polynesian influence can be noticed in the phonology, whilst English and Maori are the main sources of the lexicon. The syntactic
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structures of PE show dual constructions and inclusive/exclusive differentiation following the Polynesian system. Due to the high mobility of Palmerston Islanders in the Pacific region and the consequent dilution of their traditions, the number of fluent speakers of PE is rapidly decreasing, which makes the language a highly endangered one.9
7.4.6.3. Ngatikese Men’s Language (Ngatik Pidgin English) Ngatik Pidgin English is spoken on the island of Ngatik, the main island in the Sapwuahfik Atoll, situated about 150 km south-west of Ponape (Pohnpei) in the Caroline Islands of Micronesia (Tryon 2001: 345). The language developed after a violent fight between European sailors and beachcombers and local Micronesians. All male adults on the island of Ngatik were killed and a beachcomber community developed from the union of some of the Englishmen with the surviving local women. “Pidgin is commonly used by the male population of Ngatik today, especially when they are engaged in communal activities such as fishing, and house- and boat-building” (Tryon 2001: 346). Ngatikese Pidgin occupies an interesting position in the Pacific because of its similarities to early New South Wales Pidgin (Amery and Mühlhäusler 1996) and the fact that it is not intelligible to other Pacific pidgin speakers without knowledge of Ponapean because of its strong Micronesian influence. Ngatik Island has approximately 500 inhabitants. Its contact language is threatened, but not moribund. The special composition of this language with a stronger influence of the Pacific element in all linguistic domains than in the other pidgins of the region gives it a position apart which is of particular interest for language typology.
7.5. Conclusions The realization that pidgins lead a relatively precarious existence is not new. Indeed, it is one of the claims of Hall’s life-cycle theory (1962) that their continued use is dependent on their usefulness as second languages. We have schematized this life cycle in our diagrams. We have attempted to illustrate, 9 The core area of PE is situated on Palmerston Island with fifty-two fluent speakers, the entire population of the island. The diaspora is much larger, though still small in absolute terms, with about 400–500 more speakers living on other islands of the Cook group and a further c.400–500 persons in the Pacific region (New Zealand, Australia, French Polynesia) having a passive or an active knowledge of PE.
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for instance, how languages of command and work cannot be maintained when the situation in which they emerged no longer exists. The more stable types of contact languages are those spoken in the home since they share a greater number of contact situations and a greater desire to communicate on both/all sides. In a small number of instances the addition of new domains and functions has increased the viability of a Pidgin. Tok Pisin, for instance has been greatly strengthened by its adoption as a language of missionization, administration, urban living and adult education in addition to its use in the plantation context. By contrast, Samoan Plantation Pidgin English, New Caledonian Pidgin English, and Fijian Pidgin English remained plantation languages and were eventually replaced by other media of intercommunication (cf. Mühlhäusler 1979). In Hall’s view creolization greatly enhances the viability of contact languages and turns them into “normal” languages, whose linguistic and social development does not exhibit special characteristics. From this point of view the disappearance of a small number of better-known creoles, such as Negerhollands of the former Danish Virgin Islands, is not a matter for concern. One of the claims of this chapter has been, however, that creoles are more vulnerable than most older and traditional vernaculars. Even subsequent to acquiring a community of native speakers many creoles continue to be transitional phenomena and the negative attitudes surrounding their predecessor pidgins are perpetuated. Put differently, creoles typically remain unvalued by both their speakers and the speakers of their lexifier languages. Negative associations are very difficult to overcome. Neither the interest of professional linguists nor the occasional official attempt to raise the status of pidgins/creoles is sufficient to arrest their decline. In our diagrams the likelihood of disappearance of a language is indicated by its distance from the crossover point. This reflects how a diminishing desire to communicate in a language among all parties weakens the language and eventually leads to its extinction. We do not wish to maintain that the well-being of a creole can be expressed in a simple formula. The number of factors that can trigger language decline is indefinitely large and we need to be aware of the rich range of components that constitute the post-colonial identity. As Mair (2002: 35) has put it: “The sociolinguistic evidence points to the existence of a continuum of gradual but by no means unsystematic transitions between more Creole-like and more English-like ways of speaking—with options for fine-tuning that go beyond anything that can be modelled against our current understanding of
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bilingualism, code-switching or code-mixing.” The absence of accurate models is not an excuse to remain inactive, however. Creolists need to become more involved in the maintenance and preservation of the remaining pidgins and creoles of the Pacific area and address the question of how one can help create a greater appreciation of these languages among their speakers and among the dominant cultures of the region.
References Amery, R., and Mühlhäusler, P. (1996). “Pidgin English in New South Wales”, in Wurm et al. (eds.), 33–52. Baker, P. (2001). “No creolisation without prior pidginisation”, Te Reo, 44: 31–50. —— and Mühlhäusler, P. (1990). “From Business to Pidgin”, Journal of Asian Pacific Communication, 1: 87–115. —— —— (1996a). “The development and diffusion of pronouns in Pacific Pidgin English”, in Wurm et al. (eds.), 537–50. —— —— (1996b). “The origins and diffusion of Pidgin English in the Pacific”, in Wurm et al. (eds.), 551–94. Baxter, A. N. (1990). “Notes on the Creole Portuguese of Bidau, East Timor”, Journal of Pidgin and Creole Linguistics, 5: 1–38. Chaudenson, R. (1992). Des îles, des hommes, des langues. Paris: Harmattan. Drechsel, E. J. (1997). Mobilian Jargon: Linguistic and Sociohistorical Aspects of a Native American Pidgin. Oxford: Clarendon Press. Drechsel, E. J., and Kane, H. M. (1982). “Hawaiian loan words in two American pidgins”, International Journal of American Linguistics, 48/1: 460–7. Dutton, T. E., and Mühlhäusler, P. (1984). “Queensland Kanaka English”, English World-Wide, 4: 231–63. Ehrhart, S. (1993). Le Créole français de St-Louis (le tayo) en Nouvelle-Calédonie. Hamburg: Buske. —— (1996). “Palmerston English”, in Wurm et al. (eds.), 523–31. —— with Corne, C. (1996). “The Creole language Tayo and language contact in the ‘Far South’ region of New Caledonia”, in Wurm et al. (eds.), 265–70. Foley, W. (1988). “Language birth: the processes of pidginization and creolization”, in F. Newmeyer (ed.), Linguistics: The Cambridge Survey. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, iv. 162–83. Grimes, B. F. (2001). “Global Language Viability”, in O. Sakiyama and F. Endo (eds.), Lectures on Endangered Languages, ii: From Kyote Conference 2000. ELPR C-002, 45–61 (www.sil.org/sociolx/ndg-lg-grimes_article.html). Hall, R. A., Jr. (1962). “The life cycle of pidgin languages”, Lingua, 11: 151–6. Hancock, I. (1971). “A survey of the pidgins and creoles of the world”, in D. Hymes, Pidginization and Creolization of Languages. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 509–23. Harding, T. G. (1967). Voyages of the Vitiaz Strait: A Study of a New Guinea Trade System, The American Ethnological Society, Monograph 44. Seattle: University of Washington Press.
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Hockett, C. (1958). A Course in Modern Linguistics. New York: Macmillan. Hosokawa, K. (1987). “Malay Talk on Boat: an account of Broome Pearling Lugger Pidgin”, in D. C. Laycock and W. Winter (eds.), A World of Language. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics, 287–96. Jones, A. (1985). “Two Mekeo pidgins”, unpublished MS, Research School of Pacific Studies, Canberra: Australian National University. Jourdan, C. (1983). “Mort du Kanaka English à Mackay (Australie)”, Anthropologie et sociétés, 7/3: 77–9. Keesing, R. (1988). Melanesian Pidgin and the Oceanic Substrate. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press. —— (1990). “Solomons Pijin: colonial ideologies”, in R. B. Baldauf and A. Luke, Language Planning and Education in Australasia and the South Pacific. Clevedon: Multilingual Matters, 149–65. Lipski, J. M., Mühlhäusler, P., and Duthin, F. (1996). “Spanish in the Pacific”, in Wurm et al. (eds.), 271–98. Long, D. (1999). “Evidence of an English contact language in the 19th century Bonin (Ogasawara) Islands”, English World-Wide, 20/2: 251–86. Mair, C. (2002). “Creolisms in an emerging standard: Written English in Jamaica”, English World-Wide, 23/1: 31–58. —— (2003). “The politics of English as a world language: new horizons in postcolonial cultural studies”, ASNEL Papers 7 Cross/Cultures 65, (Amsterdam), ix–xxi. Moag, R. F. (1977). Fiji Hindi. Canberra: Australian University Press. Mosel, U. (2002). “Description of the project ‘The Teop language of Bougainville, Papua New Guinea’”, financed by the VW foundation for endangered languages, Hanover: www.volkswagenstiftung.de/foerderung/foerderinitiativen/bewilligungen/ proldoku_d.ht Mühlhäusler, P. (1979). Growth and Structure of the Lexicon of New Guinea Pidgin. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics, C52. —— (1993). “The role of pidgin and creole languages in language progression and regression”, in K. Hyltenstam and Å.Viberg (eds.), Progression and Regression in Language. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 39–67. —— (1996a). “Pidgins and creoles of Queensland”, in Wurm et al. (eds.), 69–82. —— (1996b). “Dutch in the Pacific area”, in Wurm et al. (eds.), 339–44. —— (1996c). “German in the Pacific area”, in Wurm et al. (eds.), 345–52. —— (1996d). Language Ecology: Linguistic Imperialism and Language Change in the Pacific Region. London: Routledge. —— (1997). Pidgin and Creole Linguistics. London: University of Westminster Press. —— (1998). “Exploring the missionary position”, Journal of Pidgin and Creole Linguistics, 14/2: 339–46. —— (2002). “A language plan for Norfolk Island”, in D. Bradley and M. Bradley (eds.), Language Endangerment and Language Maintenance. London: RoutledgeCurzon, 167–82. —— (2004). “Norfolk Island-Pitcairn English (Pitkern-Norfolk): morphology and syntax”, in E. W. Schneider, K. Burridge, B. Kortmann, R. Mestrie, and C. Upton (eds.), A Handbook of Varieties of English, ii: Morphology and Syntax. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, 789–804. —— and McGregor, W. (1996). “Post-contact languages of Western Australia”, in Wurm et al. (eds.), 101–22.
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Mühlhäusler, P., and Trew, R. (1996). “Japanese language in the Pacific”, in Wurm et al. (eds.), 373–400. —— Dutton, T., Hovdhaugen, E., Williams, J., and Wurm, S. A. (1996a). “Pre-colonial patterns of intercultural communication in the Pacific islands”, in Wurm, et al. (eds.), 401–38. —— Tryon, D. T., and Wurm, S. A. (1996b). “Post-contact pidgins, creoles and lingue franche, based on non-European and indigenous languages”, in Wurm et al. (eds.), 439–70. —— Lee-Smith, M. V., and Wurm, S. A. (1996c). “Preliminary thoughts on Chinese and Chinese contact languages in the Pacific area”, in Wurm et al. (eds.), 799–814. Munro, J. M. (2000). “Kriol on the move: a case of language spread and shift in northern Australia”, in Siegel 2000: 245–67. Pawley, A., Ross, M., and Tryon, D. (eds.) (2001). The Boy from Bundaberg: Studies in Melanesian Linguistics in Honour of Tom Dutton. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics. Reinecke, J. (1969). Language and Dialect in Hawaii. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. Rheeden, van H. (1995). Het Petjo van Batavia. Publicaties van het Instituut voor Algemene Taalwetenschap 64. Amsterdam: Universiteit van Amsterdam. Roberts, S. J. (2000). “Nativization and the genesis of Hawaiian Creole”, in J. McWhorther (ed.), Current Issues in Creole Studies. Amsterdam: Benjamins, 259–302. Sandefur, John (1991). “Kriol: the creation of a new language”, in S. Romaine (ed.), Language in Australia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 195–203. Sapir, E. (1911). “Chinook”, in F. Boas, Handbook of American Indian Languages. Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 40: 578–677. Shibuya, K. (2001). “The remnants of Japanese in Palau: introduction”, ELPR A4–001, 285–302. Shnukal, A. (1991). “Torres Strait Creole”, in S. Romaine (ed.), Language in Australia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 181–94. Siegel, J. (1987). Language Contact in a Plantation Environment. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. —— (1988). “Pidgin English in Nauru”, paper presented at the International Conference on Austronesian Linguistics, Auckland. —— (1992). “The transformation and spread of Pidgin Fijian”, Language Sciences, 14/3: 1–22. —— (ed.) (2000). Processes of Language Contact: Studies from Australia and the South Pacific. Quebec: Fides. Skutnabb-Kangas, T. (2000). Linguistic Genocide in Education: Or Worldwide Diversity and Human Rights? Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. Smith, G. P. (2002). Growing up with Tok Pisin. London: Battlebridge. Toki, S. (chief investigator) (1994). The Remnants of Japanese in Micronesia: Research on Japanese Language and Culture in Micronesia. Osaka: Osaka University, Faculty of Letters. Tryon, D. T. (2001). “Ngatikese men’s language”, in Pawley et al. 2001: 345–60. —— and Charpentier, J.-M. (2004). Pacific Pidgins and Creoles: Origins, Growth and Development. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. —— Mühlhäusler, P., and Baker, P. (1996). “English-derived contact languages in the Pacific in the 19th century (excluding Australia)”, in Wurm et al. (eds.), 471–96.
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Volker, C. (1982). “An introduction to Rabaul Creole German (Unserdeutsch)”, MA dissertation, University of Queensland. Wurm, S. A. (2001). “Language endangerment in the insular Greater Pacific area, and the New Guinea area in particular”, in Pawley et al. (eds.), 383–97. —— Mühlhäusler, P., and Tryon, D. T. (eds.) (1996). Atlas of Languages of Intercultural Communication in the Pacific, Asia, and the Americas. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
8
Linguistic Diversity in Decline: A Functional View Osahito Miyaoka
8.1. Prologue 8.2. Linguistic diversity and its backgrounds 8.3. Language in culture, culture in language 8.3.1. Adaptation strategies linked with cognition of environment 8.3.2. Primordial function of language 8.3.3. Culture as encapsulated in language 8.4. The less directly functional, the more possibility for diversity 8.4.1. Indirect function: language as referential system 8.4.2. Directly functional aspects of language 8.5. “Formhood” of words inevitable in human language: another background for linguistic diversity 8.5.1. A view on the “word” 8.5.2. Formhood responsible for diversity 8.6. An implication
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8.1. Prologue Linguistic diversity is a theme with a long history of absorbing intellectual and academic enquiry, and interest in it has recently resurged partly through the growing realization of the value of biodiversity and partly through language endangerment as diversity becomes severely threatened. Concerning the current issue of linguistic diversity and its diminution, however, many different attitudes and views prevail—individual and collective—which largely depend upon how to see the functions of human language, besides historical and non-linguistic factors involved. The most commonly held view seems to be that a language is distinct from a culture and irrelevant to the process of thought. More specifically, most deeply seated seems to be the instrumental view that language is nothing
Special thanks should go to Sasha Aikhenvald, Mathias Brenzinger, Michael Fortescue, George W. Grace, Takashi Irimoto, Jeffrey Leer, Andrey Malchukov, Johanna Mattissen, Masayuki Onishi, Tamami Shimada Joseph Tomei, Honoré Watanabe, Takako Yamada, and Akira Yamamoto who read the earlier versions of this chapter and provided helpful suggestions. A recent version was read at the Workshop on Linguistic and Cultural Diversity—Dialogue of Cultures, an International Conference—held on 14 and 15 April 2005 in Reykjavik, in honour of Mme Vigdiís Finnbogatóttir.
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but a tool of communication/expression (and historical transmission) for human beings—a lever to get thoughts “across” or one way of “spitting it out”: so much so that it would be easy to harbour a pragmatic and negative view that multilingualism and linguistic diversity should be considered “poor economy” or costly nuisances (if not a Babel to be cursed) and, accordingly, should not be allowed to exist within a country, while monolingualism and diminution of linguistic diversity is in sober fact a welcome phenomenon, given in particular the globalized dominance of market economies coupled with build-up of information and communication infrastructures. For a better understanding of the theme, however, we would have to address it from a broader perspective.
8.2. Linguistic Diversity and its Backgrounds The diversity of language is very often taken as the best gauge of the diversity of (non-linguistic) culture, reasonably to some extent. With fundamental difference in function, however, language is interrelated with culture only partially (as on the lexical level sensitively tuned to the environment), implying its certain autonomy by which to operate at a more or less distant remove from culture and to be more stable (§ 8.3, § 8.4). Since the early days of American anthropology when “convergence” was a hot issue, it has been noticed that the fundamental forms of culture “lend themselves to a comparatively small number of types, which constantly recur as one passes from culture to culture”, partly owing to “the principle of limited possibilities in the development of culture” (Goldenweiser 1913: 273).1 In this trend, anthropological linguists, among others, have been aware that language, in terms of structure, shows a wider range of diversity than culture, although we have not identified the limits on the range of cross-linguistic diversity. In fact it is often the case that relatively greater diversity obtains in one and the same culture area, particularly among more or less isolated peoples in far-flung corners of the world not much spoiled and levelled out by encroaching civilization, who are found to speak
1 The principle, proposed in trying to formulate a theoretical justification of “convergence” of ethnological phenomena which was a contemporary theme that provoked lively discussion, is summarized as follows: “A limitation of possibilities checks variety. In relation to historical series of linked objects or features this means that wherever a wider range of variability in origins and developments coexists with a limitation of end results, there will be reduction in variability, decrease in dissimilarity, and increase in similarity or convergence” (Goldenweiser 1933: 45–6).
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languages with a surprising uniqueness and/or impressive complexity of grammatical—particularly morphological—structures; witness languages of the Pacific Rim, particularly in New Guinea (Ch. 13, this volume) and northwest North America (Chs. 21–23) as well as Amazonia, neighbouring the Pacific coast of South America (Ch. 10). As Edward Sapir (1884–1939) succinctly put it, “there seem to be no types of cultural patterns which vary more surprisingly and with a greater exuberance of detail than the morphologies of the known languages” (1933 [1951: 9]; italics mine). Syntax is by nature much less diverse. Linguistic diversity should be a combination of interwoven backgrounds or factors. The diversity of language as wider than culture is ascribed, first of all, to its being an “immensely ancient heritage” which Sapir is inclined to believe antedated any other cultural asset of man (1921: 22 [23], 1933 [1951]: 7). The diversity could also be traced to variously divergent processes (differentiation by inbuilt mechanism of linguistic change, creolization through language contacts, etc.) which reflect peoples’ sociocultural histories going back to antiquity. Recently resurged interest in diversity has yielded in-depth elucidations about lineage divergence “in space and time” by Nichols (1992) and Nettle (1999), for instance. My concern, however, is not in diachrony but in typological or structural diversity of human language, as contrasted with culture. The diversity goes side by side with the universality of principles, which, apparently a paradox, should nonetheless come from the nature of language itself or “something which is invariant in the human species” (Hale 1995: 137). Quite obviously, relative arbitrariness in linguistic categorization of experiences (§ 8.3.2) is admittedly responsible for the diversity, but a major attempt is made here to address the theme doubly in the same term called indirect functionality (§ 8.3; Miyaoka 1996b, 2002: 165–70) of (a) language (as contrasted with culture) in view of environmental adaptation (§ 8.4.1) and (b) the linguistic unit “word” (in parallel with the “syllable”) as the most essential “form” inevitable in human language at the first stage of what may be called as “articulation” (in the sense of “jointing together” but not “dividing”; § 8.5). Although the great variety among the world’s languages of packaging information into words is increasingly better known, it should remain an interesting question why linguistic morphology—both derivational and inflectional—shows dazzling diversity and daunting idiosyncrasy which obtains by far more widely than phonological, syntactic, or discourse/ pragmatic variations.
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8.3. Language in Culture, Culture in Language In order to capture major functions of language (including communication/ expression as a “tool”), it would be important to see it in the broad context of “culture”, however notoriously ambiguous or elusive a term it is, namely in view of its fundamental constitution and overall workings. In order particularly to grasp that language and (non-linguistic) culture are not causally related with each other in any true sense and to see why linguistic (typological) diversity can be greater than cultural (§ 8.2), it would be crucial to consider the adaptive aspect of culture—adaptation to the environment which is the subjective and collective world of reality (realia) constructed by the speakers themselves.2 While development of culture and its diversity is reasonably related to the necessity of adapting to the ever-changing and unrelenting environment, linguistic diversity would be so only to a very limited extent. The ceaseless and dynamic interactions of a human group vis-à-vis the environment constitute the very process of ecological adaptation on the part of the people. Culture serves the serious (sometimes literally “life-and-death”) purpose of adapting to the environment, working as a buffer or cushion to alleviate the stress of multifarious pressures (or even strangulations) from it. So far as human culture serves this adaptive (versus exaptive) purpose, it is “functional in the immediate sense”,3 that is, directly functional. This functionality is generally most apparent in material culture (as of subsistence) but not irrelevant at all to the more symbolic aspects of (non-linguistic) culture (e.g. arts and religion) as well. By contrast, language as a symbolic system of reference stands aloof from non-linguistic reality, not acting upon nor being acted upon by it, aside from the portion of lexicon which is sensitively tuned to the environment. Language as such is functional only in the non-immediate sense, that is, (i) indirectly functional concerning environmental adaptation (§ 8.4.1). It indeed carries out the instrumental function, but it is still indirect (in contrast to such directly functional aspects as illustrated in § 8.4.2—with the caveat just below). This would imply that language is not such a tool in the common sense of the word (cf. Li 2005: 44)—be it an Eskimo toggle harpoon head (cf.n. 6) or a presentday computer—as can never cease vying for the improvement or evolution 2 The philosopher Kitaro Nishida (1870–1945) laconically remarked in a lecture that “a man makes up the environment and the environment makes up a man”, and “the environment is an environment only if it is subjective” (1940: 64, 65—translation mine). 3 “All activities may be thought of as either definitely functional in the immediate sense, or as symbolic, or as a blend of the two” (Sapir 1929 [1951: 163]; italics mine).
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under unremitting pressure from the environment, which is something alien to language. This marked difference between language and culture in terms of functionality relative to the adaptation will turn out to be relevant to the present theme of linguistic diversity (§ 8.4.1). A caveat here, just so there is no confusion, is that language in actual use can also be (ii) directly functional in view of adaptation exactly like culture (§ 8.4.2), in a distinct sense from the language-internal functions as of syntax and phonology which have to serve directly for communication (not for environmental adaptation) (§ 8.4.2, end). An essential prerequisite to language being a symbolic system of reference, which eventually has the instrumental function, should be in tidying up of the environment. This would imply that the more fundamental or primordial function of language in relation to the environment would be (iii) cognitive, i.e. to construct reality for the (ethnolinguistic) group and the speaker (cf. Grace 1987), which is largely a matter of “linguistic classification” (Taylor 1995—§ 8.3.2).
8.3.1. Adaptation Strategies Linked with Cognition of Environment To grasp the fundamental role and unique status of language in human culture, a cognitive-ecological understanding of it would be an unavoidable necessity. The ever-changing environment, which a people constitutes a part of and is collectively in constant interaction with, should not remain a chaos (diffuse continuum) but be some cosmos (discretely classified world). Classification imposes an order on the world. It is not until the environment is classified and thereby “understood”4 that the people can stand ready to take any collective adaptation strategy—a manner in which it solves its impending problems with the environment. Given that adopting an appropriate adaptation strategy presupposes the group’s own way of cognition about the environs, human culture could be taken as a collectively inherited integration of: (i) cognition including here not only how the environment is classified by the group but how the classifications are manipulated in thinking and linguistic
4 The insight that to classify is to understand seems to be captured by the Japanese transitive/intransitive pair of verbs wakeru (“to divide, separate, classify”) vs. wakaru (“to divide [into] by itself, be understand[able]”), together with the nominal form wake “dividing, reason, cause” from the former, where the vowel alternation (a ~ e) is of a very common type in the morphophonology of the language (Miyaoka 2002: 160–61; cf. Li 2005: 44–6).
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representation (by speech or writing), (ii) adaptation strategy, i.e. patterned activity in subsistence, society, education, arts, religion, and so on, with the time/period, space, and participant(s) agreed upon, and (iii) a plethora of associates connected with each category and strategy, including (a) manmade object(s), institution(s), and technology—i.e. material culture, (b) sentimental-emotional, metaphorical-symbolic, and magical-ceremonial values and implications, (c) belief and knowledge, myth and legend, etc. The intrinsic linkage of language with culture as such is implicit in Sapir’s laconic remark (1921: 233 [1951: 218]): “Culture may be defined as what a society does and thinks. Language is a particular how of thought.” Here we may see a harbinger of a rather general attitude fundamental to modern anthropological thinking about culture.
8.3.2. Primordial Function of Language Things come into being as the world is classified and named for fixity; witness the repeated occurrences of “divided (from)” and “called” in the beginning passages of Genesis 1 (cf. § 8.4.2). Language is destined to classify. It is inextricably interwoven with cognition—the way of viewing/classifying and organizing/representing the inner and outer world—playing a fundamental role therein. Classifications are conventionally fixed as linguistic symbols. Linguistically encoded classification (categorization) is multilayered. A simple design could be: (i) people classify the environment extensively and meticulously into discrete units (“conceptual categories”—Taylor 1995: 174), in paradigmatic/hierarchical/transverse ways, according to their particular modes of viewing the environment (primarily a matter of lexicon in which cognitive and linguistic anthropology—once under the name of folk taxonomy, ethno-X-ology, etc.—has had particular interest); (ii) upon the lexical categorization is laid a secondary categorization of (verbal) actions and states and of (nominal) referents, again possibly in different levels, either conformed to optionally or compulsorily (a part of grammar as it is, this is still a classification largely based upon (the aspects of the speakers’ view of) the non-linguistic world; and (iii) these categories are organized into the language structure by the purely linguistic (abstract or relational) categorizations and are manipulated and “articulated” (§ 8.5) into speech and thinking in accordance with certain channels or “grooves” based thereupon (Sapir 1921 passim).5
5 e.g. “Language and our thought-grooves are inextricably interwoven, are, in a sense, one and the same” (Sapir 1921: 232 [1949: 218–19]).
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8.3.3. Culture as Encapsulated in Language Cognition as the primary function of language is closely integrated with adaptation strategies and their associates (§ 8.3.1). The whole of a culture as such—which has been cultivated by wisdom, ingenuity, and resourcefulness through the constant interactions between the group and its surrounding environment—permeates the language. In other words it is intrinsically encapsulated in language (cf. Dixon 1997: 135) from every aspect of it down to the finest details. Language, while being a subsystem of culture, would be the only one thereof that unites the whole of culture, as it were, into one capsule. It would be this “encapsulating” property of language, coupled with its “socializing” function below (§ 8.4.2), that leads to the “emblematic” function of a language—a function highly relevant to the current issue of language endangerment and revitalization. All this said about language vs. culture could be taken to mean that people do not live so much in a biological ecosystem per se as in a human-centred ecosystem, in which the former is largely integrated, and that it is the latter which is unique and meaningful to human beings (Miyaoka 2001: 3). Given that language makes up the very core of culture, one may even say that each group lives in a linguistic, i.e. linguistically constructed, ecosystem rather than a biological or even cultural one. So many languages, so many linguistic ecosystems—the integrated system of which may have something comparable to the ecosystem of linguistic diversity for which Krauss constructed the term “logosphere” (1996 and § 1.6.3, this volume).
8.4. The Less Directly Functional, the More Possibility for Diversity Any cultural activity as adaptation strategy (§ 8.3.1) which people carry out (either subsistence farming or a symbolic act in a ceremony) together with the associated objects (either a plough or an amulet) they use is supported by a certain purposiveness: It has a more or less defined purpose which, in the final analysis, resolves itself into ecological adaptation to the environment, however symbolic the device(s) employed may be. As such it can continue to exist only as long as it remains more or less functional and serves the purpose. Otherwise it becomes obsolete or replaced by another. (Non-linguistic) culture as a whole is obliged to be directly functional.
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Because of the purpose, culture cannot but be largely conditioned or restricted by the environment (while retroactively working upon it). Given a serious (very often “life-and-death”) purpose to fulfil and the direct functionality relative to the environmental adaptation, culture elements may be apt to “converge” or conspire with each other and, cross-culturally, to be less diverse despite the appearances. As is most patently illustrated in the domain of material culture, they become largely limited in terms of “possibilities” or choices of shapes, patterns, materials, and technologies to be employed (§ 8.2; n. 1), affording little room for arbitrariness or irregularity and yielding greater uniformity and less diversity:6 The severer the restrictive pressure from the environment is, the heavier the purposiveness and the more direct the functionality is obliged to be. The more directly functional, the more limited possibility for diversity and the less stability (the greater transience).7
8.4.1. Indirect Function: Language as Referential System Language is not simply a self-contained tool for communication. Linguistic communication, while naturally attainable in close association with paraand non-linguistic factors, would presuppose collective sharing of not only the language code but also the whole culture (§ 8.3) by all the members and sectors of an group, even though in an approximate way with minor individual/regional/generational deviations and fluctuations. It is this collective sharing that enables speakers not only to properly communicate with each other but also to easily predict the addressee’s responses, often a difficult matter for people from other cultures, thereby facilitating group cooperation in environmental adaptation. Although language as a symbolic system of reference itself eventually serves for communication, it is, in contrast with (non-linguistic) culture, no more than indirectly functional in relation to the adaptation—apart from some portion of lexicon sensitive to the non-linguistic reality and from the directly functional aspects the language also has (§ 8.4.2). The less bound 6 Highly refined and sophisticated differences may result through the serious pursuit of efficiency under exigencies of environmental pressure, but only within a limited range of possibilities. Eskimo archaeology has disclosed the distribution of toggle harpoon heads in the Arctic with such exuberant differences in detail as to allow inferences about the chronology of Eskimo culture, but they cannot but be very much limited after all in the shape, structure, and material used. 7 Cf. “Purely functional explanations of language, if valid, would lead us to expect either a far greater uniformity in linguistic expression than we actually find, or should lead us to discover strict relations of a functional nature between a particular form of language and the culture of the people using it” (Sapir 1927 [1951: 550]). See § 8.5.2 also.
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by functionality or purposiveness, the more possibility for diversity and the more stability. The diversity of language as wider than (non-linguistic) culture as a whole, however simplistic or superficial the contrast might appear to be, could be ascribed, for one thing, to this difference between the two in terms of functional directness. By the same token, the greater stability of language.
8.4.2. Directly Functional Aspects of Language All the above notwithstanding, language can also be (b) directly functional in relation to environmental adaptation, exactly as (non-linguistic) culture is. Language, though indirectly functional as communication, is actually overlaid with many different aspects of direct functionality. The earliest case with the greatest grandeur where language was directly functional is encountered again in Genesis: God called all things into being by his word, starting from “God said, ‘Let there be light,’ and there was light” (1: 3). All God had to do was to speak, and the word created day and night from the chaotic darkness of the void. Also, a magical spell (blessing or curse), once uttered, takes on a life of its own and influences the course of events as if the word and its signified thing (object or event) were an undivided whole (even with the arbitrariness of linguistic signs) and a shamanistic incantation achieves (or is at least believed to achieve) its desired effect by a kind of innate power. To that extent, these language uses are directly functional. The same functionality manifests itself exactly in the contexts relevant to language endangerment and revival/maintenance as well as in more common activities.8 One of the most relevant (and perhaps powerful) would be in its great force of “socialization” (Sapir 1933 [1951: 15–16]), which is considered responsible for emblematicity of language. Of whatever kind, size, and internal cohesion a group may be (whether it may be a family, a group of alumni, a generation, or a gang of organized criminals), the mere fact of sharing even a small bit of common vocabulary or stock phrases or of native naming of aboriginal land (as in Australia—§ 12.1.4) has the direct function of strengthening its members’ social bond and sense of identity, thereby effectively building up an emblematic barrier that outsiders could not be easily
8 Including the so-called “conative” and “poetic” functions, transient vogue words (just like dress fashion), words as “weapons”, mispronounced shibboleth, dictators’ rabble-rousing speeches, media commercials, judicial judgements and testimony, and other speech activities that bring about changes in the social environment. Again, “phatic communion” which is directly functional to the extent it serves as an interpersonal lubricant.
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allowed to cross. It is true that there exist groups with a strong ethnic identity and pride but without having retained their heritage language and there exist communities where the knowledge of the heritage language is not regarded as essential for being a good member of the community (cf. Brenzinger et al. 1991: 35–6). But more often than not a language tends to be affiliated with a people (hence the very common identity of a language name with the people’s) and comes to be viewed inwardly as proof of its social or ethnic identity and pride but outwardly as a test for alienating or discriminating against a different people. If a people speaks one and the same language (beyond its barely retained lexical fragments), sharing the whole culture encapsulated therein, the social solidarity and identity, not surprisingly, may grow by far stronger than otherwise (unless, say, linguistic differences are too small for emblematicity as among closely related languages). Another instance of directly functional language in this context would be the forced name change very commonly executed upon native peoples. As an active attempt to directly affect the inter-ethnic environment,9 it was an important pillar of assimilation policy as toward Taiwanese and Koreans besides Hokkaido Ainu during Japan’s colonial rule (§ 18.1), with the aftermath lingering obstinately up to the present. Functionality—both indirect and direct—of language so far has been considered in relation to environmental adaptation, simply in order to compare it with (non-linguistic) culture (§§ 8.4.1, 8.4.2). Just so there is no confusion or mistake, there is another sense, of course, in which language is directly functional (the aforementioned caveat, § 8.3). Apart from functionality in relation to adaptation, language does have the direct purpose of communication to serve. Accordingly, many portions of linguistic structure cannot but be motivated and bound by the purpose—a great variety of languageinternal functions (thus functional load, unity, conspiracy, selection, and so on) in phonology and syntax and in such linguistic units that require functional definition (phonemes and morphemes), in marked contrast with morphology which has much less room for function and with words which could not be primarily defined other than as “forms”. Thus we have to move to the special status of words—in light of what I would venture to call “bilateral articulation”—among basic linguistic units, given that they would be responsible partly for the linguistic diversity as well as indirect functionality of language itself in view of environmental adaptation (§ 8.4.1).
9 Note by contrast that observance of taboo for certain words or names—either of a king, an animal, or a recently deceased—represents a passive stance of avoiding adverse effects from the environment.
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8.5. “Formhood” of Words Inevitable in Human Language: Another Background for Linguistic Diversity There is widespread disregard for or suspicion of the word among linguists as it is too ambiguous a term for easy use in a technical literature or it may simply be language specific and not be a primitive construct. The tendency has strengthened as syntax became the mainstream of linguistic studies. It is encouraging to see, however, that many linguists are positive about wordhood: among others, Dixon and Aikhenvald (2002). The insight with which the late Rokuro Kono (1912–98) prefaced the monumental Encyclopaedia of Linguistics, that “the genuine object of linguistics is a word” (Kamei et al. 1988–96: i, p. ii; translation mine), should be duly appreciated. No one could fail to see my profound indebtedness here to Sapir (1921: 33, etc.), and beneath his passages we could not fail to hear the echoing words of Benedetto Croce (1866–1952), who claimed that linguistics is “nothing other than the Aesthetic” (aesthetics as the investigation of a fundamental capacity of human beings) and that “Aesthetic activity is … a matter of giving form, and nothing other than a matter of giving form” (1902 [1992: 156, 17]).
8.5.1. A View on the “Word” In my naive, possibly linguo-centric, perception (cf. Miyaoka 2000b; 2002; in preparation): (a) A word (語 go) would be an inevitable fundamental entity in human language in either an isolating language like Classical Chinese or a polysynthetic10 one like Eskimo (as illustrated in n. 15)—presumably a consequence of the very use of speech sounds (through air-stream mechanism) and brains, respectively having physiological and biological limitations and constraints (in articulatory and auditory apparatuses) and neuro-psychological and cognitive ones (in encoding and decoding, i.e. information processing). 10 Despite the renewed lively discussion of polysynthesis, linguists have not reached consensus on what type of languages it refers to (e.g. Fortescue 1994: 2601; Evans and Sasse 2002: 1–6; Mattissen 2003: 202). My stance on this is that it should not be sought so much in the morphological strategies employed (e.g. noun incorporations) or the kinds of semantic categories of the content (e.g. instrumentality, location) as in formal criteria—most notably of the Du Ponceau–Sapir–Greenberg tradition—closely linked to high morphological productivity and flexibility. See n. 17 also for P. S. Du Ponceau (1760–1844; American Philosophical Society president) who used the term polysynthesis most probably in 1816.
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(b) In order to be free from oxymoronic or circular definition, a word could be defined as the primary, i.e. minimal, realized “form” of articulation (“jointing together”—結節 kes-setsu “connect-joint”; see below) at the content plane11 (with morphemes as the ultimate entities) which satisfyingly follows the morphological (grammatical) pattern of the language, but not in terms of the (semantic and functional) content packed therein. As a linguistic sign with two terms, sign-content and sign-expression, the morphological (grammatical) articulation is paired with the corresponding, i.e. phonological, articulation at the expression plane (with phonemes as the ultimate entities), again according to the satisfying pattern, thereby fortifying the formhood of the morphological articulation—hence (for some) a “phonological word” vs. a “morphological (grammatical) word”. The primary (minimal) “form” of articulation at the latter plane is a syllable (音節 on-setsu “sound-joint”)—see n. 11. (A single entity can be articulated by itself—a word may be mono- or polymorphemic, just as a syllable may be mono- or polyphonemic.) A word as such has necessarily both phonological and morphological (grammatical) relevance. This “form-assuming” process in the two planes may be called “bilateral articulation” which starts from the two formal units, as contrasted with the two functional units—a morpheme and a phoneme—abstracted by double articulation analysis.12 Double articulation and bilateral articulation are not simply the other sides of the same coin, despite the bivalency of the term articulation—“dividing” and “jointing together”. Seeing speech merely as the other side (i.e. spreading out) of the principle of double articulation might not sufficiently capture the status of a word as the essential feature of human language: single-track top-down analysis would blur the word. (c) Bilateral articulation proceeds simultaneously by jointing together respective entities in each plane according to the patterns of the language. Morphemes are hierarchically articulated (realized) into words, phrases,
11 A word is not taken as intermediate in status between the morpheme and the phrase. The “plane” here is in a bilateral implication as employed by Hjelmslev (1953), to whom “l’unité minimale essentielle est la syllabe” and the corresponding “syllabes de contenu” in the content plane are minimal “syntagmes” which practically coincide often with words (Hjelmslev 1966: 145–6)—a logical consequence from the glossematic isomorphism of expression and content. 12 Admittedly the very source for the economy and productivity of human language is “double articulation” without which language would be “a tool unusable for its purpose” (Martinet 1949; cf. Hjelmslev 1953: 29). Contrasted with the lucidity in defining this feature, Martinet does not seem to have assigned a clear place to the linguistic unit of word, though repeatedly discussing the disparity between a monème as the minimal sign and a “mot” (put in inverted commas) (1960: 112–13, 1965a, 1965b).
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(d) The two terms of a linguistic sign, which necessarily presuppose each other, are symmetrically paired, but terms within one plane bear multifarious relations among themselves, independently of any within the other (cf. Hjelmslev [1953] and Saussurian “valeurs”). Owing to these plane-internal mutual relations of the terms as well as the pre-linguistic limiting conditions and constraints (above) in each articulation, the corresponding articulations on each plane do not necessarily go on in perfect correspondence. Hence, abundance of mismatches between the two articulations on different planes—a natural consequence of bilateral articulation as part and parcel of human speech. (e) For a linguistic “form” in itself, the content is secondary (cf. Croce 1902 [1992:17, 20]), just as an isosceles triangle, for instance, is taken as such so long as it has certain features (two of its sides being equal), however big a space (i.e. content) it may enclose. This means that a word may potentially be very diverse content-wise and that, without always being a static slot-fixed or ready-made unit established prior to a speaker and stored as a single concept, it can be a flexible process by which any speaker produces a new word as a matter of course (rather than nonce or ad hoc), though necessarily within certain limits.15 Thus a word can functionally be equivalent even to a complex sentence in other languages, with a variety of concrete, abstract, and grammatical concepts packed in, as typical in polysynthetic languages, while it can diametrically be an expletive devoid of content as in isolating languages. The nature of a word itself 13 Words include clitics. A clitic, which is inflectable in some languages, is taken here as a “bound” word (vs. “free” word) as defined by Hattori (1950), although I am fully aware that demarcation between a clitic and an affix (his “bound” form) is far from rigid (cf. Dixon and Aikhenvald 2002: 25–7). A “bound-word (clitic or non-clitic) phrase” is conceived between a word and a (syntactic) phrase. 14 Words, clitic phrases, and non-clitic (bound-word) phrases in Central Alaskan Yupik Eskimo (CAY), for instance, generally match with distinctive phonological units (with little asymmetry) which fortify the formhood of the articulations (Miyaoka 1971, 1996a, 2000). 15 In CAY, a “non-slot” type of polysynthetic language, we may readily encounter a very “heavy” word, e.g. angya-cuara-li-yu-llru-nrit-qapig-caaq-sugnarq-a-a-nga (boat-small-make- DESIR-NEGINTENS-but.actually-INFER-INDIC-he-me) “I thought he did not want to make me a small boat at all (but he actually made one)”, which is, clearly enough to speakers, a single word (consisting of a single stem for “kayak” followed by more than ten suffixes). Japanese is also a helpful language in getting a feel for articulation of the “non-slot” type, since, though not so polysynthetic as CAY, it is endowed with very productive “verbal complexes” (用言複合体 yougen-fukugou-tai; distinct from compound verbs)] which are actually non-enclitic phrases with verbal inflection (Miyaoka 2002: 102–18).
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definable as nothing but a form should be responsible for its diversity, cross-linguistic as well as language internal. (f) As far as it is a mere form, a word (and a phrase) by itself is intrinsically liable to change, dilute, or reduce (close) to zero in content as a whole or in its constituent, with the original content being opacified or lost—a phenomenon which would be expected to hold of any human language. Hence expletives as well as (more or less opaque) lexicalizations at the word (and the bound-word phrase) level.16 (g) Intuitive knowledge of phonological and morphological properties (together with the patterns followed) backs up the formal unity, that is, the “form feeling” or psychological reality of an articulation. Thus the form feeling would be the very basis for the two kinds of writing systems, syllabic and lexigraphic (“word-writing”),17 corresponding to the two minimal forms in bilateral articulation which are intuitively the most salient of all the linguistic categories (cf. Taylor 1995: 176). Lexigraphism is the fundamental function of any kinds of writings, including alphabets (Kono 1977 [1994]).18
8.5.2. Formhood Responsible for Diversity After all is said, it would be this bilateral articulation of a word and a syllable as the minimal “form” which renders human language unique among any conceivable structures characterized by double articulation. “Forms” should be an absolute necessity for human speech controlled by brains and by speech organs. Back to the main theme now, it should be important to note that a word, being merely a “form”, is not so directly constrained by function—has little direct functionality—and that there is, again, an inverse relationship between functionality and diversity. It would be this “formhood” itself of a word that is partly responsible for the great diversity of linguistic morphology which can be full of sometimes daunting idiosyncrasy, arbitrariness, irregularity (or even “randomness” of association), and also for the limited possibility 16 It would be natural that, given the configurational structure and the very limited productivity at the word level, isolating languages like Chinese may tend to have expletives just for the sake of filling a syntactic slot and also to have the locus of lexical creativity at the bound-word phrase level which produces new lexical units in an innovative and extensive way. 17 The “lexigraphic” or “logographic”—instead of ideographic—nature of Chinese characters was first noticed again by the Americanist Du Ponceau (1838: pp. xxii–xxiv, etc. and 110; cf. n. 10). 18 As is most evident in English spellings—incoherency itself as a phonographic system. It is also to be noted that the Japanese syllabic writing of the running type (平仮名 hiragana-writing) makes full use of the characteristic of brush calligraphy in that its successional style (連綿体 renmen-style) has the function of representing words or enclitic phrases in one succession (Miyaoka 2002: 33).
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for universals therein: Mutatis mutandis (cf. n. 7), if functional explanations of morphology (and definitions of words) are valid, we would expect such greater uniformity, regularity (even pseudo-universality), and less stability as found in those aspects of syntax in particular that have to be directly functional as regards communication (§ 8.4.2, end). To conclude, sources for linguistic diversity could be sought in the largely indirect functionality of language in relation to environmental adaptation (§ 8.4) and of words as “forms” inevitable in human language which makes it unique among all conceivable symbolic systems based on double articulation (§ 8.5), in addition to language as an “immensely ancient heritage” with variously divergent historical processes (§ 8.3) and the largely arbitrary nature of the three-layered linguistic classification (§ 8.3.2).
8.6. An Implication Admittedly the effect of diminution of linguistic diversity, now steadily in progress, is not so easy to decipher and the whole magnitude is difficult to gauge. Various reasons, however, why we now should care about diversity have been cogently argued by Crystal (2000: 32–6) and Krauss (2001: 28–32; § 1.6, this volume) in particular. As argued, each and every language has the whole content of a people’s unique culture—uniqueness in understanding and adapting to the environment—encapsulated in its entirety and in its finest details (§ 8.3.3). Extinction (or extermination as it often is) of a language as such, which leads not only to total collapse of the unique culture but also to loss of the people’s soul (pride and identity), could be likened to aphasia, in which the patient may have lost the language so inextricably linked to cognition of the outside world. Severe loss of language caused by brain injury works such profound damage that it looks as if the patient has had his or her soul taken away or lost their entire personality. By the same token, for a people to lose the language or to have it replaced by another may be to lose something deeply rooted in their very existence—a loss so profound that it would not be easy to see the significance. Loss of a single language from the earth would not affect the people alone who speak the language, however. For science, it would mean a crucial narrowing of our understanding of linguistic diversity and width (cf. “confirmatory function of linguistic diversity”, Hale 1996: 151), as Comrie (Ch. 2) argues, as well as an irretrievable loss of historical information about the language and its speakers, since it would
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also mean an additional loss for their intellectual heritage. In other words, it would decrease the total amount of human understanding and knowledge about the world, and the “loss of any language is a loss for all humanity”, as concluded in the recommendations by the UNESCO Ad Hoc Expert Group on Endangered Languages (2003 at Paris). Each language, with the whole culture encapsulated, may be something to be fully entitled to the status of Masterpieces of the Intangible Heritage of Humanity. What is more, I would reiterate that structural diversity manifests itself in language to a greater extent than in (non-linguistic) culture (§ 8.3, 8.4) and to the greatest in linguistic morphology (§ § 8.5). If it is the case that the latter is “nothing more nor less than a collective art of thought” (Sapir 1921: 233 [1949: 218]), those threatened languages which still retain without much attrition the impressive and highly distinctive characteristics foreign to the major threatening languages could possibly reflect as many threatened ways of viewing the world. It would be none but human beings themselves, gifted with logos—language and faculty of reasoning—that can have intelligent control over the two currently urgent issues of maintaining the health of the ecosystem and the intellectual vitality of humanity. As Krauss (§ 1.6.1) argues, we have no option in intelligent planning for the future other than to depend upon this uniquely human gift. In exercising the gift, however, we should probably be alert to the chance that what is arrogantly claimed as “rationality” might possibly be biased by a particular language (and culture) and be in itself an extreme expression of a kind of folie (M. Foucault) which is liable to totally and forcibly exterminate what is regarded as “irrationality” of other peoples. This is not just a historical case such as was implied in B. de las Casas’s inner denunciation (1552) to defend the Indios “discovered” in the New World but may possibly be what we, quite simply, witness through recent world-shaking history. We students of linguistics are finally on the cusp of realizing that linguistic diversity, particularly with great typological difference and deep genealogical divergence, may testify to the rich and priceless variety of human thought, which could be the very source of intellectual vitality and thereby of the health and strength of the logosphere (§ 8.3.2). If the diversity may have the effect of effacing the folie inherent to the arrogance of “rationality”, it would be far from “poor economy” or something to be passively permitted, but should be something to be positively valued as the greatest asset of humanity and to be securely safeguarded as an indispensable requisite of it. Diminution of linguistic diversity, together with environmental
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deterioration, would be the gravest issues that put human intelligence to trial today.
References Brenzinger, M., Heine, B., and Sommer, G. (1991). “Language Death in Africa”, in R. H. Robins and E. M. Uhlenbeck (eds.), Endangered Languages. Oxford: Berg, 19–44. Croce, B. (1902). The Aesthetic as the Science of Expression and of the Linguistic in General, trans. C. Lyas, from Estetica come science dell’espressione e linguistica generale, part I (1902), Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Crystal, D. (2000). Language Death. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Dixon, R. M. W. (1997). The Rise and Fall of Languages. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. —— and Aikhenvald, A. Y. (2002). “Word: a typological framework”, in Dixon and Aikhenvald (eds.), Word: A Cross-Linguistic Typology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1–41. Du Ponceau, P. S. (1838). A Dissertation on the Nature & Character of the Chinese System of Writing, in a Letter to John Vaughan, Esq. Transactions of the Historical and Literary Committee of the American Philosophical Society 2. Philadelphia. Evans, N., and Sasse, H.-J. (eds.) (2002). Problems of Polysynthesis. Studia Typologica, NS. Berlin: Akademie Verlag. Fortescue, M. (1994). “Polysynthetic morphology”, in R. E. Asher (ed.), The Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics, vol. v. Oxford: Pergamon Press, 2600–2. Goldenweiser, A. A. (1913). “The principle of limited possibilities in the development of culture”, Journal of American Folk-Lore, 26: 259–90. —— (1933). History, Psychology, and Culture. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. Grace, G. W. (1987). The Linguistic Construction of Reality. London: Croom Helm. Hale, K. (1996). “Universal grammar and the roots of linguistic diversity”, MIT Working Papers in Linguistics, 28: 137–61. Hattori, S. (1950). “Bound words and bound forms” [付属語と付属形式], GengoKenkyuu,15:1–26. Hjelmslev, L. (1953). Prolegomena to a Theory of Language, trans. F. J. Whitfield. IJAL Memoir 7. (Omkring sprogteoriens grundlæggelse, 1943, University of Copenhagen.) —— (1966). Le Langage: une introduction, trans. M. Olsen. Paris: Les Éditions de Minuit. (Sproget–En Introduktion, 1963, Capenhagen: Berlingske Forlag.) Kamei, T., Kono, R., and Chino, E. (eds.) (1988–96). The Sanseido Encyclopaedia of Linguistics [言語学大辞典], 6 vols. Tokyo: Sanseido. Kono, R. (1977). “The true nature of writings [文字の本質]”, in Iwanami Series, Japanese 8 (Writings) [岩波講座 日本語 8 (文字)] (reproduced in R. Kono, On Writings 文字論, 1–24, 1994, Tokyo: Sanseido). Krauss, M. E. (1992). “The world’s languages in crisis”, Language, 681: 4–10. —— (1996). “Linguistics and biology: threatened linguistic and biological diversity compared”, Papers from the Parasession on Theory and Data in Linguistics, CLS 32. Chicago: Chicago Linguistic Society, 69–75.
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—— (2001). “Mass language extinction, and documentation: the race against time”, Lectures on Endangered Languages, ii: From Kyoto Conference 2000. ELPR C-002, 19–39. Li, Ch. (2005). “An fragment of language study [言語研究に寄せる断章]”, ∆ΥΝΑΜΙΣ Language and Culture (Kyoto University), 9: 39–53. Martinet, A. (1949). “La Double articulation linguistique”, TCLC 5: 30–7. —— (1960): Éléments de linguistique générale. Paris: Librairie Armand Colin. —— (1965a): ‘Le mot’, Diogènes, 48: 39–53. —— (1965b): La linguistique synchronique, 8th edn. 1975. Paris: Presses Universitaires de France. Mattissen, J. (2003). Dependent-Head Synthesis in Nivkh: A Contribution to a Typology of Polysynthesis. Typological Studies in Language 57. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. —— (2004). “Structural typology of polysynthesis”, Word, 55/2: 189–216. Miyaoka, O. (1971). “On syllable modification and quantity in Yuk phonology”, International Journal of American Linguistics, 37: 219–26. —— (1996a). “Sketch of Central Alaskan Yupik, an Eskimoan language”, in W. C. Sturtevant (gen. ed.), Handbook of North American Indians; I. Goddard (vol. ed.), xvii: Languages. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution, 325–63. —— (1996b). “The constitution of culture and functions of language [文化のしくみと 言語のはたらき]”, in Miyaoka (ed.) (1996c: 3–41). —— (ed.) (1996c). An Introductory Reader on Linguistic Anthropology [言語人類学を 学ぶ人のために]. Kyoto: Sekai-shisosha. —— (2000a). “Morphologie verbale en yupik alaskien central”, in N. Tersis and M. Therrien (eds.), Les langues eskaléoutes. Sciences du langage, Collection ed. Christian Hudelot. Paris: Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, 225–48. —— (2000b). “A reflection on the ‘word’ : ‘Articulation’ in natural languages [<語>に ついての断想 自然言語における<結節>”, valedictory speech, Kyoto University, 11, Mar. 60. —— (2001). “Endangered languages: the crumbling of the ecosystem of language and culture”, in Lectures on Endangered Languages, ii: From Kyoto Conference 2000, ELPR C-002, 3–17. —— (2002). What is a ‘Word’? Japanese Viewed from Eskimo [<語>とはなにか エ スキモー語から日本語をみる]. Tokyo: Sanseido. —— (in preparation). “A preception of a ‘word’ ”. Nettle, D. (1999). Linguistic Diversity. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Nichols, J. (1992). Linguistic Diversity in Space and Time. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Nishida, K. (1940). Problems of Japanese Culture [日本文化の問題]. Tokyo: Iwanamishoten. Sapir, E. (1921). Language: An Introduction to the Study of Speech. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company. [A Harvest Book edition, 1949.] —— (1927). “The unconscious patterning of behavior in society”, in E. S. Dummer (ed.), The Unconscious: A Symposium. New York: Knopf, 114–42. [Selected Writings of Edward Sapir, ed. D. G. Mandelbaum, Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1951, 544–59.] Sapir, E. (1929). “The status of linguistics as a science”, Language, 5: 207–14. [Selected Writings of Edward Sapir, 160–66.]
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Sapir, E. (1933) [1951]. “Language”, in Encyclopaedia of the Social Sciences, vol. ix. New York: Macmillan, 155–69. [Selected Writings of Edward Sapir, 7–32.] Taylor, J. R. (1995). Linguistic Categorization, 2nd edn. Oxford: Clarendon Press. UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Unit’s Ad Hoc Expert Group on Endangered Languages (2003). Language Vitality and Endangerment. 10 Mar. 2003, Paris.
PART II Areal Surveys The South Pacific Rim
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9
Languages of Middle America Yoshiho Yasugi
9.1. Current situation of Middle America 9.1.1. Typological characteristics 9.1.2. Threatened languages 9.2. Attempts to salvage endangered languages 9.2.1. Colonial documentation 9.2.2. Modern documentation 9.3. Maya revitalization movement 9.3.1. Standardized orthography 9.3.2. Language preservation
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9.1. Current Situation of Middle America Many indigenous languages of Middle America (from Mexico to Panama) have disappeared since the conquest in the sixteenth century. During the last 500 years, 244 out of 365 languages, which include languages and dialects known only by name, were lost according to McQuown (1955), while B. Garza Cuarón and Y. Lastra (1991: 120–8) give a substantial list of 167 extinct languages in Mexico and Guatemala, and now only ninety-two languages are spoken by over nine million people (Yasugi 1995: 5–10).1 These languages can be classified into at least seventeen language families and isolates (as shown in Table 9.1) which show considerable typological diversity not only in phonemic systems but also in morphological and syntactic levels.
9.1.1. Typological Characteristics In the phonemic systems the number of consonants varies from eleven to thirty-five. Almost all languages share the plain consonants; p t c c k ’ s š h 1 The number of the languages is taken from Yasugi (1995). Yasugi counts fifty-seven languages in Mexico, taking in consideration the traditional standard, while Manrique Castañeda (1997) and Ethnologue count seventy-seven and 295 languages, respectively. The number varies with the definition of language. For example, some say Zapotecan is only one language, while others say Zapotecan contains eight languages and still others see it as consisting of ten or more (Manrique et al. 1994–5) and Ethnologue counts fifty-eight languages. On the other hand, Yaqui and Mayo are traditionally taken as two separate languages but they should be classified as only one language, Cahita. Traditionally, Zapotecan, Mixtecan, Chinantecan, and Mazatecan are treated as one language, but if we apply the criteria for the classification of Mayan to them, the number increases as is indicated above.
Figure 9.1. Distribution of the Native Middle Americian Languages
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Table 9.1. Classification of Middle American Indian languages Language
Location
Number of speakers
I. Southern Uto-Aztecan A. Tepiman (Pimic) 1. Piman Pima Alto [1] 10,000 Papago [2] 15,000 Pima Bajo (Nevome, Ure, Yecora) [3] 740 2. Tepehuan (Odami/Odame) 17,900/18,470/25,550 Northern Tepehuan [4] Southern Tepehuan [5] *Tepecano D1 0 B. Taracaitan (Taracahitic) 1. Tarahumaran Tarahumara (Rarámuri) [6] 62,500/54,430/75,550 Guarijío (Varohío) [7] 1,670 2. Opatan *Opata(Teguima) D2 #12 *Jova D3 0 *Eudeve (Heve, Dohema) D4 0 3. Cahitan Yaqui (Cahita) [8] 9,300/10,990/13,320 Mayo (Cahita) [9] 56,400/37,410/31,510 4. *Tubar D5 0 C. Corachol Cora [10] 12,300/11,920/16,410 Huichol [11] 51,900/19,360/30,690 D. Nahuan 1. Azteca (General Aztec) 1,377,000/1,197,330/1448,940 Nahuatl [12] Nahual [13] Nahuat [14] Pipil [15] 20 2. *Pochutec D6 0 II. *Cuitlatec D7 0 III. Yuman (includes only Yuman languages of Mexico.) Paipai [16] 200 Cochimi (Kumyai, Kimiai) [17] 240 Kiliwa [18] 50 Cocopa (Cucapa) [19] 180 IV. Seri [20] 500/560/460 V. Tarasco (Purepecha) [21] 118,700/94,840/121,490 VI. Totonacan Totonac [22] 196,100/207,880/240,040 Tepehua [23] 8,500/8,700/9,440 VII. Otomanguean A. Chichimec (Meco, Jonaz) [24] 1,000?/1,620/1,640 B. Oto-Pamean 1. Pamean [25] 57,00/5,730/8,310 North Pame, Central Pame, South Pame 2. Matlatzincan Matlatzinca (Pirinda) [26] 18,00/1,450/1,300 (Continued)
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Table 19.1. (Continued) Language
Location
Number of speakers
Ocuiltec (Tlahuica) [27] 400/760/460 3. Otomian (a) Otomí [28] 306,200/280,240/291,720 North-Western Otomí (Mesquital), Northeastern Otomí (Sierra) South-Western Otomí, Ixtenco Otomí (b) Mazahua [29] 194,200/127,830/133,430 C. Supanec 1. Tlapanec (Yope) [30] 55,100/68,480/99,390 2. *Subtiaba D8 0 (*Maribio El Salvador) D. Popolocan 1. Chochoan (a) Ixcatec [31] 200?/1,220/350 (b) Chochoan Popoloca [32] 6,800/1,730/16,470 Chocho [33] 12,400/12,550/990 2. Mazatec [34] 124,200/168,370/214,480 E. Amuzgo [35] 18,700/28,230/41,560 F. Mixtecan 1. Mixtecan Mixtec [36] 323,200/386,870/444,550 Cuicatec [37] 14,200/12,680/13,430 2. Trique [38] 8,500/14,980/20,710 G. Zapotecan 1. Zapotec [39] 423,000/403,460/452,890 (*Papabuco #5) 2. Chatino [40] 20,600/28,990/40,720 H. Chinantec [41] 77,100/109,100/133,370 I. Manguean (Chorotegan, Chiapanec-Mangue) 1. *Chiapanec D9 #180 2. *Mangue D10 0 (*Diria Nicaragua) (*Chorotega Honduras) (*Nicoya Costa Rica) VIII. Huave [42] 10,000/11,960/14,220 IX. Oaxaca Chontal (Tequistlatec) [43] 81,000/ 4,670/4,960 Lowland Chontal (Huamelultec) Highland Chontal (Tequistlatec) X. Mixe-Zoque (Zoquean, Mixean) 1. Zoquean [44] 31,000/43,160/51,460 (a) Oaxaca Zoque (San Miguel Chimalapa, Santa Maria Chimalapa) (b) Chiapas Zoque (c) Tabasco Zoque (Ayapa) (d) Veracruz Zoque (Zoque Popoluca) [45] Sierra Popoluca (Soteapan etc.) 23,800/ 29,030/38,140 Texistepec Popoluca 170 2. Mixean (a) Veracruz Mixe (Mixe Popoluca) [46] Sayula Popoluca 4000 Oluta Popoluca 3 (b) Mixe [47] 74,100/ 95,260/118,920 Eastern Mixe, Western Mixe (c) *Tapachultec D11 0
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Number of speakers
XI. Mayan A. Huastecan 1. Huastec [48] 66,100/103,800/120,740 2. *Chicomuceltec D12 #20 B. Northern Lowland Maya 1. Yucatecan (a) Yucatec [49] 665,400/713,520/800,290 (b) Lacandon [50] 300/100/40 (c) Itzaj [51] 650/1,835 (d) Mopan [52] 8,500/13,460 C. Southern Lowland Maya 1. Cholan (a) Chol [53] 96,800/128,240/161,770 (b) Chontal [54] 29,000/30,140/38,560 (c) Ch’orti’ [55] 27,097/76,782 (d) *Cholti D13 0 2. Tzeltalan (a) Tzotzil [56] 133,400/229,200/297,560 (b) Tzeltal [57] 215,200/261,080/284,830 (c) Tojolabal (Chaneabal) [58] 22,400/36,010/37,990 D. Western Highland Maya 1. Kanjobalan (a) Chuj [59] 50,000/87,489 (b) Jakalteko/Popti’ [60] 39,635/86,266 Q’anjob’al [61] 75,155/211,687 Akateko [62] 40,991/40,991 (c) Motocintlec (Mocho) [63] 170 Tuzantec [64] 300 2. Mamean (a) Tektiteko (Teko) [65] ?/ 4,895 Mam [66] 346,548/1,126,959 (b) Awakateko [67] 18,572/35,485 3. Ixil [68] 47,902/134,599 E. Eastern Highland Maya 1. Q’eqchi’ [69] 473,749/732,340 2. Poqom (a) Poqomchi’ [70] 94,714/266,750 (b) Poqomam [71] 46,515/130,928 3. K’ichean (a) Uspanteko [72] 12,402/22,025 (b) K’iche’ [73] 663,241/1,954,007 Sakapulteko [74] 3,033/43,439 Sipakapeño [75] 4,409/6,118 Kaqchikel [76] 343,038/1,032,128 Tz’utujil [77] 50,080/160,907 XII. Xinca [78] 107/306 XIII. Arawakan (includes only a Central American language.) Garífuna(Black Carib) [79] 70,000 XIV. Lencan *Lenca (Honduran Lenca) D14 0 *Chilanga (Salvadoran Lenca) D15 0 XV. Tol (Jicaque) [80] 300 (Continued)
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Table 9.1. (Continued) Language
Location
Number of speakers
XVI. Misumalpan (Misuluan) A. Mískitu [81] B. Sumu (Ulwa=Southern Sumu) [82] Bawihka, Tawahka, Kukra, Panamaka C. Matagalpan *Cacaopera D16 *Matagalpa D17 XVII. Chibchan (includes only Central American Chibchan languages) A. Paya (Pech) [83] B. Rama [84] C. Guatuso (Malecu) [85] D. Boruca (Brunca) [86] E. *Huetar (Guetar) D18 F. Viceita Cabécar (Chiripó, Estrella) [87] Bribrí [88] G. Teribe/Téraba [89] H. Guaymí [90] I. Bocotá [91] J. Cuna [92]
67,000 4,900 0 0 300 650 300 5 0 6,000 5,000 1,100 56,500 15,000? 36,500
Notes: The population of Mexico is cited from the Census of 1980/1990/2000. The number includes speakers of more than 5 years old. Fractions have been rounded off to the nearest even number. The Guatemalan Mayan population is cited from Comisión de Oficialización de los Idiomas Indígenas de Guatemala (1999)/ Tay Coyoy (1996). The number of speakers in Central America is based mainly on Turpana (1987) and García Segura and Zúñiga Muñoz (1987). D before the identification number signifies that the language is extinct.
m n l r w y. Glottalized consonants are added to them in Mayan, Huehuetla Tepehua, Oaxaca Chontal, Xinca, and Tol. Prenasal stops are seen in Mixtecan and a fortis–lenis contrast is reported in Zapotecan. Tarascan, Terribe/Terraba, and Tol have aspirated stops. The number of vowels ranges from three to nine with elongation or nasalization. Otomanguean and Chibchan have tonal systems with two to five level tones and some combination of tones (Yasugi 1995: 11–57). Morphologically Tarascan has only suffixes while other languages have both prefixes and suffixes. Most Middle American languages are head marked. In terms of word order, the central part of Middle America, called Mesoamerica as a cultural area, is sandwiched by SOV and postpositional languages. In addition to SOV order and postpositions, Lower Central America languages share the traits of Genitive-Noun, Noun-Adjective, Noun-Numeral orders, while northern Mexican languages have modifierhead (Genitive-Noun, Adjective-Noun, Possessive-Noun, DeterminativeNoun, Numeral-Noun) orders. Almost all populous indigenous languages are concentrated in Mesoamerica; most Otomanguean are VSO and Mayan are VOS or VSO, head-modifier languages, while Mixe-Zoquean and
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Nahuan permit SVO/VOS/VOS, PO/PR, GN/NG orders, though they seem to have been SOV, modifier-head languages. Some small families are also in Mesoamerica; Totonacan and Huave are SVO, modifier-head languages; Oaxaca Chontal is a VOS, modifier-head language (Yasugi 1995: 107–31).
9.1.2. Threatened Languages All Middle American languages are more or less in danger of extinction. The reason of endangerment varies according to the language in question, but the number of speakers is one of the most important factors to judge whether or not a language in question is “moribund”, i.e. on the verge of extinction. For example, in the case of Ixcatec, which is spoken in Oaxaca, Mexico, the number of speakers has been reduced to a number too small to maintain the language. Therefore, I will list all the languages whose speakers are less than 1,000. We have the 1990 census data of speakers under 5 years and that of bilingualism in Mexico. The number of speakers of the year 2000 is smaller than that of 1990 in many languages and the percentage of bilingual speakers is increasing (67.5 per cent in1950, 83.1 per cent in 2000). Although the sociolinguistic data are lacking, it seems that children do not inherit their native language. Almost all children speak Spanish and therefore it is natural to think that these are definitely threatened languages. However, it is very difficult to evaluate the degree of endangerment: Lacandon has only a few hundred speakers, a number too small to maintain the language, but people still continue to speak it proudly.2 Pipil is almost extinct, with about twenty old speakers out of almost 200,000 in that ethnic group. The numbers of Chichimec and Ixcatec are 200 and 119 according to Ethnologue, while the census of the year 2000 records that the numbers of these ethnic groups are 1,641 and 351, respectively. The languages of Opata, Chiapanec, and Chicomuceltec are extinct but some people still maintain their ethnic identity, with the number of 12, 181, and 24 respectively. Besides the small number of speakers, Spanish influence has been a serious factor in language endangerment. The Spanish language is dominant in Middle America except in Belize where English is dominant, and indigenous languages are subordinate. Subordinate languages are always in danger of extinction, even though they outnumber dominant language speakers (for example, Kaqchikel, one of the Mayan languages, is spoken around the Guatemalan capital city). They are strongly under Spanish 2 In the spelling of Mayan language names, I have followed the new orthography officially recognized in 1987 for languages spoken in Guatemala, but I have maintained the traditional spellings for languages spoken outside Guatemala.
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Table 9.2. Languages whose speakers are less than 1,000 Census year
Paipai [16] Cochimi (kumyai) [17] Kiliwa [18] Cocopa [19] Pima Bajo [3] Seri [20] Ocuiltec [27] Ixcatec [31] Texistepec Popoluca [45] Oluta Popoluca [46] Lacandon [50] Motocintlec [63] Tuzantec [64]
1990
2000 Endangerment degree(ED)
Total
Speakers under 5 years
Speakers speaking Spanish
223 96 41 36 732 561 755 1220 172 3 104 235 300
48 34 6 17 183 68 216 280 50
48 33 6 16 176 64 204 262 47
201 243 52 178 741 458 466 351
26 98
25 94
40 174
3 3 3 3 4 3 3 3 3 1 4 3 3
Notes: Endangerment degree (ED): 4 = potentially endangered; 3 = endangered; 2 = seriously endangered; 1 = moribund.
influence. Although about a million people speak Kaqchikel, the language is also in danger of extinction due to the fact that the children prefer to speak Spanish instead of speaking their mother language. Here, we can observe gradual shift to the dominant language. The parents speak well, but their children do not, although they do understand what their parents speak. A policy of suppression also affects survival of a language. After the peasant uprising in 1932, the Salvadoran government suppressed the indigenous people. The result was that the Lenca and Cacaopera languages were abandoned and became extinct. The sudden language loss was due to a halt in speaking their native languages in order to avoid being identified as communist-inspired Indians (Campbell and Muntzel 1989: 183). During the civil war in Guatemala, which lasted over thirty years, there was a great danger of extinction. Maya people became more silent for fear of death. If genocide had escalated, speakers would have stopped speaking the language. Fortunately, this did not occur and the suppression finally came to an end in 1996, costing about 75,000 lives in the war (Warren 1997: 24). During that time, a number of young Maya people began to learn their own cultural heritage and found their values and pride. New movements toward indigenous liberation and identity are now becoming vigorous.
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9.2. Attempts to Salvage Endangered Languages 9.2.1. Colonial Documentation Linguistic description and analysis of indigenous Middle American languages began soon after the Spanish conquest in the early sixteenth century. When Spanish missionaries encountered indigenous people, they must have been perplexed at the strange sounds they had never heard. Spanish missionaries studied indigenous languages and established orthographies for them, based on the Latin or Spanish alphabet. Sometimes they invented new letters such as for /tz’/ and ε for /q’/ etc. Based on the new orthography, they wrote grammars, dictionaries, catechisms, etc., and taught native elites how to write and read their languages. Indigenous people wrote myths, legends, letters, wills, etc. using the alphabet they had just learned. Among indigenous languages, Nahuatl and Yucatec have the most extensive documentary sources. Some of them were written by Spanish missionaries and others were recorded by indigenous people. Some other dominant languages in those days, such as Zapotec, Mixtec, Tarasco, K’iche’, and Kaqchikel, also have documents, dictionaries, and grammars, although they are fewer than Nahuatl and Yucatec. Other minor languages were poorly documented. Nevertheless, languages in Mexico and Guatemala are more documented than Central American languages (Contreras García 1985; Campbell et al. 1978). During the colonial period, fortunately compared with, say, North America, indigenous languages continued to attract interest, although the colonial government went ahead with a policy of Castilianization. There were professors of Nahuatl and Otomi in the University of Mexico as early as 1640 (Ligorred 1992: 17). In Guatemala Kaqchikel, a Mayan language, was taught in the university as a metropolitan language from the years 1678 to 1822 (Brinton 1884: 347). After independence, the word “indio” was prohibited to be used in any documents under this liberal thought, and the class of “indio” became non-existent (Favre 1996: 25). Consequently indigenous languages were ignored and indigenous people who had had a literacy tradition did not inherit it. In the twentieth century, indigenous languages came to the attention of North American and Mexican anthropologists. After the Public Education Secretariat (Secretaría de Educación Pública; SEP) was founded in 1921, alphabetization of indigenous languages started in order to Hispanicize indigenous peoples. In 1935, the Independent Department of Indian Affairs was created. In that same year the Summer Institute of Linguistics (SIL) c
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began to study indigenous languages to diffuse the Bible among indigenous people. The SIL carried out descriptive studies for the vernacular languages and prepared didactic materials (cartillas) for the alphabetization of indigenous languages. The Institute for Alphabetization of Indigenous Languages was established in 1945 and the national campaign against analphabetism was organized (Bravo Ahuja 1977: 112). However, the purpose of alphabetization was to facilitate the learning of the national language for ethnic groups. The Mexican education system starting in 1921 operated under the thesis of incorporation and assimilation that denies the development of indigenous cultures. Bilingual-bicultural education became official in 1955 when the General Bureau of Indigenous Education (Dirección General de Educación Indígena) was created within the Public Education Secretariat, but the meaning of bilingual-biculture was different from that of our days. It did not mean teaching in both Spanish and indigenous languages or respecting the cultures of indigenous peoples. To teach indigenous languages was to facilitate the learning of Spanish. Even now, bilingual education tends to be considered as a learning method to facilitate the transition from the indigenous language to Spanish. Indigenous people were given an opportunity for education, but in practice their languages were disrespected and documentation of the indigenous languages was not a desideratum.
9.2.2. Modern Documentation Modern documentation of Middle American languages has been done by linguists. Major languages have at least some descriptions of phonology. Some languages have dictionaries and grammars. Especially SIL has contributed to documentation, and its linguists have published many useful dictionaries and grammars, but most of the early dictionaries are too short and lack helpful examples to demonstrate the significance of the terms. In the early 1970s documentation of the languages became popular among North American linguists. They studied indigenous languages with indigenous people working as informants and in exchange they taught them how to write and read. Some indigenous people working with North American linguists learned basic descriptive linguistics and dictionary-making procedures. Now they themselves produce dictionaries and grammars, especially in Guatemala (see Yasugi 2003: pp. xi–xvi).
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To document a language adequately, three parts are required: a dictionary, grammar, and morphemically analysed texts. Looking at language documentation from this point of view, there are very few projects meeting the requirements of this standard. An example of an almost ideal documentation is the Itzaj case, where Hofling published a grammar, dictionary—with more than 20,000 entries—and texts (Hofling 1991, 2000; Hofling and Fernando Tesucún 1997). Recently the most extensive dictionary is the Great Tzotzil Dictionary of San Lorenzo Zinacantan—with 35,000 entries—by Laughlin (1975). Most other dictionaries contain fewer entries. I will now survey language documentation in each country. In Mexico linguists at Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México and Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia have played a central role in documentation. Besides their activities, two other projects should be mentioned. Jorge Suárez and others organized the Archive of Indigenous Languages in Mexico (Archivo de Lenguas Indígenas de México; formerly Archivo de Lenguas Indígenas del Estado de Oaxaca). The first publication was the data of Isthmus Zapotec (Pickett and Embry 1975). The book consists of 594 sentences responding to a questionnaire for structural analysis and short vocabulary. They had originally intended to describe indigenous languages in the state of Oaxaca, but, amplifying their scope later and applying the same standard to other languages, they had published data for twenty-five languages of Mexico by the year 2003. The series covers languages like Matlatzinca and Chocho, in addition to currently nonendangered (safe or stable yet threatened) languages like Zapotec, Mixtec, Otomi, etc. In 2003 the data of sixteen Guatemalan Mayan languages were added by Yasugi (2003). In 1993 the Project for the Documentation of the Languages of Mesoamerica, which was organized by T. Kaufman and J. Justeson, began research on Mixe-Zoquean languages, and then extended to Zapotecan, Oto-Pamean, Totonacan, and Nahuan. Now the Project has been studying four Mixean, six Zoquean, ten Zapotecan, two Chatino, ten Nahuan, three Totonacan, and two Oto-Pamean consisting of Matlatzinca and Ocuiltec. The preparation of a dictionary for each language is undertaken by a different linguist in collaboration with native speakers. A major feature of the Project is that a set of specialists in each language family is trained in the context of regular and long-term interaction, helping to generate a body of lore that is tested through discussion and comparison of the results of individual investigation. The dictionaries they are producing are medium in size,
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ranging between 5,000 and 10,500 lexical items. Part of their results can be accessed at the website—www/ablany.edu/ anthro/maldp/index/html. In Guatemala, T. Kaufman founded the Proyecto Lingüístico Francisco Marroquín, where about eighty indigenous people learned how to write their language. USA linguists (such as N. C. England) analysed Mayan languages in collaboration with native speakers. Kaufman published the basic spelling and phonology of Guatemalan languages (Kaufman 1970). Mayan people organized the Academy of Mayan Languages (Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala) and established a “unified” alphabet for all Mayan languages spoken in Guatemala in 1987. The Academy of Mayan Languages set up branches in the head towns of each language group. The branches function as a regional centre for making up bilingual education programmes, surveying dialectal variation, and making dictionaries, grammars, etc. In 1990 N. C. England founded OKMA (Oxlajuuj Keej Maya Ajtz’iib’) where she trained native Mayan linguists. Now these Mayan linguists analyse their native languages and publish grammars, dictionaries, and dialectal descriptions. In Honduras and El Salvador, there are moribund languages, such as Pipil, Tol (Jicaque), and Pech (Paya). Tol (300 speakers) and Pech (300 speakers (Ethnologue at www.ethnologue.com/show_country.asp?name=HN) may be too close to death to be salvaged. As for Garifuna, whose territory extends to Belize and Nicaragua, documentation is also needed, although it does have a dictionary and a grammar (Hadel 1975; Suazo 1990). Pipil (nearly extinct) was documented by Campbell (1985). Other languages such as Lenca and Chilanga are extinct with little documentation (see Lehmann 1920; Andrews 1970; Campbell 1976). In Nicaragua, the Center for Research and Documentation of the Atlantic Coast (CIDCA) is responsible for the description of indigenous languages in that country (Craig 1992). The Nicaraguan linguists along with North American linguists are producing dictionaries of Ulwa, Miskito, and Rama (Marx and Heath 1992; Anonymous 1989; Rigby and Schneider 1989). After the Sandinista revolution was over, however, the revitalizing movement seems to have become less active. In Costa Rica, linguists at the University of Costa Rica are rescuing indigenous languages of the country. Since 1982 they have yearly published the Journal of Studies of Chibchan Linguistics (Estudios de lingüística chibcha) where they report the data of indigenous languages like Boruca (nearly extinct), Terraba, Bribri, Cabecar, Guaymi, etc. They have also published dictionaries and grammars (Constenla Umaña 1998; Constenla Umaña et al. 1998; Margery 1989).
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Concerning the languages of Panama, we have good descriptions thanks to Lenguas de Panama (vols. i–viii) published by Instituto Nacional de Cultura and Instituto Lingüístico de Verano. For more information, see Ethnologue (www.ethnologue.com/show_country.asp?name=Panama).
9.3. Maya Revitalization Movement Indigenous people have come to recognize their ethnic distinctiveness and are beginning to promote their cultural heritage. The Maya revitalization movement that began in Guatemala in the late 1980s is the most active one among Middle American indigenous language groups. I can give some reasons why documentation is the most active. The most important contribution is made by North American linguists such as T. Kaufman, N. C. England, etc. who have been educating Maya people since the mid 1970s. These Maya people have grown up to be linguists who describe their own native languages. Other reasons may be that Guatemala has proportionately the greatest population of indigenous people and that the Maya people are descendants of the ancient Maya civilization about which they can boast. Worldwide movements have also influenced Maya revitalization activities. Although revitalization is very active, there are still problems; so I will discuss Guatemalan activities with regard to language preservation.
9.3.1. Standardized Orthography In Guatemala, in 1950 a new orthography was proposed for four major Guatemalan languages, Kaqchikel, K’iche’, Q’eqchi’, and Mam, and in 1952 SIL was established. They adopted the orthographical practices of Spanish such as ca, que, qui, co, cu for the sounds [ka], [ke], [ki], [ko], [ku] to ease the transition to Spanish for monolingual children. In 1970, however, the members of the Instituto Lingüístico Francisco Marroquín proposed new orthography. This orthography influenced later linguistic policy. In 1987 the Guatemalan government legalized a standardized orthography (Anonymous 1988). Now scholars use this orthography because it was legalized. The old orthography was rejected and the approach of earlier scholars was later regarded as assimilationist.
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A standardized writing system is indeed important for literacy and cultural stability, but the orthography adopted by the Maya people is not applied to their own names and the names of their towns. They are familiar with the older still prevailing colonial spelling of place names and surnames. It is difficult to change traditional names into new ones, because legal documents must be conserved and the spelling in documents must inevitably be sustained. Because of the use of traditional names in daily life, two different spellings coexist. Then for what purpose did indigenous people change orthography and what advantage do they get? The reason they have changed traditional orthography and adopted a new one was to throw off the yoke of Spanish domination and to strengthen their ethnic identity. Since indigenous people were despised and indigenous languages were regarded as imperfect and inferior for many years, it is most important to take pride in their languages for salvaging and maintaining them by using the new orthography as a symbol of new movements. Spanish as the dominant language is indispensable for everyday life, while reading and writing in their own languages is not. If asked what advantage they have when they learn this new orthography, I must confess that it is useful only among the language groups and their knowledge does not spread to the outside world. However, if they do not know how to read and write Spanish, they can suffer some obstacles to living in their society. Rigoberta Menchú, a Nobel Peace Prize winner, wrote about many of the losses and absurd treatment she suffered from Ladinos (i.e. non-Indias) because she did not know Spanish (Rigoberta Menchú 1987). It is more economical to teach only the dominant language of Spanish in school. Teaching in both Spanish and an indigenous language at the same time may theoretically take twice as much time as teaching only in Spanish. For many years teachers tried to teach the writing and reading of indigenous languages in the first and second grades at elementary school. But even if children learn to write the indigenous language for two years, they cannot write and read their language fluently, because the education system is organized to serve for easy transition to Spanish and they have no need to write their language. More than ten years ago indigenous people unsuccessfully demanded that the law should be written in every indigenous language. If we consider an outcome proportionate to the cost, it is natural to think that it is less costly to make them understand the law in Spanish rather than to write the law in every indigenous language, because there are more than twenty languages and each language has far fewer speakers than Spanish-speaking people.
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9.3.2. Language Preservation However, we must not treat language merely from the point of economy or of convenience. Now the Maya people promote bilingual education in schools called escuelas mayas (Maya schools), even though tremendous time needs to be devoted to developing proper curricula. In one Maya school at Palin I visited in 2001, children were taught in Poqoman. There are more children speaking Poqoman than there were some twenty years ago when the language was in danger of extinction, because Palin is near the Guatemalan capital. At that time many Poqoman people preferred to speak Spanish, partly because they were looking for a job in Guatemala City and partly because indigenous languages were looked down upon. Now, however, Poqoman may possibly have escaped from the danger of extinction, thanks to cultural revival. Ladinos say that there is no official discrimination, but actually there is a gap between them and indigenous people: the latter distrust the former, who despise the latter. Although we hardly know how to achieve this, it is important for Ladinos to come to respect indigenous languages and culture. However, the mobility and liberation of society is progressing in Guatemala after a hard time in the early 1980s. Years ago, once indigenous people learned Spanish, they abandoned speaking their native tongue and transferred their ethnic identity to Ladino. The change of identity went with the change of language usage. Especially the more highly educated indigenous people had abandoned their Indio-ness. But now, even people who cannot speak a Mayan language begin to declare that they are Maya. In Middle America there are many indigenous languages and generally each community has its own dialect. When indigenous people want to communicate with other groups, they have to speak in Spanish as a common language. Therefore, in order to prevent the extinction of these languages, it is vital, needless to say, that people speak to children in their language, thereby promoting bilingualism in their communities. To popularize bilingualism, normalized texts of a standard dialect should be published, though it has a great risk of diminishing dialect diversity. A standard dialect may be the dialect of regional centres where the Academy of Mayan Languages set up the branches. The Academy staffs are now studying their dialects and trying to write normative grammar and texts, and so the Academy should take a leading role in training teachers who can read and write indigenous languages. If these teachers start to teach in rural schools, there may be some hope that bilingual education will be fortified to some extent. Their operations are now active, but they depend on financial aids: if these are cut, then
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their movements may deteriorate easily. Under many negative and very difficult situations, the most important thing should be for indigenous people to have a real passion and will for maintaining their own language. It entirely depends upon their awareness of the issue.
References Andrews V., and Wyllys, E. (1970). “Correspondencias fonológicas entre el lenca y una lengua mayance”, Estudios de Cultura Maya, 10: 341–87. Anonymous (1988). Lenguas mayas de Guatemala: documento de referencia para la pronunciación de los nuevos alfabetos oficiales. Guatemala: Instituto Indigenista Nacional y Ministerio de Cultura y Deportes. —— (1989). Diccionario elemental del ulwa (sumu meridional). Nicaragua: Karawala Región Autónoma Atlántico Sur and Centro de Investigaciones y Documentación de la Costa Altántica. Bravo Ahuja, G. (1977). La enseñanza del español a los indígenas mexicanos. México: El Colegio de México. Brinton, D. G. (1884). “A grammar of the Cakchiquel language of Guatemala”, Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 21: 345–412. Brown, R. M. (1996). “The Maya language loyalty movement in Guatemala”, in E. F. Fischer and R. M. Brown (eds.), Maya Cultural Activism in Guatemala. Austin: University of Texas Press, 165–77. Campbell, L. (1976). “The Last Lenca”, IJAL 42: 73–8. —— (1985). The Pipil Language of El Salvador. Berlin: Mouton. —— and Muntzel, M. C. (1989). “The structural consequences of language death”, in N. C. Dorian (ed.), Investigating Obsolescence: Studies in Language Contraction and Death. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 181–96. —— Ventur, P., Stewart, R., and Gardner, B. (1978). Bibliography of Mayan Languages and Linguistics. Albany: State University of New York Press. Comisión de Oficialización de los Idiomas Indígenas de Guatemala (1999). Oficialización de los idiomas indígenas de Guatemala: propuesta de modalidad. Guatemala: Proyecto Q’anil B. Constenla Umaña, A. (1998). Gramática de la lengua guatusa. San José: Universidad Nacional. —— Elizondo Figueroa, F., and Pereira Mora, F. (1998). Curso básico de bribri. San José: Universidad de Costa Rica. Contreras García, I. (1985). Bibliografía sobre la castellanización de los grupos indígenas de la República Mexicana (siglos XVI al XX). México: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. Craig, C. (1992). “A constitutional response to language endangerment: the case of Nicaragua”, Language, 68: 17–24. England, N. C. (1995). “Linguistics and indigenous American languages: Mayan examples”, Journal of Latin American Anthropology, 1/1: 122–49. —— (1996). “The role of language standardization in revitalization”, in E. F. Fischer and R. M. Brown (eds.), Maya Cultural Activism in Guatemala. Austin: University of Texas Press, 178–94.
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—— (1998). “Mayan efforts toward language preservation”, in L. A. Grenoble and L. J. Whaley (eds.), Endangered Languages: Language Loss and Community Response. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 99–116. Favre, H. (1996). L’Indigénisme. Que sais-je? 3088. Paris: Presses Universitaires de France. García Segura, G., and Zúñiga Muñoz, Z. (1987). “Costa Rica: acciones educativas para la revitalización lingüística”, América Indígena, 47/3: 489–517. Garza Cuarón, B., and Lastra, Y. (1991). “Endangered languages in Mexico”, in R. H. Robins and E. M. Uhlenbeck (eds.), Endangered Languages. Oxford: Berg, 93–134. Hadel, R. E. (1975). A Dictionary of Central America Carib. 3 vols. Belmopan: BISRA. Hofling, C. A. (1991). Itza Maya Texts with a Grammatical Overview. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press. —— (2000). Itzaj Maya Grammar. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press. —— and Fernando Tesucún, F. (1997). Itzaj Maya Spanish English Dictionary. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press. Horcasitas de Barros, M. L., and María Crespo, A. (1979). Hablantes de lengua indígena en México. México: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia. INEGI (1992). Estados Unidos Mexicanos: resumen general, XI censo general de población y vivienda, 1990. México: Instituto Nacional de Estadística, Geografía e Informática. —— (2001) Población hablante de lenguas indígenas. www.inegi.gob.mx/est/default. asp?c=2397. Instituto Nacional de Cultura, and Instituto Lingüístico de Verano (1974–80). Lenguas de Panama. 8 vols. Panama. Instituto Nacional de Estadística (1996). X censo nacional de población y V de habitación. Guatemala. Kaufman, T. (1970). Proyecto de alfabetos y ortografías para escribir las lenguas mayances. Guatemala: José de Pineda Ibarra. Laughlin, R. M. (1975). The Great Tzotzil Dictionary of San Lorenzo Zinacantán. Washington: Smithsonian Institution. Lehmann, W. (1920). Zentral-Amerika. Berlin: Dietrich Reiner. Ligorred, F. (1992). Lenguas indígenas de México y Centroamérica. Madrid: Mapfre. McQuown, N. A. (1955). “The indigenous languages of Latin America”, American Anthropologist, 57: 501–70. Manrique Cantañeda, L. (1996). “Lenguas mexicanas en peligro de extinctión”, in Z. Estrada Fernández, M. Figueroa Esteva, and G. López Cruz (eds.), III encuentro de lingüística en el noroeste, i: Lenguas indígenas, vol. i. Sonora: Editorial Unison, 13–38. —— (1997). “Clasificaciones de las lenguas indígenas de México y sus resultados en el censo de 1990”, in B. Garza Cuarón (ed.), Políticas lingüísticas en México. México: Centro de Investigaciones Interdisciplinarias en Ciencia y Humanidades, UNAM, 39–65. Manrique, Leonardo, Lastra, Y., and Bartholomew, D. (eds.) (1994–5). Panorama de los estudios de las lenguas indígenas de México, 2 vols. Quito: Ediciones Abya-Yala. Margery, E. (1989). Diccionario cabécar–español, español–cabécar. San José: Universidad de Costa Rica. Marx, W. G., and Heath, G. R. (1992). Diccionario: miskito–español, español–miskito. Tegucigalpa: The Moravian Church.
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Pickett, V., and Embry, V. (1975). Zapoteco del Istmo. Oaxaca: Instituto de Investigación e Integración Social del Estado de Oaxaca. Rigby, N., and Schneider, R. (1989). Dictionary of the Rama Language. Berlin: Dietrich Reimer. Rigoberta Menchú, I. (1987). Rigoberta Menchú: An Indian Woman in Guatemala. London: Verso. Suazo, S. (1990). Conversemos en garífuna: gramática y manual de conversación. Tegucigalpa: COPRODEIM. Tay Coyoy, A. (ed.) (1996). Análisis de situación de la educación maya en Guatemala. Guatemala: Cholsamaj. Turpana, A. (1987). “Panamá: lenguas indígenas”, América Indígena, 47/4: 615–25. Tzian, L. (1994). Kajlab’aliil maya’iib’ xuq mu’siib’: ri ub’antajiik iximuleew—Mayas y ladinos en cifras: el caso de Guatemala. Guatemala: Cholsamaj. Warren, K. B. (1997). “The indigenous role in Guatemalan peace”, Cultural Survival Quarterly, 21/2: 24–7. Yasugi, Y. (1995). Native Middle American Languages: An Areal-Typological Perspective. Osaka: National Museum of Ethnology. —— (2001). “Endangerment in Mayan languages”, in N. Shibata and T. Shionoya (eds.), Languages of the South Pacific Rim, vol. i. ELPR A1–001, 191–200. —— (2003). Materiales de lenguas mayas de Guatemala. 4 vols. ELPR A1–007abcd.
10
Languages of the Pacific Coast of South America Alexandra Y. Aikhenvald
10.1. Linguistic diversity in South America 10.2. Languages of the Pacific coast of South America: past and present 10.2.1. Choco family 10.2.2. Barbacoan family 10.2.3. Extinct languages 10.2.4. Quechua and Aymara 10.3. Typological features of the languages of the Pacific coast 10.3.1. Amazonian versus Andine linguistic types 10.3.2. Pacific coast languages 10.3.2.1. Phonology 10.3.2.2. Morphological profile 10.3.2.3. Evidentiality systems 10.3.2.4. Noun categorization devices and person marking 10.4. Summary
183 185 185 188 189 191 192 192 194 194 195 196 197 200
10.1. Linguistic Diversity in South America The degree of linguistic diversity in South America is comparable only to that in New Guinea (see Ch. 13, this volume). This genetic diversity is reflected in the sheer number of language families and isolates, many of which are now extinct or on the verge of extinction. In his classification, Loukotka (1968) established 117 languages families besides a large number of unclassified isolates, while Tovar and Tovar (1984) postulated over 170 groups. Many of the linguistic families are discontinuous. For instance, Arawak languages are spoken in over ten areas north of the river Amazon, and over ten to the south. Even though there is no doubt as to the genetic relationship between Arawak languages, the geographic diversity, and the extensive and prolonged language contact with genetically unrelated groups, have by and large created a situation whereby languages became restructured to various extents, and their subgrouping within the family—using conventional My deepest gratitude goes to R. M. W. Dixon, Willem Adelaar, Daniel Aguirre Licht, Willem de Reuse, Perihan Avdi, and Anthony Grant, for their insightful comments. Special thanks are due to Daniel Aguirre Licht for facilitating the book exchange between the Research Centre for Linguistic Typology and Centro Colombiano de Estudios de Lenguas Aborígenes.
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historical-comparative methodology—is problematic (see Aikhenvald 2001). The impact of long-term areal diffusion often makes it next to impossible to unequivocally state whether languages are related or not. This makes any attempts at establishing long-distance genetic relationships especially dubious.1 Since Columbus’s first explorations of Venezuela’s coast in 1498, the numbers of languages and of their speakers have been drastically reduced (see Adelaar 1991, 2004; Rodrigues 1986; Dixon and Aikhenvald 1999, and references therein). Many languages have disappeared without leaving more than a name, or perhaps a few place names. This is the case for Taino, the language of the first native American peoples encountered by Columbus (in 1492) in the Bahamas, Hispaniola, and Puerto Rico, who became extinct within the first hundred years of invasion (Rouse 1992; Hill and Santos-Granero 2002; Payne 1991); its Arawak affiliation is based on a mere handful of lexical comparisons. Other Arawak languages suffered a similar fate. Just under twenty words were recorded from Caquetio, once spoken on two islands near the Venezuelan coast, extinct since the mid-sixteenth century (Loukotka 1968: 128; Oliver 1989: 54–5); just fifteen words are known from Shebayo, once spoken on the island of Trinidad. Our ideas concerning the genetic affiliation of these and many other languages are bound to remain mere hypotheses. With its large number of discontinuous families and isolates, the linguistic map of indigenous South America resembles a patchwork quilt. The Amazon basin comprises over three hundred languages which include about fifteen well-established families as well as numerous isolates. (The six major linguistic families of the Amazon basin are Arawak, Tupí, Carib, Panoan, Tucanoan, and Macro-Jê; smaller families include Makú, Guahibo, Yanomami, BoraWitoto, Harakmbet, Arawá, Tacana, and Chapacura. Macro-groupings or “stocks” suggested by Greenberg 1987, Kaufman 1994, and others are almost without exception illusory and otiose.) The degree of genetic diversity on the continent is, however, not even. The linguistic map of the coastal areas of the Pacific, on the one hand, and the Atlantic, on the other, look impoverished. No indigenous languages survived on the east coast of Brazil (hence the term “linguistic wilderness” 1 The so-called “Arawakan” phylum is a prime example of a dubious grouping of demonstrably unrelated languages which includes Arawak proper (also known as Maipuran), Arawá, Chapacura, Harakmbet, and a few more (see Aikhenvald 1999; Payne 1991). We urge scholars who wish to adhere to proper comparative procedures in South American linguistics to employ the term Arawak to refer to a well-established genetic family.
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coined by Rodrigues 1986), as a result of the rapid European invasion and mass extinction of indigenous population. The relatively poor degree of linguistic diversity of the west coast compared to the neighbouring area of Amazonia—including the eastern slopes of the Andes—is due to a combination of factors. Apart from the effects of the European invasion—which resulted in language extinction and continuous language endangerment— the arid coastal area was not conducive to any large-scale migrations of population. That is, even prior to the invasion, the degree of genetic diversity in the Pacific coastal area appears to have been lower than that on the eastern slopes of the Andes. In § 10.2, I discuss the known languages in the Pacific coast area of Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru, their documentation and endangerment (languages spoken further south are discussed in Ch. 11, this volume). The typological diversity of South American languages is also noteworthy. Unusual, often unique, features include the obligatory expression of information source known as evidentiality, a variety of classifier types, and fascinating patterns of marking grammatical relations. How the extant languages of the Pacific coast compare with the two broad linguistic types recognized for South America—Lowland Amazonian and Andine—is addressed in § 10.3. The last section, § 10.4, contains a brief summary.
10.2. Languages of the Pacific Coast of South America: Past and Present The two major language families extending from inland areas to the Pacific coast of Colombia and Ecuador are Choco and Barbacoan (see Figure 10.1).2
10.2.1. Choco Family Languages of the Choco family are spoken by over 60,000 people in the northern parts of the Department of Choco, Colombia, on the tributaries of the Atrato river and the rivers flowing directly into the Pacific ocean, and along the Pacific coast from the Darien jungle in Panama to the southern Department of Nariño. Recently, the Choco-speaking peoples have expanded 2 The Kuna people speak a Chibchan language known as Kuna, Cuna, or Tule (see Aguirre Licht 1993: 311; Mejía Fonnegra 2000a: 56). The majority of the Kuna (about 43,000 people) live in Panama. About 700 live in Colombia, in the area of the Gulf of Uraba on the Atlantic Coast. In the Colombian linguistic tradition, the Cuna-Tule language is geographically grouped together with the languages of the Pacific coast (see Mejía Fonnegra 2000a; Llerena Villalobos 2000).
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Figure 10.1 Languages of the Pacific Coast of South America
eastwards, into the departments of Antioquia, Córdoba, and Risaralda in Colombia. The family consists of Waunana3 on the one hand and the Embera dialect continuum with five distinct dialect areas, on the other (also see Adelaar 2004: 56–61). The latter fall into two subgroups. Southern Embera dialects include Chamí or Embera (in Alto San Juan), the epera, or Saija (on Costa Sur Buenaventura), and the epera or Baudó (in Bajo Baudó). Northern Embera dialects are Embera-Katío (north of Antioquia and Córdoba) and the Embera Proper (in Atrato, Alto Baudó, and in Panamá) (Pardo Rojas and Aguirre 1993; Aguirre, p.c.).4 The Southern Embera varieties can be viewed 3 Also known as Waunán, Wounaan (autodenomination: literally, “people”), Waunméu, or Waun Meu “people’s language” (Mortensen 1999) and Noanamá (term employed by other groups) (Mejía Fonnegra 2000b: 85). 4 Llerena Villalobos (1995b) divides the Choco family into Waunana, Eastern and Western Embera e˜pe˜ra. A somewhat different classification is given by Mortensen (1999). Incomplete and not always accurate lists of Embera languages and dialects (erroneously listed under Emberá) appear in Campbell (1997: 172–3) and Migliazza and Campbell (1988: 183).
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as a continuum of dialects spoken on San Jorge, Verde, and Sucio rivers (Harms 1994). Most Waunana live in Colombia, with a few settlements extending into the Pacific coast of Panama. The current estimate for the Waunana in Colombia is of about 4,000 people. The Embera languages and Waunana are not mutually intelligible (according to Mejía Fonnegra 2000b: 85, they share about 50 per cent cognates); while most Embera varieties are (Pardo Rojas 1997: 337). The present consensus is that Choco languages form an independent family which cannot be demonstrated to be related to any other family (see Costenla-Umaña and Margery-Peña 1991: 139–40; Aguirre Licht 1999a). Various attempts at grouping Choco languages with Chibchan or Chibchan-Paezan (Greenberg 1987: 106–22; Ruhlen 1987; repeated in Migliazza and Campbell 1988: 183) and Carib (Loewen 1963a: 244) have not been substantiated. The first attempts at documenting the Choco languages go back to the diary of Father Joseph Palacios de la Vega, the head of the mission at San Cipriano on the San Jorge river around 1787. A brief analysis of this and other sources and a detailed bibliography were published by Loewen (1963a), who also completed a grammar of the Sambú dialect of Embera (1958). The Embera languages are now quite well documented. Recently, three grammars of Embera languages have been produced: Harms (1994) of Embera Saija; Mortensen (1999) of two Northern Embera varieties; and Aguirre Licht (1998, 1999a) of Embera Chamí. The bulk of recent research has been undertaken under the auspices of Centro Colombiano de Estudios de Lenguas Aborígenes (Universidad de los Andes, Bogotá). A useful overview of the sociolinguistic situation of the Choco languages is in Pardo Rojas (1997) and Mejía Fonnegra (2000a, 2000b).5 A major study of the phonology of Embera languages is in Llerena Villalobos (1995a) which contains both synchronic and comparative descriptions. Apart from a short description by Loewen (1954), there is no comprehensive grammar of Waunana (see Mejía Fonnegra 1995, 2000b). Materials include papers by Binder (1977), and Binder and Binder (1974), based on varieties spoken in Panama, and work by Mejía Fonnegra, based on Colombian varieties. The most up-to-date summary of Waunana grammar is Mejía Fonnegra (2000b), which also contains a history of studies of the language.
5 Landaburu (1999: vol. iv) presents a variety of 19th- and early 20th-century sources on Embera languages (including a large anonymous grammar of Katío).
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Choco languages are not in danger of immediate disappearance. All the languages are still being learnt by children. According to Pardo Rojas (1997), most Choco-speaking peoples maintain their traditional lifestyle and their languages. However, the lexical knowledge of people under 70 appears somewhat impoverished, with a large number of Spanish loans; younger people tend to simplify the case and number marking systems. Among the Waunana, the only monolinguals are children under 7 and elderly women. It appears that, with the expansion of Spanish-based schools, this is rapidly changing (Mejía Fonnegra 2000b: 85). With increasing bilingualism in Spanish, the language is under threat. It is, however, a positive sign that cultural and language workshops continue to be organized by linguists and anthropologists (under the auspices of Universidad de Los Andes: see, for instance, Mejía Fonnegra’s 1995 discussion of a successful language and culture workshop conducted among the Waunana).
10.2.2. Barbacoan Family The Barbacoan languages are spoken, by and large, in the Pacific region of Ecuador and the adjacent area of southern Colombia (mostly the Municipio of Ricaurte). Guambiano and Totoró are spoken in the Andes in the department of Cauca, Colombia. The family consists of five languages divided into two major groups (Curnow and Liddicoat 1998; Curnow 1998; see Adelaar 2004: 392–4 for a broader approach): North Barbacoan consisting of Guambiano and Totoró, on the one hand, and Awa Pit (Cuaiquier), on the other hand; and South Barbacoan formed by Cha’palaachi (Chachi, Cayapa) and Tsafiki (or Colorado). See Figure 10.1. The earliest classification of Barbacoan languages is by Brinton (1891: 194–9); for an updated history of classification and language studies see Curnow (2002b, 1998).6 Cha’palaachi is spoken by about 3,000–5,000 people (Stark 1985: 162) in Esmeraldas province, in the north-west area of Ecuador. Most are monolingual (with only 20 per cent of the population bilingual in Spanish: Stark 1985: 162). Tsafiki is spoken by about 1,000–1,800 people (Grimes 2000; Stark 1985: 160) in the western lowlands of Ecuador. In the 1970s, about 50 per cent of the Tsafiki (who call themselves the Tsachi people) were bilingual in Spanish. A partial grammar of Tsafiki is in Dickinson (2002). At present, Tsafiki and Cha’palaachi appear to be relatively healthy. However, in
6 The lists of Barbacoan languages given by Campbell (1997: 174) and Migliazza and Campbell (1988: 182) are incomplete: Guambiano-Totoró and Cha’palaachi have been omitted.
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view of their small numbers and the current political situation in Ecuador, they are threatened. Estimates for Guambiano vary from 8,000–9,000 (Adelaar 1991: 66) to 18,000 (Huber and Reed 1992: p. xiv), while Totoró is spoken by just a few people (Pabon Triana 1995b) and is now close to extinction.7 While Guambiano appears to be relatively healthy, Totoró is endangered. Pabón Triana (1995b) reports a high degree of bilingualism, negative attitudes towards the language, and a high degree of language loss. Efforts are being directed towards cultural and linguistic revival of Totoró. The estimated number of Awa Pit (Cuaiquer) in Colombia is around 20,000, and in Ecuador 1,000 (Tim Curnow, p.c.). Grammatical descriptions are available for Awa Pit (Calvache Dueñas 1989; Obando Ordóñez 1992; Curnow 1997, the latter based on work with obsolescent speakers in Colombia). Awa Pit is endangered, with the majority of people monolingual in Spanish and no evidence in favour of any monolingualism in Awa Pit (Curnow 1997: 18–20; also see Mejía Fonnegra 2000a: 57 on the high degree of acculturation among the Awa Pit in Colombia). Attempts to group Barbacoan languages with either Chibcha or Paez have proved unsatisfactory (see discussion in Curnow 1997, 1998; Landaburu 1993; Curnow and Liddicoat 1998, pace Campbell 1997: 173).
10.2.3. Extinct Languages Little is known about most of the extinct languages in the coastal area. The most important language on the Pacific coast before the Inca conquest was Mochica, or Yunga,8 spoken along the north-east coast of contemporary Peru. On the basis of toponyms, some scholars believe that Mochica extended southwards as far as northern Chile and Argentina (see discussion by Stark 1972: 119). Quingnam (also known as Chimú, or Yunga) was spoken around the present-day city of Trujillo, and possibly as far south as Lima. Hardly anything is known about this language, apart from a few place-names. Quingnam-Chimú was the major language of the Chimú culture, a major pre-Incan civilization (known for its distinctive pottery) (also see Harrington 1945). The Chimú capital Chan Chan was located in the Moche 7 According to Rivet (1941: 3), the number of the Guambiano in the 1930s was 5,623, while Totoró was spoken by about 1,200 people. According to him, the two were mutually intelligible with each other and with a third dialect, Polindara (then spoken by 695 people). 8 The name Yunka or Yunga is of Quechua origin; in Quechua, yunka means “jungle” (Harrington 1945: 24).
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valley near the modern city of Trujillo, about 500 km north of Lima (hence the confusion of Quingnam-Chimú and Mochica). The Chimu empire state is believed to have begun to take shape in the first half of the fourteenth century. The major expansion of the state occurred under Ñancen Pinco (whose reign began in 1370). The Chimú were conquered by the Incas in 1465–70. They passed their social stratification, as well as technological achievements such as irrigation and road engineering, on to the Inca. The Mochica language was originally spoken in Eten and Monsefú near Chiclayo, up until the 1940s (when Huber collected a word list published in 1953). A few speakers of the Eten variety survived until the 1960s (Stark 1972; also mentioned by Loukotka 1968: 261). Two traditional grammars of this language are Carrera (1644),9 and Middendorf (1892), who complements Carrera. Both grammars describe the variety of Eten.10 Also see discussion in Adelaar (2004: 319–50). Other extinct languages on the Pacific coast of north-eastern Ecuador include Sechura and Tallan or Atalán (with dialects Colán and Catacaos). According to Tovar and Tovar (1984: 170), at least the dialect of Atalán was spoken until the end of the nineteenth century. The materials for these languages are limited to short word lists, insufficient for postulating any linguistic relationships, other than striking similarities between Sechura and Atalán. Schmidt (1926: 214) attempted to put together Mochica-Yunga and what he called Tallan (subsuming Sechura, Colán, and Catacaos). This relationship remains purely conjectural (just like Mason’s 1950: 195–6 hypothetical Yunga-Puruhã family consisting of Yunga, Puruhã-Cañari, and Atalán). The question of the wider genetic relationships of Yunga remains open. Various scholars have tried to link it with Chibcha, and with Barbacoan, without, however, much success. Stark (1972) detected typological similarities between Yunga, Maya, and Uru-Chipaya. The few lexical and morphological look-alikes she listed are mainly monosyllabic and are likely to be coincidental. There may have been more extinct languages in the Pacific coastal area. A short vocabulary of Yurumangui,11 once spoken on Yurumangui River in the Department of Valle de Cauca, was collected by Father Christoval Romero in 9 Carrera was born in the area of Trujillo and may have been a native speaker of the language (Stark 1972). 10 According to Loukotka (1968: 261–2), the Chimu family consisted of two subgroups: Southern (including Chimú, Eten, and Mochica) and Northern (including Puruhá, Cañari, Huancavilca, of which only four words are known, and Manabita or Manta, with only a few patronyms surviving). 11 The alternative term Yurimangui was erroneously used by Loukotka 1968, and then repeated by Kaufman (1994).
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1768 (see Ortiz 1946, on other sources for this language). On the basis of it, Rivet (1942) attempted to establish a genetic relationship between Yurumangui and the putative Hokan group. However, the materials are too scanty for any positive statement. Loukotka (1968: 259–60) groups together Yurumangui with a number of languages in the same area (Timba, Lili, Yolo, Jamundi, and Puscajae), on which there is no information at all. Extinct languages on the Ecuadorian coast include Esmeralda, with some materials put together by Seler (1902), and Caraque, on which we know nothing (see Loukotka 1968: 133–4; Tovar and Tovar 1984: 185; Adelaar 2004).
10.2.4. Quechua and Aymara The Andean area is dominated by Quechua and Aymara. Quechua, with over seven million speakers, is spoken in the Andean highlands of Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia (Hornberger and King 2001; Grimes 2000; Adelaar 1991; Cerrón-Palomino 1987); while Aymara, with over two million speakers, is spoken around Lake Titicaca and from Lake Titicaca towards the Pacific (Grimes 2000). The question of whether Quechua and Aymara are related or not remains open (see Campbell 1995; Adelaar 2004: 168–315). The Quechua dialects spoken on the Pacific coast included varieties known as Quechua IIb, extinct since the seventeenth century (Adelaar 1992, 2004). Quechua dialects I come close to the Pacific coast in the areas of Cajambo and Yauyos (Willem Adelaar, p.c.). Quechua is a well-documented language (see Adelaar 1991, 1992, 2004; Campbell 1997; Cerrón-Palomino 1987, for an overview of Quechua studies which go back over 400 years). It was legally recognized as an official language of Peru under Velasco Alvarado’s presidency in the 1970s. In its turn, Ecuador ‘‘saw the rise of a powerful national political organization in the early 1980s’’ (Hornberger and King 2001: 190, and further discussion in Hornberger 2000). There is nevertheless little doubt that with the encroaching dominance of Spanish, and the gradual spread of bilingualism, the language is under threat. As Hornberger and King (2001: 167) put it, “the Quechua language and Quechua speakers generally remain powerless and marginalised within their national contexts. Quechua continues to be strongly linked with the rural, uneducated and poor, while Spanish remains the primary language of national and international communication, literacy and education, and professional and academic success.” King’s (1999) investigation of the status of Quechua in the Ecuadorian Andes revealed patterns of slow but steady decline of Quechua: even remote and isolated Quechua-speaking
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communities in highland Saraguro, Ecuador, can no longer be considered bilingual. Quechua is still used at certain traditional community events and as a means of communication between elders, but “Spanish has made in-roads into seemingly every speech situation” (King 1999: 25). The hope for the future of the language—so far uncertain, given the extent of cultural, sociolinguistic, and geographic differentiation of Quechua varieties—lies perhaps in the establishment of regional international institutions, like the Andean Program in Bilingual Intercultural Education (Programa de Formación en Educación Bilingüe para los Paises Andinos, PROEIB-Andes), a Master’s programme sponsored by a five-nation consortium with coordination between Ministries of Education, universities, and indigenous organizations spanning Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru, established at the University of San Simón, Cochabamba, Bolivia (Hornberger and King 2001: 188–9). The maintenance of Quechua is being enhanced by its growing role in the media (Luykx 2001).
10.3. Typological Features of the Languages of the Pacific Coast 10.3.1. Amazonian versus Andine Linguistic Types Two broad linguistic types have been recognized in South America: Amazonian and Andine. Amazonia can be recognized as a linguistic area in terms of a number of features which are shared by all (or most) languages in the area.12 A comparison between the typological characteristics of the Amazonian linguistic area in Lowland South America with those of the Andean linguistic area in the adjacent mountains, which comprises the Quechua and Aymara families, shows that these Andean languages are clearly different. A few representative features of Lowland Amazonian languages are summarized in the first column of Table 10.1, with Andine features in the second column. Other features, exceptions to pan-Amazonian tendencies, and regional areal characteristics are discussed in Dixon and Aikhenvald (1999). There is no sharp boundary between the Andean and Amazonian linguistic areas—they tend to flow into each other. (For instance, Andean features such as lack of prefixes and an accusative technique for marking 12 Whether Quechua and Aymara belong to the same linguistic type as other languages spoken outside the Amazonian Lowlands (such as Mapuche, Leko, Cholón and Uru-Chipaya) is an open question.
Table 10.1. Lowland Amazonian and Andean languages: a comparison Lowland Amazonian
Andean
(a) The majority of languages are polysynthetic and head marking; agglutinating with little fusion.
Andean languages are synthetic, and combine head and dependent marking; basically agglutinating with some fusion (subject, object, and
tense suffixes to the verb may be fused). (b) Typically one liquid phoneme, which is frequently a flap; usually more affricates than fricatives. The high unrounded central vowel is frequent. A typical Amazonian vowel system has five members: i, e, a, , u/o. There is typically contrastive nasalization of vowels.
Two or three liquids; fricatives rather than affricates; and a three-vowel system i, a, and u, with no contrastive nasalization.
(c) Many languages have extensive classifier and/or gender systems. Gender assignment is often semantically transparent, and is not overtly marked on the head noun.
No genders or classifiers.
(d) There are few oblique cases (often a locative and an instrumental/comitative), but hardly any core cases.
Extensive set of core and oblique case markers.
(e) Just one core argument is typically cross-referenced on the verb. There may be different bound pronominal paradigms depending on which core argument is being cross-referenced in each particular instance.
Two core arguments are marked on the verb.
(f) The rules for which core argument is cross-referenced can be complex (relating to the meaning of the verb, clause type, etc.) often giving rise to a “split-ergative” system. Fully accusative systems of marking for predicate arguments are rarely encountered.
Fully nominative/accusative systems.
(g) Most (although not all) languages have prefixes; there are typically fewer prefix than suffix positions.
No prefixes.
(h) There is generally only a small class of lexical numbers.
Full set of lexical numbers
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syntactic function are found in languages of the Tucanoan family, which are in Amazonia but fairly close to the Andes.)
10.3.2. Pacific Coast Languages A brief look at the language families of the Pacific coast shows that, typologically, they differ from both Amazonian and Andean profiles. Most languages have rich consonantal and vocalic systems, and no tones; a few have contrastive vowel nasalization. Mochica was mostly dependent marking with a high degree of synthesis. Choco and Barbacoan languages are synthetic with head and dependent-marking properties. All are agglutinating.
10.3.2.1. Phonology The phonology of Choco languages is very complex: there is typically a series of three stops (voiceless aspirated, voiceless unaspirated, and voiced lax, as in Waunana and Saija), or voiceless plain (with elements of aspiration), voiced tense, and voiced implosive, as in the northen dialects of Embera), besides two affricates, and two vibrants (a trill and an alveolar sonorant). Embera languages have six vowels (i, e, ɯ, a, u, o); Waunana also has an open back vowel γ. Every vowel has a nasal counterpart (some authors consider nasalization a prosodic feature of the word or of a larger unit: Aguirre Licht 1999a: 20; Adelaar 2004: 56–61). Stress is not distinctive. Barbacoan languages typically have five or four vowels (cf. Moore 1962 and papers in Elson 1962; and Curnow and Liddicoat 1998). Awa Pit is unusual in distinguishing voiced and voiceless vowels, while Cha’palaachi appears to have phonemic vowel length and Tsafiki has phonemic nasal vowels. The consonantal system contains voiced and voiceless stops, up to four fricatives (f, s, h, ʃ), and one affricate, ts (see Curnow and Liddicoat 1998: 401, for a summary of reconstructed phonemes). Mochica had complicated phonology, with a six-vowel system reminiscent of the “Amazonian” type (i, u, e, o, a, and central or ə) with phonemic long vowels, a series of seven fricatives (labial, dental, alveopalatal, palatal, and velar, and two lateral), three affricates (dental, alveopalatal, and palatal), distinctive dental and alveopalatal nasals, laterals and vibrants, and a velar nasal (Stark 1972: 120; a somewhat different analysis of Carrera and Middendorf is given by Tovar and Tovar 1984: 168–9; also see Adelaar 2004: 321–8). It appears that the language had contrastive stress.
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10.3.2.2. Morphological Profile Choco languages are exclusively suffixing, similar to Andean languages, while some Barbacoan languages have suffixes and prefixes (as apparently did Yurumangui: Rivet 1942). Mochica was suffixing, with a few proclitics sometimes analysed as prefixes (e.g. Harrington 1945). Unlike Quechua, all Choco languages are morphologically ergative, with nominative-accusative features in cross-referencing. The ergative case (Northern Embera -pa, Chamí -ba, Waunana -au/ua) marks the subject of a transitive verb (A), and also instrument (in all languages), reason, and cause in Northern Embera, Epena Pedee, and Chamí (Mortensen 1999: 47–9; Aguirre Licht 1999a: 88–90; Harms 1994: 65), and ablative in Northern Embera. The emphatic ergative case marker cannot occur together with the ergative case on nouns. In contrast, it can be added to the ergative marker on personal pronouns. Absolutive case marking is fourfold, depending on the status of the noun referent in discourse. If the noun referent is non-activated, there is zero marking. Special suffixes mark an S/O participant which is non-focal, in introductory focus, or as given information. There is no participant cross-referencing on the verb except for plural marking, which indicates the number of S/A. Unlike Embera languages, Waunana has subject cross-referencing on the verb (on a nominative-accusative principle: Mejía Fonnegra 2000b: 91), with different sets for present and non-present tenses. Singular masculine suffixes distinguish first person versus non-first person forms, while feminine and plural do not distinguish person. This unusual first/non-first person marking in Waunana is reminiscent of some Tucanoan languages in Amazonia (see Aikhenvald 2002). Other nominal cases include dative, allative, locative, benefactive, prolative, and associative. Chamí, Epena Pedee, and Waunana (Mejía Fonnegra 2000b: 89–90; Aguirre Licht 1999a: 91) have a special ablative marker (formally distinct from ergative). In Chamí, this can occur together with locative in one word (also see Harms 1994: 76). Waunana has just dative/allative, associative, ablative, locative, and genitive/partitive. In Northern Embera (Mortensen 1999: 51), the locative in combination with a personal pronoun marks possession (e.g. ãči-de “they-LOC” “theirs, their own”), and the resulting combination may take markers of syntactic function, a pattern similar to that discussed by Dixon (2002: 147–52) for Australian languages, but hitherto unattested in South America. Barbacoan languages are predominantly suffixing (a few prefixes are found in Cha’palaachi and Tsafiki). All are nominative-accusative. In Awa Pit, Cha’palaachi, and Tsafiki the accusative and the locative are marked
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with the same morpheme (which is reminiscent of the polysemy found for Quechua -ta “accusative; locative/goal”: Adelaar 1992). Nominative-accusative marking is also shared by Mochica, which had pronominal cross-referencing on the verb, on a nominative-accusative basis (with suffixes cross-referencing subject). It also had a genitive and an instrumental case, alongside a rich variety of verbal derivations including a causative and several passives.
10.3.2.3. Evidentiality Systems Evidentiality systems with four terms in some Barbacoan languages and in Northern Embera are richer than three-term systems in Quechua, and are reminiscent of multiple evidentials in Amazonia (see Aikhenvald and Dixon 1998). Consider the four-way evidentiality distinction in Tsafiki (Dickinson 2000: 407–9). If an event was “directly” witnessed, the verb is morphologically unmarked, as in (1). Evidentials are in bold. (1)
Manuel ano fi-e Manuel food eat-visual+declarative “Manuel ate” (the speaker saw him)
If information was obtained by inference from direct physical evidence, (2) would be used. (2)
Manuel ano fi-nu-e Manuel food eat-inferred-declarative “Manuel ate” (the speaker sees the dirty dishes)
A nominalization followed by the verb class marker is employed if the inference is made on the basis of general knowledge and assumption. (3)
Manuel ano fi-n-ki-e Manuel food eat-nom-verb.class:do-declarative13 “Manuel ate” (he always eats at eight o’clock and it’s now nine o’clock)
The reported evidential—marked with the suffix -ti—indicates that the information was obtained from someone else. In (4), the reported speech specifies the source of information the “reporter” had: the report was based on inference from physical evidence. Typologically this is highly unusual (Aikhenvald 2004). 13 ACC - accusative; FEM - feminine; INTER - interrogative; MASC - masculine; NEG - negation; NOM - nominalizer; PL - plural.
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Manuel Manuel
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ano food
fi-nu-ti-e eat-inference.physical. evidence-hearsay-declarative “He said/they say Manuel has eaten (they didn’t see him, but they have direct physical evidence, e.g. dirty dishes)” The reported evidential can be repeated several times, to indicate up to three sources “between the speaker and the original event”, another unusual feature of Tsafiki. There are two repetitions in: (5)
tsachi-=la person-PL
jo-la-jo-ti-e ti-e be-pl-verb.class.be-reported- say-declarative declarative “They say he said they were people”
Guambiano (Vásquez de Ruíz 1992; Triviño Garzon 1992, 1994) also appears to have grammatical evidentials; this, however, requires further study. Among Choco languages, Northern Embera varieties distinguish visual, conjectural, quotative, and reported evidentials (Mortensen 1999: 86–7), while Saija (Epena Pedee) appears to have just a reported evidential (Harms 1994: 117, 177).
10.3.2.4. Noun Categorization Devices and Person Marking Most Choco languages have no genders or classifiers. Aguirre Licht (1999a: 74) points out the existence of animate and inanimate forms of the existential verb in Embera-Chamí; nouns can take suffixes with such meanings as “liquid”, “flat surface”, “internal organs” (pp. 75–6), which are reminiscent of noun classifiers. Of the Barbacoan languages, Tsafiki has classifiers used with adjectives (Dickinson, p.c.; Curnow and Liddicoat 1998: 387), while Cha’palaachi has numeral classifiers. Mochica had several numeral classifiers (including one for humans and animals, one for fruit and vegetables, and one for other inanimate objects). These features are only somewhat reminiscent of Amazonian languages. Just like most Amazonian languages, Choco and Barbacoan have only a small class of lexical numbers (up to four or five). In contrast, Mochica has a full set of numbers in a decimal system (Harrington 1945: 29). A cross-linguistically rare salient feature of Barbacoan languages is the conjunct-disjunct person marking system (found in a few Tibeto-Burman languages).14 In these languages statements which contain a first person 14
This is also known as locutor/non-locutor person-marking system.
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participant are marked differently from those which do not. In questions the second person is marked in the same way as the first person in statements. Consider the following examples from Tsafiki, a Barbacoan language spoken by the Tsachi (Dickinson 2000) which has two construction types. One, shown in (6), appears with first person in statements and indicates “conjunct” marking. A summary of Barbacoan person marking is found in Curnow (2002b). (6)
tse Tsachi 1.fem Tsachi “I am a Tsachi”
jo-yo-e be-conjunct-declarative
The other one occurs in all other contexts and indicates “disjunct” marking: (7)
ya/nu Tsachi 3rd/2nd Tsachi “He/you are a Tsachi”
jo-Ø-e be-disjunct-declarative
In questions, the conjunct marking indicates second person: (8)
nu seke you good “Did you dance well?”
tera dance
ki-yo-n? do-conjunct-inter
Disjunct and conjunct forms contrast in meaning if used with a “wrong” person. When disjunct forms are used with first person in statements, they may indicate that the speaker did something unintentionally, without being in control. In (9), the pig was killed intentionally, and the speaker uses conjunct marking. (9)
la kuchi=ka tote-yo-e 1masc pig=acc kill-conjunct-declarative “I killed the pig” (intentionally)
In (10), disjunct marking is used: the speaker did not mean to kill the pig. (10)
la kuchi=ka tote-i-e 1masc pig=acc kill-disjunct-declarative “I killed the pig” (unintentionally)
Disjunct forms with first person may indicate a speaker’s surprise, that is, they have mirative overtones: (11) is a simple statement of a fact; as expected, conjunct marking is used (Dickinson 2000: 388).
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kala ta-yo-e money have-conjunct-declarative “I have money”
If the speaker suddenly discovers to his surprise he has some money which he did not think he had, the disjunct marker would be used: (12)
kala ta-i-e money have-disjunct-declarative “I have money!” (what a surprise!)
Conjunct markers can in turn be used with third person subject. This implies that the speaker is a knowing participant. Such constructions are used to refer to something the speaker knows first hand: in (13) the conjunct marker indicates that the speaker is a knowledgeable member of the group (despite the fact that the sentence contains a third person subject): (13)
amana now
tsachi=la Tsachi=pl
fi-tu-min=la eat-neg-nom=pl
jo-yo-e be-conjunctdeclarative “Nowadays, we, the Tsachi, do not eat snakes” (lit. the Tsachi do not eat snakes)
Person marking in this and other conjunct/disjunct systems code the degree of congruence of the information with the speaker’s general knowledge, and thus is indirectly connected with the way of obtaining information. The conjunct marking—especially when used with the third person—has an overtone of information integrated into the person’s knowledge. The disjunct marking when used with the first person produces the effect of unintentional action, surprise, or irony. That is, in a conjunct-disjunct system, the choice of person marking acquires an additional connotation related to information source. In summary, even a brief comparison with typical features of Amazonian and Andean languages shows that, in spite of a seemingly low degree of genetic diversity, the languages of the Pacific coast are typologically very diverse. There is hardly any recognizable “Pacific coast of South America” language type. Rather, each language family and individual languages of the Pacific coast exhibit unusual characteristics. This underlines the desirability of their maintenance and urgent documentation.
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10.4. Summary There is no doubt that most indigenous languages of the Pacific coast are either endangered, like Awa Pit, or threatened. In spite of high numbers of speakers, even Quechua is a threatened language, quickly moving towards becoming endangered. Among the numerous factors which have contributed to this imminent language loss are the lack of juridical and political statuses for the vernacular languages (Triana y Antorveza 1997: 118–19), and the expansion of Spanish via socioeconomic pressures and the official education system. The current situation in Colombia appears to be now changing due to the activities of local Colombian linguists, and especially of the CCELA (Centro Colombiano de Estudios de Lenguas Aborígenes, created in 1988 at the University of Los Andes), strengthened by its international collaboration with CNRS in France (Pineda Camacho 1997: 166–70). An important change in attitude towards the indigenous population was reflected in the 1991 Constitution which now acknowledges and protects “the ethnic and cultural diversity of the Colombian nation” (Art. 7), in contrast to the previous constitution (Pineda Camacho 1997: 158–9; 170–1). This will no doubt enhance the preservation of the remaining linguistic diversity and the unusual languages of the Pacific side of South America. There is now hope for language maintenance and revitalization.
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Obando Ordóñez, P. (1992). “Awa-Kwaiker: an outline grammar of a Colombian/ Ecuadorian language, with a cultural sketch”, Ph.D. dissertation, University of Texas, Austin. Oliver, J. R. (1989). “The archaeological, linguistic and ethnohistorical evidence for the expansion of Arawakan into Northwestern Venezuela and Northeastern Colombia”, Ph.D. dissertation, University of Illinois. Ortiz, S. E. (1946). “Los indios yurumanguies”, Acta Americana, 4: 10–25. Pabón Triana, M. (ed.) (1995a). Simposio: la recuperación de lenguas nativas como busqueda de identidad étnica. VII Congresso de Antropologua, Universidad de Antioquia. Medellín, junio 1994. Lenguas aborígenes de Colombia, Memorias 3. Santa Fé de Bogotá: Universidad de los Andes, CCELA. —— (1995b). “La lengua de Totoró: historia de una causa”, in Pabón Triana (1995b): 91–110. Pardo Rojas, M. (1997). “Aspectos sociales de las lenguas Chocó”, in Elsa Benavides Gómez (ed.), Lenguas amerindias: condiciones socio-lingüísticas en Colombia, gen. eds. Ximana Pachón and François Correa. Santa Fé de Bogotá: Instituto Caro y Cuervo, 312–81. —— and Aguirre, D. (1993). “Dialectología chocó”, in M. L. Rodríguez de Montes (ed.), Estado actual de la clasificación de las lenguas indígenas de Colombia. Santa Fé de Bogotá: Instituto Caro y Cuervo, 270–312. Payne, D. L. (1991). “A classification of Maipuran (Arawakan) languages based on shared lexical retentions”, in D. C. Derbyshire and G. K. Pullum (eds.), Handbook of Amazonian Languages, vol. iii. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, 355–499. Pineda Camacho, R. (1997). “La política lingüística en Colombia”, in Elsa Benavides Gómez (ed.), Lenguas amerindias: condiciones socio-lingüísticas en Colombia, gen. eds. Ximana Pachón and François Correa. Santa Fé de Bogotá: Instituto Caro y Cuervo, 155–75. Rivet, P. (1941). “Le Groupe kokonuko”, Journal de la Société des Américanistes de Paris, 33: 1–61. —— (1942). “Un dialecte hoca colombien: le yurumangí”, Journal de la Société des Américanistes de Paris, 34: 1–59. Rodrigues, A. D. (1986). Línguas brasileiras: para o conhecimento das línguas indígenas. São Paulo: Edições Loyola. Rouse, I. (1992). The Tainos: Rise and Decline of the People who Greeted Columbus. New Haven: Yale University Press. Ruhlen, M. (1987). A Guide to the World’s Languages. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. Schmidt, W. (1926). Die Sprachfamilien und Sprachkreisen der Erde. Heidelberg. Seler, E. (1902). Gesammelte Abhandlungen zur amerikanischen Sprach- und Alterthumskunde, vol. i. Berlin: A. Asher and Co. Stark, L. R. (1972). “Maya-Yunga-Chipayan: a new linguistic alignment”, International Journal of American Linguistics, 38: 109–35. —— (1985). “Indigenous languages of Lowland Ecuador: history and current status”, in H. E. M. Klein and L. R. Stark (eds.), South American Indian Languages: Retrospect and Prospect. Austin: University of Texas Press, 157–93. Tovar, A., and Tovar, Consuelo Larrucea De (1984). Catálogo de las lenguas de América del Sur. Madrid: Editorial Gredos. Triana y Antorveza, H. (1997). “Factores políticos y sociales que contribuyeron a la desaparición de lenguas indígenas (Colonia y Siglo XIX)”, in Elsa Benavides Gómez
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(ed.), Lenguas amerindias: Condiciones socio-lingüísticas en Colombia, gen. eds. Ximana Pachón and François Correa. Santa Fé de Bogotá: Instituto Caro y Cuervo, 85–153. Triviño Garzon, L. (1992). “Sobre la modalidad en la lengua Guambiano”, in II Congreso del CCELA: temas fonologicos. Santa Fé de Bogotá: CCELA, Universidad de los Andes, 219–27. —— (1994). “Hacia una tipología de la predicación de la oración simple en la lengua guambiana”, Bulletin de l’Institut des Études Andines, 23: 601–18. Vásquez de Ruíz, B. (1992). “La modalidad epistemica en Guambiano”, in II Congreso del CCELA: temas fonologicos. Santa Fé de Bogotá: CCELA, Universidad de los Andes, 209–18.
11
Fuegian Languages Oscar E. Aguilera
11.1. Chilean languages in general 11.2. Kawesqar 11.2.1. Distribution and current status 11.2.2. Documentation 11.2.3. Structural features 11.3. Yahgan 11.3.1. Distribution and current status 11.3.2. Documentation 11.3.3. Structural features
206 207 208 209 211 213 213 214 216
11.1. Chilean Languages in General Chile, with the longest coast in the whole Pacific Rim, is a multilingual country, but only six native language groups survive today: Aymara and Quechuan (mentioned in § 10.2.4), Mapuche, two Fuegian languages— Kawesqar and Yahgan—and Rapanui (or Pascuense; a Malayo-Polynesian language, cf. Ch. 14) in Easter Island. At least five other languages are known to have existed, some of them with little documentation, that is, Chango, Atacameño (below), Diaguita, Selk’nam, and Chono. See n. 4 for Ona, an extinct Fuegian language. The Mapuche or Mapudungu(n) (also known as Araucanian) family is the most vital group of Amerindian languages in Chile (also spoken in Argentina). While some of the languages are still not endangered (though threatened), others are considered moribund or seriously endangered. Although Atacameño, also known as Kunza or Likan-antai, is generally believed to be extinct, there is a rumour that some speakers survive in the Atacama region in northern Chile. The last and only trustworthy report about this language can be found in Mostny et al. (1954: 86) where it is mentioned that only a few old persons could speak the language though mixed with Spanish, and that there were some ceremonial songs whose meaning nobody could understand. Kawesqar and Yahgan (or Yamana) are the only Fuegian languages spoken today in Chile. Both are seriously endangered, with a small number of speakers, i.e. Kawesqar approximately twenty and Yahgan only two speakers.
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70 W
C
ARGENTINA
H
K
A W
I E S Q
L S E
A
L K
R
E
E
N
A
M
Figure 11.1. Fuegian languages
11.2. Kawesqar Kawesqar is also known as Alacaluf, Alakaluf, Alikhoolip. Robert Fitz-Roy (1805–65), captain of the British navy’s Beagle in the surveying voyage of the southern shores of South America, was the first to name as Alikhoolip a group of people (about four hundred) he found west of the Beagle Channel and in the central section of the Magellan Strait (1839, II: 132). Fitz-Roy found two other groups (about two hundred adults), whom he failed to recognize as members of the same “Alikhoolip”. One of the groups he found about the central parts of Magalhaens Strait he identifies as “Pecherays”,
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which was the usual exclamation they uttered, “whence Bougainville and others called them Pecherais” (Fitz-Roy, ibid.). This utterance, reported first by Bougainville (1771: i. 276), is also mentioned by Gusinde (1924, 1974: 115–16), who attributes this denomination to a Selk’nam loan, but it is no other than the Kawesqar word pælsc’éwe “alien”, “foreigner”, which is used today to designate a non-Chilean person. It is composed of pæls “the bill of a bird”, and -c’éwe a deictic which means “vertical”, “verticality”, pointing out the form of a ship’s captain’s or officer’s hat, and the vertical element referring to the distance from the canoe to the deck of the ship: therefore the meaning of the word would be something like “beak-headed-like man up on board”. For a complete account concerning the names of this ethnic group, see Aguilera (1978: 25–31, 2001a: 3–8).
11.2.1. Distribution and Current Status Kawesqars inhabited an extensive territory known as western Patagonia from the southern section of the Gulf of Penas to the Magellan Strait, i.e. the fjords and islands north of the Strait, and both sides of the latter. Kawesqars have been divided in three groups geographically rather than linguistically: Northern, Central, and Southern. This classification was first proposed by Gusinde (1974: 119), establishing as natural boundaries the Gulf of Penas in the north, Nelson Strait in the central part of the territory, and Magellan Strait in the south. He also mentions dialects which coincide with the geographical boundaries, though without providing evidence, and rightly points out that the differences among the three dialects are lexical rather than grammatical (Gusinde 1924: 48). Kawesqars themselves have distinguished several groups inhabiting particular zones within their territory, but they recognize only a Southern group with linguistic differences. Some of the groups are mentioned in the oral tradition, and others have been documented in chronicles of Spanish navigators (e.g. García Martí 1889). The number of fully competent speakers is no more than fifteen or sixteen, who live in Puerto Edén where the pristine form of the language has been preserved. Some other speakers live in Puerto Natales and Punta Arenas. A small number of semi-speakers, born in the 1960s, who belong to the last generation to learn Kawesqar as a first language, have moved to the cities in the south or the north and stopped using the language, except sporadically when they visit their relatives in Puerto Edén. Descendants of this generation and others who had migrated to the cities in the 1940s and 1950s, marrying Huilliches (Araucanian) in Punta Arenas and Puerto Natales (originally from Chiloe), never learnt to speak the language. They constitute nowadays
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the so-called “urban Kawesqars”. According to the Bureau of Indigenous Affairs (CONADI), there are 279 Kawesqars who have registered themselves in the bureau, although some do not belong to this ethnic group. Such is the case of some married couples with one member belonging to another ethnic group. Urban speakers and semi-speakers usually do not live in the same neighbourhood and do not have daily communicational interchanges, and when they happen to meet, the language employed is usually Spanish. Nowadays Kawesqar is in fact spoken only in Puerto Edén, since it is the only community where Kawesqar people live close together. It has been the home of Kawesqars for more than seventy years, after they gave up their nomadic life. While the number of non-Kawesqar settlers in Puerto Edén was small, the language used to be unrestrictedly in daily use. But, as the alien population grew and the place became a small village, Kawesqars were looked down on, sometimes with aversion. The newcomers used to call Kawesqars “the Indian colony”, without realizing that the real colonists were themselves. Most of these colonists were from the Chiloe island, i.e. Huilliches, who felt superior and did not consider themselves as Indians. Chilotans usually mocked Kawesqars when they heard the language spoken. As a consequence, the language was restricted to home use among Kawesqars in private but never in the presence of strangers or Chilotans as they felt ashamed to speak in an “uncivilized” language. When a school was built in 1970, Kawesqars sent their children to study there and to learn “to speak well in Spanish”. These children are today’s semi-speakers, with different degrees of interference from Spanish. The feeling of shame was manifest even among Kawesqars themselves: they might pretend not to understand the mother tongue when they had sporadic encounters with kin in the city.
11.2.2. Documentation Linguistic documentation of Kawesqar dates back to the seventeenth century. Two kinds of documentation can be distinguished: (a) “informal”, represented by data gathered by early explorers, geographers, naturalists, or missionaries after the discovery of the Magellan Strait, and (b) the modern linguistic one which started in the 1970s. The informal documentation is composed of numerous lists of words and some sentences (cf. Cooper 1967), but an important number of items lack accuracy. Comparison of these informal records confirms that just one language was spoken in western Patagonia, with at least two dialects. An account of Kawesqar linguistic research from the seventeenth century till 1975 can be found in O. Aguilera (1978: 32–46).
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Modern linguistic research on Kawesqar is represented by work carried out by Christos Clairis, Adalberto Salas, and Oscar Aguilera. Clairis (1977a, 1977b, 1987) and Salas and Valencia (1990) have separately examined the phonology of the language. Clairis’s grammatical description (1987) lacks many aspects due—it seems—to his failure to have a sufficiently prolonged contact with the language to corroborate his data and to get a more exhaustive analysis. Now we have a rather complete description of Kawesqar in the form of O. Aguilera’s descriptions in phonology, morphology, syntax, and some aspects of discourse (2002a, 2002b, 2005). A small comparative vocabulary of Northern and Southern Kawesqar was published by O. Aguilera (1978: 127–8), who now concludes that some of the items are Northern synonyms rather than dialect variants. It was during the second half of the 1970s that there arose an increasing academic interest in this ethnic group. Anthropological as well as linguistic fieldwork was carried out in the zone, and Kawesqars started to view their language as a cultural asset they had not realized, with some people in Puerto Edén collaborating intensively as consultants. All this work was done with academic interest, focused towards the preservation of cultural data outside the group: if the language became extinct, at least all the information obtained would guarantee that a cultural salvage had been successfully performed. In this context the Kawesqar community was not conceived as a beneficiary of the results of the research. The 1980s saw a decrease in research and fieldwork, and the people in Puerto Edén complained that they never saw the results of the research programmes carried out with their cooperation. What they claimed were concrete research products: reports, publications, pictures, sound recordings, videos, etc. that might evidence their contribution. This was important to them because they could show their importance as individual Kawesqars as well as an ethnic group, despite the discrimination they had to undergo. The published materials about their language would demonstrate that in fact scientific work had been produced by real scientists but not by non-specialists who were just interested in observing the people as if part of the zone’s unique fauna. The 1990s saw a revival of cultural interest regarding Chilean indigenous peoples. In 1993 the so-called Indigenous Law was promulgated. For the first time the government recognized Chile as a multicultural country and proposed “to develop several policies which were aimed at the promotion and conservation of the idiosyncratic values of Chilean ancient peoples” (Tonko 2001: 238). The purpose of this law was to protect the interests of the different ethnic groups and to rescue, make known, and revitalize all their cultural expressions.
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One of the tasks that the Chilean government had to carry out was the implementation of a programme of Bilingual Intercultural Education (BIE) for all indigenous communities, which would be directed by the Ministry of Education. Nevertheless, an appropriate linguistic policy to face the problem of a multilingual country was never adopted, and BIE had to be left in the hands of enthusiastic and good-willed native teachers, who had to create, without a proper training, linguistic materials in order to teach these languages.1 Since there had been no reliable information, it was thought that both Kawesqar and Yahgan were extinct. Later the Ministry of Education funded projects which were aimed at multiculturalism rather than bilingual education, since none of the few Kawesqar or Yahgan schoolchildren spoke the vernacular languages any longer. Within both Fuegian communities, however, some members expressed their desire to recover the knowledge of ancient traditions and language. Thus, CONADI started to finance a programme of revitalization of these languages. The first concrete action began in 1998, when alphabets for both languages were proposed, and later accepted as “official alphabets” (§§ 11.2.3, 11.3.3), followed by a Kawesqar reference grammar, a first primer, and an encyclopedic dictionary Kawesqar–Spanish (Aguilera and Tonko 2003). A Spanish–Kawesqar dictionary is in progress now, although, because of considerable fund reduction, some parallel tasks had to be abandoned and the long-cherished sound archive may not be carried out. This will affect the Kawesqar community in a significant manner as they will not be able to preserve the testimony of the last speakers. In recent years several older speakers have died, and with the rate increasing, we cannot be optimistic about the recovery of this language.
11.2.3. Structural Features2 Kawesqar has phonemically six vowels /i, e, æ, a, o, u/, two contiguous ones of which often show alternation in the lexicon (/e/~/i/, /e/~/æ/, /æ/~/a/, /o~u/, for example, -sekóna~-sikóna “presumptive”; asétæl~asætæl “tell”; áltæl~ által “fly”; lol~lul “steal”), and eighteen consonants, i.e. (occlusive) /p, t, k, q/, (ejective) /p’, t’, c’, k’/, glottal /h/, fricative /f, s/, affricate /č/, nasal /m, n/, (lateral) /l/, trill /r/ (variants tap r, trill r, and retroflex), and approximant /j, w/. The official alphabet employed and the corresponding phonemes are shown in Table 11.1. Accent is varied, sometimes a same word has a different accent even spoken 1 For a more complete account of these early stages of BIE in Chile, see Tonko (2001: 237–48), and for the situation regarding Fuegian languages from a governmental perspective, see N. Aguilera (2001: 223–36). 2 For a complete account of Kawesqar grammar, see Aguilera (2001a).
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Table 11.1. Grapheme
Phoneme
Grapheme
Phoneme
Aa Ææ Čč C’ c’ Ee Ff Hh Ii Jj Kk K’ k’ Ll Mm
/a/ /æ/ /č/ /c’/ /e/ /f/ /h/ /i/ /j/ /k/ /k’/ /l/ /m/
Nn Oo Pp P’ p Qq Rr Rr rr3 Ss Tt T’ t’ Uu Ww Xx
/n/ /o/ /p/ /p’/ /q/ /r/ /r/ /s/ /t/ /t’/ /u/ /w/ /k/
by the same speaker; the only regularity observed is that when a suffix is added, accent is displaced to the next syllable, e.g. jéksor “see” – jeksór-fqat “saw”, however some speakers don’t follow this rule. Kawesqar is basically an SOV language. It is morphologically agglutinative and moderately synthetic. Morphological processes employed are compounding and suffixation. The former is responsible for derived nouns (nóus-kstái nose-channel “nostrils”), and the latter for derivation (kiúrrowálak dog-female “female dog”, akčáwe-jeké cholga-DIM “small cholga”, i.e. Aulocomy ater, “a mollusc similar to mussels”) and for marking case (jemmá-s white man-genitive), plural verbs (-atál), and tense-aspect (áltqar-pas get.up-immediate.past “got up”). One of the most important features in the language is abundant deictics by which spatial location can be expressed very precisely. For instance, thirty-two forms to express “here” are possible by adding different spatial descriptors to the pronominal æs “ego” such as -asé “in this sound, bay, or any sound-like spot”, -k’ólaf “on this beach or beach-like flat surface”, -qálaks “on this pampa or steppe-like place, barren place or swampy spot”, -kar “on this isle, hill, or promontory”, -tqal “in this bay or place with a flat surface and rounded contour, of undetermined extension, external, frontal sight”, and -c’éwe “on/in a cliff-like terrain or ravine with an abrupt or smooth progressively ascending/ descending surface; verticality”. Spatial descriptors can be recursive for more precision, e.g. háute-kas-k’ólaf-kstái at the other side [of a channel or bay]-over there-beach-channel “over there at the other side of the channel, on the beach”. The most distinctive feature of Kawesqar verbs is its gradient past system, and its aspectual distinctions. 3
The grapheme corresponds to trill /r/, like Spanish “perro”.
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Past distinguishes different moments that can point to: (a) a moment which occupies part of the present as a consequence of an action, process, or fact that has just occurred: this is the punctual or immediate past, suffix -pas; (b) a moment that occurred recently: recent past, suffix -(a)fqat; (c) a moment that occurred long before: remote past, suffix -horaras; (d) a moment that occurred in an undefined past: mythical or narrative past, suffix -hójok.
Aspect in Kawesqar is varied and exhibits different forms: aspectual suffixes or a particle that can be added to verb roots/themes and act as aspect.
11.3. Yahgan The people were first called Yahgan by the Anglican missionary Thomas Bridges (1842–98; below) from Yahga, the native name for the Murray Narrows region, a locality much frequented by some of them (Cooper 1963: 82). The original self-designation Yamana, which means “man”, is not accepted today by the members of the group, especially by women who say that they cannot call themselves “men”.
11.3.1. Distribution and Current Status Yahgan is spoken by a very much reduced number of speakers who live in Ukika, which nowadays has become a borough of the Chilean navy port Puerto Williams on Isla Navarino in the Beagle Channel. In earlier times they occupied a broader territory. According to Cooper (1963: 81), “the Yahgan regularly occupied the southern coast of Tierra del Fuego Island from about the eastern end of Beagle Channel to Brecknock Peninsula, and the islands south of this line to Cape Horn. But they evidently wandered more widely.” There were five dialects, spoken in different sections of their territory (Gusinde 1974; Koppers 1927): southern, eastern, central, western, and south-western. Today there are only two old women who can be considered completely competent speakers, Cristina Calderón and Emelinda Acuña. Their descendants as well as the descendants of other speakers now dead are semi-speakers. What they speak might be called “Ukika Yahgan”, which is probably a mixture of several dialects because of the settlement in Ukika of the last survivors.
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The Yahgan population has been decreasing very rapidly since the nineteenth century. According to Cooper (1963: 83), “in the third quarter of the 19th century [it] totalled between 2,500 and 3,000 souls. In 1881 a sharp decline set in. By 1884 the number had dwindled to about 1,000, to 400 by 1886, to 200 by 1899, to 130 by 1902, to less than 110 by 1913, and to 40 by 1933. The immediate causes of the sudden drop in the eighties were the respiratory diseases and a severe outbreak of measles in 1884, followed by epidemics of typhoid, whooping-cough, and smallpox. Syphilis does not appear to have played an important role. Contributory, or rather basic predisposing, factors were, it seems, the then introduced European ways of life, especially the clothing but also the food, alcoholic beverages, and type of shelter and work.” Today’s Yahgan population, registered by CONADI, is seventy-eight, although the last official census inexplicably reports as many as 5,000. In 1946, according to Lipschütz and Mostny (1950: 24),4 the whole Yahgan community both adults and children spoke the vernacular language as well as Spanish, and some of them English, which was the first European language brought by British missionaries in the middle of the nineteenth century.5 In 1973, according to Ortiz (1973: 100), the situation had changed and the language was dying,6 as confirmed by Miyaoka (1992).7
11.3.2. Documentation T. Bridges, who succeeded to the evangelization of the Yahgan started by his foster-father (George Packenham Despard), lived among the people for thirty-six years and left a manuscript of an exceptionally rich dictionary for 4 “From the total of 19 adults, 13 spoke two languages: Yamana and Spanish; 5 spoke three languages: Yamana, Spanish, and English, or Ona; a 75 year old woman spoke four languages: Yamana, Spanish, English, and Ona” (translated by O. Aguilera). Ona, also known as Selknam, is an extinct language formerly spoken in Tierra del Fuego (in both Argentina and Chile). 5 The contact, much earlier than with Spanish, left a trace in a considerable number of English loan words, e.g. for “fat”, “salt”, “hat”, “sheep”, “pig”, “money”, “window”, “table”, “devil”, “nothing” (> “unimportant, nevertheless”), “to cook”, “to count” (> “to teach”), and “dirty” (Miyaoka 1992: 540). 6 “Since the recent generations have an imperfect command [of the language] and show no interest in broadening their knowledge of it, this is a completely understandable attitude, for the group is extremely reduced, and the language is the only remnant of a cultural past towards which they have no special esteem. In the future the knowledge or the lack of it will not change their point of view…. Yamana is relegated to the communication of elders—not even permanently—and can be partially understood by some youngsters who are far from being able to communicate correctly in it” (translated by O. Aguilera). 7 During a few weeks’ stay at Ukika in 1972–3, Miyaoka (1992: 539) found that there were no Yamana monolinguals (all speaking Spanish), about ten bilingual speakers all above the thirties (the two most fluent of whom had passed away by 1975—Clairis 1983), and a few who has some passive knowledge or would not speak in the presence of outsiders (the youngest being 19 years of age), and was told that a few Yamana speakers lived among Chilotes (of mixed Araucanian and Spanish parentage) on Isla Navarino and its surrounding islands as well as one old man at Ushuaia in Argentina (the southern coast of Tierra del Fuego).
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the day and for any aboriginal languages of the New World. Posthumously published (Bridges 1933), it contains more than 32,000 entries, including abundant derivatives by the productive techniques of the language (compounding and affixation) as well as rather detailed semantic explanations and ethnological information.8 Bridges also published a grammatical note of less than thirty pages (1893), a primary but very fragmentary piece of information of rather limited value. Several restatements and vocabularies, which successively followed in the 1880s (L. Adam, A. J. Ellis, K. J. Platzmann, and C. Spegazzini), all relied upon Bridges’s material or instructions, occasionally with some distortions. Academic work did not start until the latter part of the twentieth century. An important work on Yahgan was published by Goodbar (1977, 1978, 1985) by supplementing Bridges’s material with his own research and following the descriptive schema in C. L. Hockett’s A Course in Modern Linguistics (1958), and Guerra explored various aspects of Yahgan grammar (1982 to 2000). Salas and Valencia (1990) published an article on the sound system with some notes on linguistic salvage, reporting a sporadic and declining use of the language, followed by Mendoza et al. (1997). From the 1990s till today, an undetermined number of recordings and notes have been made by aficionados, anthropologists, and sociologists, with no linguistic training. Most of these materials are lists of words gathered “to illustrate the Yahgan dialect”,9 but contain some recorded texts and part of the oral Yahgan literature that the Calderón sisters (see below) repeated. Though with a number of erroneous or misleading data, they constitute an important although scarce textual corpus that provides more linguistic information than uncontextualized sentences or word lists. In O. Aguilera’s first fieldwork carried out in 1999, he found only two speakers, Ursula and Cristina Calderón, whose use of the language had been reduced to a minimum, for most of the time they communicated in Spanish. A third speaker, Emiliana Acuña, I could not interview because (I was informed) her husband did not allow her to participate in any enquiry concerning the language, saying that she was too old and sick to be disturbed. Aguilera found out 8 The manuscript had been lost for a few decades after his death until it fell into the hands of the editorship (it is now to be archived in the British Library) finally after some unhappy circumstances as described in his son E. Lucas Bridges’s memoirs (1949). In the original manuscript Th. Bridges employed representations in the Ellis Phonotype (with modifications) which his foster-father had started for practical use among the natives, but this was transliterated by the editors into the Wilhelm Schmidt Anthropos alphabet. 9 Many people, including the press, call indigenous languages “dialects” in Chile, for they believe that these “dialects” have not the status of “language”, implying that they are “imperfect” or “primitive” forms of speech.
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later, however, that this was not true; there was a sort of “conspiracy” against Emiliana, for her husband had died long ago. In 2003, during a very short visit to Puerto Williams, he was able to interview Emiliana, who was very helpful and eager to cooperate in the rescue of her language. Ursula and Cristina’s attitude towards their language was positive, since both felt that there was an urgent need to preserve it for future generations. The sisters felt that it was their duty to collaborate with persons interested in the Yahgan language and culture, since their sons and daughters and other relatives had only a passive knowledge or a partial command of the language, hardly ever using it. The Yahgan community welcomed the project proposed by CONADI, because they thought the revitalization of the language would contribute to strengthen their identity as an authentic Fuegian ethnic group whose cultural heritage was lost. However, the fund reductions and later the death of Ursula Calderón have prevented the continuation of this project. On the other hand, members of the Yahgan community seem to have lost their interest in the ancestral language, and Cristina Calderón would entrust the knowledge of her tongue to her granddaughter rather than to strangers. Her granddaughter Cristina Zárraga (called “Cristina the Younger”) is a young poetess, at present writing a biography of “Cristina the Elder”, but has a negative perception of linguists, unless they pay high fees for the interview. Thus, the two last extant Fuegian languages, Kawasqer and Yahgan, are in their last stage of existence, with no signs of recovery being envisioned, although the linguistic data gathered so far will at least ensure their presence among the documented languages of the world.
11.3.3. Structural Features10 Yahgan has phonemically seven vowels /i, e, æ, a, u, o, ә/ and seventeen consonants, i.e. occlusive /p, t, k/, fricative /f, s, š, č, x/, nasal /m, n/, lateral /l/, trill /r, ɹ, tr/. Vowels can occur lengthened, and consonants occur geminated. The official alphabet employed and the corresponding phonemes are shown in Table 11.2. Yahgan is basically an SOV/AN language (head final), with a predicative A following an NP. It is characterized by mostly dependent marking (case 10 Phonological data presented here are from Aguilera (2000). Grammatical data are based mainly on Bridges’s dictionary and have been processed by Jess Tauber (
[email protected]) who has done a thorough examination of all Yahgan documents from the earliest sources till the present. I am very grateful for his help. Transcriptions of Yahgan examples are given in the standard alphabet, and rendered in the present Ukika Yahgan when possible, according to equivalents in our data.
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Table 11.2. Grapheme
Phoneme
Grapheme
Phoneme
Aa Ææ Čč Ee Öö Ff Hh Ii Jj Kk Ll Mm
/a/ /æ/ /č/ /e/ /ə/ /f/ /x/ /i/ /j/ /k/ /l/ /m/
Nn Oo Pp Rr Řř Ss Šš Tt Uu Ww Xx
/n/ /o/ /p/ /r/ /ř/ /s/ /š/ /t/ /u/ /w/ /x/
on object nominals, when higher animacy), subject co-reference preverbally, and nominative/accusative alignment. Morphologically it is agglutinative and moderately synthetic. Morphological processes employed are suffixation, prefixation, and stem compounding. Suffixes are used for nominal case and number (but no gender marking), tense/aspect, adverbial subordination, nominalization, verbalization, etc., while prefixes (but largely proclitics) are verbal (subject) person, nominal (possessor) person, valency (causative, passive), etc. Instrument/body part prefixes and locational (spatio-temporal) suffixes frequently flank verb stems as more abundantly attested in Western North America than South America. Compounding includes verb stems with adverbs but is rare with nominals, and verb stem serialization is very productive. Tense-aspect markers developed from posture or movement verbs—e.g. “to stand” > “habitual, ready to, potential”, “to lie” > “definitively, extending to past”. Reduplication is found in some animal names, in emphasized adverbs, and “cognate object”-like constructions (e.g. uku-t-uku “materials to make a basket base (uku)”). The language has a small class of lexical numbers up to three or four (paucal rather than plural), which distinction obtains also with personal pronouns. This class of “numbered” contrasts with the “numberless”, i.e. “uncountable” beyond the paucal. Suppletive verb stems, which abound in the language, seem to be based upon this contrast in relation to intransitive S (“to die”, “to be afloat”, “to sit”, “to stand”, “to go”, “to go on board”, “to spread (blanket)”, “to lie”, etc.) or transitive O (“to give”, “to eat”, “pile up”, “to carry (in container)”, “to bear”, “to collect”, “to go on/off board”). Another characteristic—and complex—feature is the large-scale demonstrative system with stems the same as person pronominal roots (h-, s-, k-),
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which enables very fine spatial/orientational distinction relative to the environment (“up”, “toward/away from the shore”, “right”, “left”, “strait”, the opposite shore’, etc.) as well as to the speaker/listener.
References Adelaar, W. F. M., with Muysken, P. C. (2004). The Languages of the Andes. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Aguilera, O. E. (1978). “Léxico Kawésqar–Español, Español–Kawésqar (Alacalufe septentrional)”, Boletín de filología (Universidad de Chile, Facultad de Filosofía y Letras, Departamento de Lingüística y Filología), 29: 7–149. —— (2000). “En torno a la estructura fonológica del yagán”, Fonología de la palabra, Onomazein (Santiago: Onomazein), 5, 233–41. —— (2001a). Gramática de la lengua Kawésqar. Temuco: Corporación Nacional de Desarrollo Indígena. —— (2001b). “A commentary on Dr. Wurm’s paper and revitalization of Fueguian languages”, in Lectures on Endangered Languages, 2: From Kyoto Conference 2000. ELPR C-002, 141–6. —— (2002a). “El discurso narrativo Kawesqar”, Onomazein. (Instituto de Letras de la Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile), 7: 295–337. —— (2002b). “El tema en el discurso Kawésqar”, Revista chilena de antropología (Santiago: Facultad de Ciencias Sociales Universidad de Chile), 16: 167–86. —— (2004). “Basic Yaghan–English lexicon” (with CD), in N. Shibata and T. Shionoya (eds.), Languages of the Pacific Rim, vol. iii. ELPR A1-008, 339–84. —— (2005) El discurso narrativo kawésqar. Textos narrativos no míticos, Part 1. Onomazein 11. Instituto de Letras de la Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile (in press). —— and Tonko, J. (2003). Diccioario enciclopédico kawésqar-español (unpublished MS). Aguilera A., N. 2001. “Revitalization of Kawésqar and Yaghan in Magallanes (Chile): governmental actions towards the rescue of two endangered Fueguian languages”, in Lectures on Endangered Languages, 2: From Kyoto Conference 2000. ELPR C-002, 223–36. Bougainville, L.-A. de (1771). Voyage autour du monde par la frégate la Boudeuse et la flûte l’Étoile; en 1766, 1767, 1768 et 1679. Paris: Chez Saillant et Nyon, libraires, rue S. Jean-de-Beauvais. (Many new editions, e.g. Paris: Club des libraires de France, 1958; Paris: ed. La Découverte, 1997.) Bridges, E. L. (1949). Uttermost Part of the Earth. New York: E. P. Dutton. Bridges, T. (1893). “A few notes on the structure of Yahgan”, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 23. —— (1933). Yamana–English: A Dictionary of the Speech of Tierra del Fuego, ed. F. Hestermann and M. Gusinde. Mödling: Verlag St Gabriel. Clairis, C. (1977a). “Première Approche du qawasqar: identification et phonologie”, La Linguistique (París), 13/1: 145–52. —— (1977b): “Lingüística fueguina”, Boletín de filología (Santiago), 28: 29–48.
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—— (1983). Las lenguas de la Patagonia: América latina en sus lenguas indígenas, ed. Bernard Pottier. Caracas: Monte Avilla Editores, UNESCO. —— (1987). El qawasqar: lingüística fueguina. Teoría y descripción. Anejo de Estudios Filológicos 12. Valdivia: Universidad Austral de Chile. Cooper, J. M. (1963). “The Yahgan”, in Steward (ed.), 81–106. —— (1967). Analytical and Critical Bibliography of the Tribes of Tierra del Fuego and Adjacent Territory. Costerhout NB: Anthropological Publications (photomechanic reprint after the edn. of 1917). Fitz-Roy, R. (1839). Narrative of the Surveying Voyages of H.M.S. Adventure and Beagle, ii: Proceeding of the Second Expedition 1831–1836. London. García Martí, José (1889). “Diario de vida i navegación hechos por el padre José García de la Compañia de Jesús desde su mision de Cailin, en Chiloe, hacia el sur en los años 1776 i 1767”. Anuario hidrográfico de la marina de Chile (Santiago de Chile), 14: 3–47. González, S. (1990). El aymara de la provincia de Iquique-Chile y la educación nacional. Iquique-Chile: Taller de Estudios Regionales TER, Proyecto Educativo Bilingüe Intercultural PEBL. Goodbar, P. G. de. (1977). “Yagán I: las partes de la oración, Vicus (Amsterdam), 1: 5–60. —— (1978). “Yagán II: morfología nominal”, Vicus, 2: 87–101. —— (1985). “Hacia una morfología verbal de Yagán”, International Journal of American Linguistics, 51/4: 421–4. Guerra E., A. M. (1982). “Le Yahgan”, in Recueil de documents linguistiques. París: Université René Descartes - Paris V. —— (1985). “El caso del yahgan y de las lenguas de la Patagonia”, in Ciclo de conferencias sobre lenguas vernáculas contemporáneas de Chile. Santiago, 16–19. —— (1988). “Sobre algunos fenómenos de fonología de la frase en el yagán”, Nueva revista del Pacífico (Valparaíso), 33–6: 137–53. —— (1989). “Fonología del yagán”, MA thesis, Valparaíso, UPLACED. —— (1990a). “Esbozo fonológico del yagán”, in Actas del octavo seminario nacional de investigación y enseñanza de la lingüística. Santiago: Universidad de Chile y Sociedad Chilena de Lingüística, 5: 88–93. —— (1990b). “Yagán: aspectos culturales de un grupo étnico en vías de extinción”, Documentos lingüísticos y literarios (Valdivia), 16: 11–6. —— (1991). “Una visión etnolingüística de los yagán”; in Sobre culturas indígenas: lenguaje e identidad. Temuco: Universidad de la Frontera, 85–92. —— (1992). “Las fluctuaciones de fonemas en el yagán”, Revista de lingüística teórica y aplicada (Concepción), 30: 171–82. —— (1994). “Acento y sílaba en un corpus yagán”, Nueva revista del Pacífico, (Valparaíso), 38–9: 271–6. —— (1995). “Los sintemas del yagán”, Jornadas de lingüística aborigen (Buenos Aires: Universidad de Buenos Aires), 2: 271–6. —— (1997). “Adverbios en un corpus yagán”, Nueva revista del Pacífico (Valparaíso), 41–2: 59–70. —— (2000). “Yagan wordlist”, in M. R. Key (ed.), Intercontinental Dictionary Series i: South American Indian Languages. Irvine: University of California. CD-ROM. Gusinde, M. (1924). “Cuarta expedición a la Tierra del Fuego “informe”, Publicaciones del Museo de Etnología y Antropología de Chile, iv. Santiago de Chile. —— (1974). Die Feuerland-Indianer, iii/1: Die Halakwulup. Mödling bei Wien: Verlag St Gabriel.
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Koppers, P. W. (1927). “Das Lautsystem der fuerländischn Sprachen”, Anthropos, 21: 1000–24. Lehnert, R. (1981–2). “Presencia del Runa-simi en el sector atacameño”, Cuadernos de filología, (Universidad de Antofagasta) 15–16: 29–47. Lipschütz, A., and Mostny, G. (1950). “Cuatro conferencias sobre los indios fueguinos”, Dictadas en la Universidad de Chile: revista geográfica de Chile (Santiago), 15: 86. Mendoza, P., Teresa, M., and Salas, A. (1997). “Fonemas yámana (yagán): estructura fonológica de la palabra”, Revista de lingüística teórica y aplicada (Concepción), 35: 125–33. Miyaoka, O. [宮岡伯人] (1992). Yahgan [ヤーガン語]. In The Sanseido Encyclopaedia of Linguistics [言語学大辞典]. Tokyo: Sanseido, iii: 539–43. Mostny, G. et al. (1954). Peine, un pueblo atacameño. Instituto de Geografía. Santiago de Chile. Ortiz, O. (1973). “Los Yámana, veinticinco años después de la misión Lipschütz’’, Apartado de Anales del Instituto de la Patagonia, 4/1–3: 77–105. Salas A. y A. Valencia (1990). El fonetismo del yámana o yagán. Una nota en lingüística de salvataje. Revista de Lingüística Teórica y Aplicada, 28: 147–169. Concepción. Steward, J. H. (ed.). (1963). Handbook of South American Indians, vol. 1, The Marginal Tribes. Smithonian Institution. Buereau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 143. Tonko, J. S. (2001). ‘‘Bilingual Intercultural Education in Chile: An Unfinished Project’’, in Lectures on Endangered Languages 2: From Kyoto Conference 2000. ELPR C-002, 237–248. —— (2004). ‘‘The View from Within. Revitalization of Kawésqar Language Achievements and Perspectives,’’ in Lectures on Endangered Languages 4: From Kyoto Conference 2001. ELPR C-004, 209–214.
12
Indigenous Languages of Australia Michael Walsh
12.1. The indigenous language situation in Australia 12.1.1. How many languages? 12.1.2. Indigenous languages of Australia 12.1.3. Contact varieties 12.1.4. Surveys of the indigenous language situation 12.1.5. Genetic relations and typological characteristics 12.2. Factors contributing to language loss 12.2.1. Stages of language loss 12.2.2. Language documentation 12.3. Addressing language loss 12.3.1. Language maintenance and revival 12.3.2. A range of terminology 12.3.3. Government funding 12.3.4. What can be achieved? 12.3.5. Renaissance in the south-east: Gumbaynggir, Kaurna, and Yorta Yorta 12.3.6. Educational initiatives 12.3.7. Training 12.3.8. Media 12.3.9. Cooperation among indigenous peoples 12.4. Factors contributing to regaining languages
221 221 222 223 223 225 226 226 227 228 228 229 229 230 231 232 233 234 234 234
12.1. The Indigenous Language Situation in Australia 12.1.1. How Many Languages? It is generally agreed that there were about 250 indigenous languages spoken in Australia when the first significant contact was made with outsiders (McConvell and Thieberger 2001: 16). Sustained contact began in earnest in 1788 with the European settlement of Australia and there is a strong correlation between the degree of contact and the relative viability of the languages today. Languages in the south-east of Australia bore the brunt of sustained contact and many of them have been referred to as “extinct”. On the other hand, the languages with the greatest degree of intergenerational transmission are to be found in the remoter parts of northern Australia where contact was much later and sparser.
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Figure 12.1. Indigenous language vitality
12.1.2. Indigenous Languages of Australia The expression “indigenous languages of Australia” has been used in the title because there are in fact two categories of indigenous languages in Australia: the languages of the Torres Strait and all the rest, the languages of Australian Aborigines. Traditionally there were just two distinct languages spoken in the Torres Strait: the Papuan language, Meriam, mainly on Murray Island, and an Australian language which includes varieties like Kalaw Kawaw Ya spoken on Saibai (see also McKay 1996: 69–84). Collectively Torres Strait Islanders and Australian Aborigines see themselves as indigenous people of Australia but they are keen to maintain a separate identity so that, for instance, the national government agency which dealt with these groups used to be called
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the Department of Aboriginal Affairs (with the fine print indicating that this included Torres Strait Islanders) but has now become the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission (henceforward ATSIC). Pama-Nyungan covers about five-sixths of the land mass of Australia so it is not surprising that most of the still healthy languages are among the PamaNyungan group. The healthy languages are all in northern Australia as various languages maps of Australia have shown.
12.1.3. Contact Varieties Contact with outsiders has spawned a range of contact varieties over the centuries. Most of these have been English based with some input from local indigenous languages. Pidgins developed in many areas and in turn influenced each other when they came into contact (see Wurm et al. 1996). With regard to endangerment the situation is complex: in some areas the creoles are spreading and in other areas the number of speakers is declining. Some pidgins have retreated because the conditions which created them have now disappeared. For instance, many Aboriginal people, particularly in northern Australia, were formerly employed in the pastoral industry—often receiving little more than some shelter, clothing, and rations. When full wages for Aboriginal people were introduced, for the most part the pastoral industry could no longer afford to employ them so the conditions under which the pidgin had developed were lost.
12.1.4. Surveys of the Indigenous Language Situation There have been many surveys of the indigenous language situation in Australia (for instance, Dixon 1980; Schmidt 1990; Dixon 1991; House of Representatives Standing Committee on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs 1992; Pearson et al. 1998; McConvell and Thieberger 2001; Dixon 2002) and all are agreed that there has been a decline in the number of languages spoken on a day-to-day basis. McConvell and Thieberger (2001: 2) conclude that ‘There has been a decrease of 90 per cent in the number of Indigenous languages spoken fluently and regularly by all age groups in Australia since 1800.’ However, this is not to say that only 10 per cent of the languages are spoken at all. There is a range of linguistic vitality and it is relatively uncommon to find an indigenous person in Australia who knows not a single word of their ancestral language(s). Indeed an indigenous person who declares that their language has gone will nevertheless know at least a few words and some stock phrases. Such a person
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may be at once proud and ashamed of this knowledge: proud because it is a marker of their linguistic identity but ashamed that they do not know as much as their grandparents. The number of speakers of indigenous languages is therefore a problematic issue. There are degrees of fluency to be taken into account, for instance. Particularly in parts of northern Australia many indigenous people are multilingual and the survey instruments need to take account of such matters as what a person regards as their primary linguistic affiliation. However the overall trend in Australia is towards language shift, so that the Australian Census presents disturbing figures for the percentage of indigenous people over 5 years old who speak an indigenous language: 18 per cent in 1986 but 12 per cent in 2001. This means that a minority of indigenous people use an Indigenous language: in 2001, around 50,000 out of around 400,000 (within a total Australian population of around 17,500,000). Even taking into account the range of factors that might make one query these figures (McConvell and Thieberger 2001: 16–27, 33–45) the picture is disturbing and some have predicted accelerated loss in the years to come: “If these trends continue unchecked, by 2050 there will no longer be any Indigenous languages spoken in Australia” (McConvell and Thieberger 2001: 2). Schmidt’s survey (1990) asserted that of the 250 or so languages at first significant outside contact the current situation could be summarized as: twenty languages – healthy; seventy – weak or dying; 160 – extinct. Of the healthy languages just ten were said to have more than 1,000 speakers. For most of these languages children are learning the language from the earliest age – however in some cases the language of the children is significantly different from that of their grandparents (e.g. Lee 1987):
• • • • • • • • • •
Kala Lagaw Ya (Torres Strait): 3,000–4,000—including Kalaw Kawaw Ya; Warlpiri (Western Northern Territory): 3,000+; Arrandic languages (Central Australia): 3,000+—including Western, Eastern Arrernte, Anmatyerre, Alyawarre, Kaytitj; Western Desert languages, eastern (Central Australia): 3,000+— including Pitjantjatjara, Yankunytjatjara, Luritja, Pintupi; Dhuwal-Dhuwala (Yolngu) (Arnhem Land): 1,700–2,000—including Gupapuyngu, Djambarrpuyngu, Gumatj dialects; Tiwi (Bathurst and Melville Islands): 1,400; Western Desert languages, western (Central Australia): 1,000+ — including Manjiljarra, Yulparija, Kukatja, Ngaanyatjara, Ngaatjatjarra; Anindilyakwa (Groote Island): 1,000+; Walmajarri (Kimberleys) : 1,000; Wik Mungkan (Cape York): 900–1,000.
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Of the seventy languages described as ‘weak or dying’ by Schmidt (above), fifty have less than 100 speakers. While there has been some controversy about these figures and some revisions, they reflect an overall situation in which most languages are either said to be extinct or in imminent danger of becoming so, to be classified as either ‘endangered’ (three), ‘seriously endangered’ (two), or ‘moribund’ (one) or ‘extinct’ (none). There is a wealth of information available on the vitality of Australian languages up to about 2000 at www.deh.gov.au/soe/techpapers/languages/indicator1a.html. And some of the information is provided in maps, e.g. www. deh.gov.au/soe/techpapers/languages/indicator1g.html#map5. See also the map in Wurm (2001) which gives a basic idea of the Australian situation, although it only shows about ninety languages.
12.1.5. Genetic Relations and Typological Characteristics Because Australian languages have been on the Australian continent for 40,000 years or more, genetic classification is controversial. At one time Dixon (1980: 228) asserted ‘that nearly all the languages of Australia form one genetic family’. The qualification, ‘nearly all’, was necessary because some languages were so poorly documented that it was impossible to say one way or the other whether a particular language was related. The most famous example of this concerns the Tasmanian languages where a systematic slaughter of the Tasmanians contributed to rapid language loss. There were also some languages like Djingili and Tiwi which resisted classification: Later it was shown that Djingili was a member of the Mindi subgroup but Tiwi remains an isolate. Despite his earlier assertion Dixon (2002: 38) now states: ‘there is no certainty that the modern languages of mainland Australia do go back—even in a long and indirect fashion—to a single ancestor language.’ What is clearer is the lack of genetic relations of mainland Australian languages with any languages outside Australia. There is no solid evidence of genetic links to any language outside. Typologically Australian languages have been classified into two broad categories: prefixing and suffixing (with the majority of non-Pama-Nyungan languages being of the prefixing type and the majority of the Pama-Nyungan languages being of the suffixing type). This is something of a misnomer as the so-called ‘prefixing’ languages have prefixes and suffixes whereas ‘suffixing’ languages are pretty much non-prefixing. The prefixing languages are confined to a small region (around one-tenth of the landmass) in northern Australia. Many languages follow a mixed pattern of accusative and ergative marking. Phonologically Australian languages are remarkably similar so that
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a canonical consonant system can be set out (Dixon 2002: 63) with individual languages ‘selecting’ a particular consonantal inventory from this template mostly in a predictable way. Around two-thirds of the languages have the simple vowel pattern: i, a, u (Dixon 2002: 64).
12.2. Factors Contributing to Language Loss Many have commented on factors contributing to language loss but there is not always agreement. Dixon (1991: 236) proposes four current factors (since in the past there was also e.g. genocide): (a) white insistence, (b) Aboriginal choice, (c) shift of cultural emphasis; and (d) media pressure. By ‘white insistence’ Dixon means the insistence from non-Aboriginal people that English be used instead of indigenous languages. At times this was enshrined in official policy but more broadly Aboriginal languages were discouraged with varying degrees of explicitness. ‘Aboriginal choice’ includes the decision by parents to speak to their children only in English, thinking that this will give them a ‘better’ chance in life. At one time indigenous people may have used English for some purposes such as work and an ancestral language for traditional activities like hunting and social gatherings with indigenous people. As less time was devoted to traditional activities there was a ‘shift of cultural emphasis’ and English came to predominate. Finally, ‘media pressure’ refers to the barrage of English encountered by children from radio, TV, popular songs, print media, and educational instruction. Later we will see (§ 12.4) that these four factors have now been reshaped as factors promoting language revitalization.
12.2.1. Stages of Language Loss It is not feasible here to enter into all the details for stages of language loss. To start with there are many different schemes, one of the best known being the Graded Intergenerational Disruption Scale (GIDS) proposed by Fishman (1991). There have been critiques concerning the applicability of GIDS to Australian indigenous languages (for example, McConvell 1992, Lo Bianco and Rhydwen 2001: esp. 392–4). A fundamental problem with applying any of the schemes is the lack of detailed knowledge about levels of language proficiency across so many languages. A useful survey of the issues is provided by McConvell and Thieberger (2001: 52–69). Dixon (1991: 237–8) proposes five stages of language loss and then attempts to match the quality of linguistic documentation against these stages. Given the history of research on Australian Indigenous languages in
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which the bulk of detailed work has been carried out in the last fifty years it is not surprising to find that the most poorly documented languages are also the ones which have experienced the greatest degree of loss.
12.2.2. Language Documentation As just mentioned there is a considerable range in the amount of documentation on Australian indigenous languages. Tragically some languages have virtually nothing. For example, one of the languages of the south-east of Australia where contact was earliest and most sustained has just 200 items of vocabulary and almost no grammar (Blake 2002: 164). Even that sort of minimal material will be subject to the vagaries of amateur recordings with no audiotapes to assist with phonetic accuracy. As one would expect, the best-documented languages are to be found in remoter parts of the country, especially northern Australia. Work has commenced on the compilation of a database which, amongst other things, will indicate the level of documentation for each indigenous language (McConvell and Thieberger 2001: 69–70). Fairly recently (based on Dixon 1991: 238–9) this was the general picture in terms of materials available : Good
c.50 languages
Fair
c.110 languages
Poor Minimal
c.50 languages c.40 languages
full grammars, sizeable dictionaries, text materials partial grammars, partial dictionaries, limited text materials minimal grammar, some word lists nil grammar, a few short word lists
More recently Dixon (2002: 2) gives: Good or fairly good
c.95
In preparation Lower quality Word lists only
5 c.110 c.25
reasonable grammar, together with a dictionary or word list descriptions
This array reflects—to a considerable extent—the history of research on Australian languages. Documentation of the languages began in 1770 when Captain James Cook and the botanist Joseph Banks took down word lists in a language of north Queensland, Guugu Yimidhirr. This was a by-product of an exploration party; it was another 200 years before a trained linguist, John Haviland, began a detailed study. Almost all the materials in the first two categories above (‘good or fairly good’ and ‘in preparation’) have been compiled
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by professional linguists from the 1960s onwards. Most of the materials from the next category, ‘lower quality’, were compiled by amateurs often in the nineteenth century. Tragically, very little material was collected for any language for much of the twentieth century: from about 1910 until the late 1950s—amazingly similar to Alaska (Ch. 21, this volume) in general. One notable exception was Arthur Capell of the University of Sydney who pioneered work on a number of languages in northern Australia but whose major focus was on the Pacific. Another significant exception is Gerhardt Laves (Nash 1993) who undertook fieldwork in the period 1928–31—however, his valuable materials only became available from the 1980s. In 1959 Kenneth Hale (Green 2001; Hale 2001) began a remarkable trip which took him across vast tracts of Australia until 1961. During this period he recorded a prodigious amount of material from numerous languages. With the establishment of the first fully-fledged Department of Linguistics at Monash University in Melbourne in 1965 the discipline of linguistics entered a strong growth period with new departments being established, and graduate students carrying out fieldwork based Ph.D.s on Australian languages. With the publication of detailed descriptions by R. M. W. Dixon of the north Queensland languages Dyirbal (1972) and Yidiny (1977) during the 1970s, Australian languages became better known on the international scene. Dixon was a pivotal figure in fostering the documentation of Australian languages through his students (for example, Nick Evans’s detailed description of Kayardild (1995) and Bininj Gun-Wok (2003) as well as through the series co-edited with Barry Blake: Handbook of Australian Languages, 1979– ).
12.3. Addressing Language Loss 12.3.1. Language Maintenance and Revival Given the diversity of language situations in indigenous Australia when it comes to language intervention it is clearly not a matter of one size fits all (McKay 1996, which presents the range of situations including case studies of different types of language intervention; see also McConvell 2001; Ash et al. 2001: 19–35 esp. 20–5). In parts of northern Australia there are still languages being spoken by all generations. In parts of the more settled southeast there are languages for which there is so little knowledge that it is hard to see that much can be done.
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12.3.2. A Range of Terminology Language revival can take a number of forms and this is reflected in a range of terminology. Basically the range of terms tries to capture the range of ambition and possibility that underpins the language revival process. For a language with just 200 items of vocabulary and little or no recorded syntax, it is hard to see how full language reclamation could be possible. The community that identifies with such a language may need to choose a language from somewhere else which is better documented and this choice would entail negotiations with the indigenous owners of that language as well as debate within the local Aboriginal community as to whether this is an appropriate choice. If, however, the ‘depleted’ language is their choice there are still meaningful options which will lead to a heightened sense of group identity. These include naming activities and songs. A school, for instance, might be assigned a name from the local language. A translation of the wellknown song ‘Heads, shoulders, knees, and toes’ basically needs just four words from the ancestral language. To give a concrete example, the Anewan (Nganyaywana) language of New South Wales is known only from a word list of 271 items. The city of Armidale, which sits within traditional Anewan territory, has adopted a policy of naming some places after words from the Anewan language. This involved assistance from a linguist and appropriate negotiations with the Aboriginal community. The result is a heightened acknowledgement towards those who claim an Anewan identity (Reid 2002). Some of the terms are language renewal, language revitalization, language reclamation, language awareness, and language resurrection (McKay 1996: 19–21). At this stage there is no consistency in the terminology although it would be useful if consistency could be achieved (McConvell and Thieberger 2001: 13–15). Whatever the term used in each case it is a matter for the Aboriginal community to decide how much should be done and how the process should be managed.
12.3.3. Government Funding Over the last fifteen years governments have made fairly modest investments in language maintenance and revival. Given the number of languages, the size of the country, and the dispersed nature of indigenous communities, huge amounts of funding would be needed to cater to all needs. Much of the funding has come from the national government (e.g. Dixon 1991: 239; Baldauf 1996; Hosking et al. 2000; McConvell and
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Thieberger 2001: 77–8). It is not always easy to get access to up-to-date figures but a selection will give an idea of the scale of funding. A National Aboriginal Languages Program distributed funds of somewhat more than $A500,000 in 1987–8 and $A1,000,000 in 1988–9. A comparable national programme distributed just over $A4.5 million in 1997–8 and just under $A7.25 million in 1999–2000. There have been numerous reviews about the effectiveness of these programmes in terms of both delivery and outcomes. One difficulty that has been identified has been a lack of suitably qualified indigenous people who can provide the long-term commitment needed to ensure that a programme, once started, will be able to continue effectively. There are also programmes funded through the state and territory governments of Australia. In New South Wales there has recently been a major commitment from the state government with greatly increased funding for language programmes and the development of an Aboriginal languages policy. In particular the Northern Territory has invested in bilingual education programmes since 1973—but these efforts have not been without their problems (Hoogenraad 2001, 2002).
12.3.4. What Can be Achieved? Whenever there is an intervention governments need to have realistic expectations about what can be achieved. Unfortunately these issues have not usually been thought through sufficiently. Thieberger (2002) argues that decisions about the appropriate target for language maintenance programmes are too often driven by structural linguistics where the supposed ideal is intergenerational transmission of the language with all its complexity retained. Such a position is often in conflict with the actual preferences of the group of people who identify with the language in question and in any case may not be achievable. As Thieberger puts it: Fluency in a language may not be the achievable outcome of a language course for a number of reasons, not least of them being the enormity of the task perceived by learners of the language. For languages with few or no speakers we should be able to construct language programmes in which the use of a small number of terms in the target language, for purposes of identity, is a sufficient and realistic outcome. (Thieberger 2002: 310)
Having said this Thieberger warns that there are problems with this less ambitious aim: for instance, members of the community may be dissatisfied, preferring an all-or-nothing approach (2002: 324).
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In addition, people outside the community may have stereotypes about the supposed simplicity of Aboriginal language reinforced. Others may regard the initiative as fundamentally wrong-headed. Dixon (1991: 239), for instance, complains of scarce resources from a national government programme for indigenous language maintenance being misdirected: “Many grants have been made to communities where a language ceased to be spoken many years in the past, with the aim of ‘reviving’ it (an impossible task)”. So there is a point of cleavage between those who believe in ‘full’ language maintenance/reclamation and those who accept other options, like Blake (2002: 165–6): Whether people manage to speak a language is not the only criterion by which the enterprise of language reclamation should be judged. Language can be a powerful marker of identity and even some knowledge of a language can serve that function and be a source of pride.
12.3.5. Renaissance in the South-East: Gumbaynggir, Kaurna, and Yorta Yorta In an earlier survey the situation for the south-eastern part of Australia had been described in the bleakest of terms: There are today many people of part-Aboriginal descent in the highly settled parts of Australia (Victoria, New South Wales and the southern parts of Queensland, South Australia and Western Australia) but virtually no full-bloods. Only one language is still spoken in this area (Bandjalang, in northern New South Wales), and that only by a handful of old people; over 100 languages have already become extinct. (Dixon 1991: 235)
In fact a number of languages in the south-east have been engaged in language revival (McKay 1996: 134 ff.). One of the better-documented cases of language revival concerns Kaurna, the language of the Adelaide Plains. Like many indigenous languages which had borne the brunt of early and sustained contact Kaurna had not been in everyday use since some time in the nineteenth century. During the 1980s Kaurna people began reinstating Kaurna place names. By 1997 a hundred public speeches in Kaurna were being delivered in a year. An initial focus for this language revival was the Aboriginal-controlled Kaurna Plains School. At first younger children were instructed in the language. Eventually instruction extended to senior high school and at times to university level (Amery 2000, 2001; McKay 1996: 135–6).
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In New South Wales the Gumbaynggir language had fallen into disuse so that by 1994 there were just ten known speakers. However, from the mid 1980s, the Gumbaynggir community has made determined efforts to reverse the trend. The result is a growing number of younger adult speakers who are now passing on the language to their children, reinforcing the instruction they are receiving at a number of schools in the area (McKay 1996: 45–54; Walsh 2001). In north-east Victoria the Yorta Yorta language has also made a comeback—injecting life into a supposedly ‘dead’ language. Much of this effort has been focused on teaching Aboriginal students at senior high school level (McKay 1996: 145–6; see also www.fatsil.org/LOTM/oct99.htm). The result has been a marked lift in self-esteem among students who, prior to this language instruction, had often been quite troubled.
12.3.6. Educational Initiatives Whatever the intended target there is a range of options for delivering teaching and learning outcomes. Some of these are explored in Hartman and Henderson (1994). Apart from teaching indigenous people their own languages some of the wider community has come to learn or learn about indigenous languages. An important initiative in this regard is the development of an Australian Indigenous Languages Framework (SSABSA 1996a) which describes the range of language situations and offers a valuable approach to introducing indigenous languages to the wider community (see also SSABSA 1996b, 1996c). Another significant initiative is the recent development of an Aboriginal Languages Syllabus K-10 (from the earliest schooling to the latter years of high school). When teaching indigenous people their own languages, a range of issues must be addressed: who should teach the language; who can learn it; which language should it be; where should the language be taught? Some indigenous people (like the Gumbaynggir; §12.3.5) have very definite views. Some believe that only an indigenous person should teach the language; only an indigenous person can learn the language; only the local language should be taught or learnt and it should not be taught in a non-indigenous institution (see also Walsh 2003). If Aboriginal people are to teach the language, do they need to be taught how to teach? Again there is a range of opinion. Some Aboriginal people claim that one’s Aboriginality is sufficient qualification, while others concede that training is not just useful but necessary. For example, in New South
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Wales one Aboriginal man lamented his lack of professional training: for years he had been trying to teach his language in a school situation and now regretted how much wasted effort had been expended because of his lack of expertise (Kevin Lowe, p.c.). Apart from training in language teaching some Aboriginal people have queried the need for expertise in linguistics. As with many of the issues so far discussed there is a wide range of opinion, from those who see no value whatsoever in expertise in linguistics to those who see it as an essential ingredient in the process of reclaiming one’s language. For those in the latter camp the idea of having Aboriginal people trained in relevant areas of linguistics has considerable appeal. A few NSW Aboriginal people already have some expertise in linguistics and more would like to gain the relevant training. Preliminary discussions have commenced about mounting a training programme for indigenous people modelled in part on the American Indian Languages Development Institute (McCarty et al. 1997).
12.3.7. Training Such a programme would complement training that has been in progress for many years. For instance, the School of Australian Linguistics trained “some two thousand speakers of about a hundred Australian languages and dialects between 1974 and 1989” (Black and Breen 2001: 161). Since then the College of Australian Languages and Linguistics has taken on this role (see also McKay 1996). Both institutions have been based in the Northern Territory but have an Australia-wide brief: to give indigenous people the necessary skills to engage in linguistic studies of their own languages and produce materials appropriate to community needs. A small number of indigenous people have pursued similar training through the Summer Institute of Linguistics and universities. Some have produced the kind of insightful studies only possible from a native speaker perspective (for example, Granites and Laughren 2001). Once indigenous people have acquired the relevant skills, two difficulties can arise: ‘retirement’ and information delivery. In small indigenous populations there will always be a need for talented individuals who can form a bridge between their own and the wider community’s culture, for instance, to handle government and other services. All too often an indigenous person who has gained training in linguistics and allied studies is called upon to fill such a role and in so doing enters into ‘retirement’ from the specialized tasks
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of language maintenance or revitalization. The other difficulty is information delivery: often the speakers and owners of an indigenous language will be dispersed across a large area in small communities. Part of the solution to this problem is through the media.
12.3.8. Media Initially, print media were used to distribute information (McKay 1996: 110–12; Molnar and Meadows 2001), but more recently other media have supplemented these: “Indigenous radio and television help to sustain language and culture; they provide a vital channel of news and information for Indigenous people; and they have the potential to provide a means for better communication between Indigenous and other Australian.” (Productivity Commission 2000: 28, quoted in Molnar and Meadows 2001: 19–20). Some see broadcasting as a two-edged sword, with one commentator, the Aboriginal linguist Dr Eve Fesl, describing satellite TV as ‘cultural nerve gas’ (Molnar and Meadows 2001: 47). With the widespread advent of IT, people are looking to computers, CDROMs, and the Internet as a way to assist in the distribution of information. This can also contribute to cooperation among indigenous people.
12.3.9. Cooperation Among Indigenous Peoples One example of cooperation among indigenous people concerns the First Voices project based in Canada (www.fpcf.ca/resources/First%20Voices/ default.htm). Australian indigenous people have already been in contact with this project and are considering ways of adapting the Canadian experience to local needs. Within Australia the important task of fostering cooperation among indigenous people has been taken on by the Federation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Languages (FATSIL; www.fatsil.org). Although language maintenance efforts will continue to be focused at a local level there is a place for a national strategic approach to retaining and regaining language.
12.4. Factors Contributing to Regaining Languages Today the former insistence by whites that indigenous languages not be used has been muted. It is an increasingly common occurrence for public gatherings to acknowledge Aboriginal ownership of the place in which
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the gathering is taking place. On such occasions indigenous people will often use some Aboriginal words and sometimes give short speeches in an Aboriginal language. This was extremely rare a mere twenty years ago and the move can be seen as an indication that Aboriginal people are now choosing to make their languages more public. In Dixon’s account (§ 12.2) it was Aboriginal choice which led to a shift away from Aboriginal languages. Now Aboriginal people are choosing to embrace their own languages in a variety of ways: naming activities; public speeches; songs; reclaiming and relearning. In Dixon’s terms it was a shift of cultural emphasis that led to language shift: indigenous languages became confined to specialized cultural domains and as those domains petered out so did the languages. In recent times indigenous peoples are creating new domains in which indigenous languages can be used: a shift of cultural emphasis—but one which fosters indigenous language use. To an extent, the media that have privileged English over indigenous languages can also be used to give new and greater prominence to indigenous languages. Indigenous people in central Australia, for instance, have said that they cried—with pride and joy—when they first heard their languages being broadcast.
References Amery, R. (1993). “Encoding new concepts in old languages: a case study of Kaurna, the language of the Adelaide Plains”, Australian Aboriginal Studies, 1: 33–47. —— (2000). Warrabarna Kaurna! Reclaiming an Australian Language. Lisse: Swets & Zeitlinger. —— (2001). “Language planning and language revival”, Current Issues in Language Planning, 2/2–3: 137–221. —— (2002). “Indigenous language programs in South Australian schools: issues, dilemmas and solutions” (www.boardofstudies.sw.edu.au/aboriginal_research/ #language_c). Ash, A., Fermino, J., and Hale, K. (2001). “Diversity in language maintenance and restoration: a reason for optimism”, in L. Hinton and K. Hale (eds.), The Green Book of Language Revitalization in Practice. San Diego: Academic Press, 19–35. ATSIC (1999). Digital Dreaming: A National Review of Indigenous Media and Communications, Executive Summary (based on a 500-page report). Canberra: ATSIC. Baldauf, R. B. (1996). “Back from the brink? Revival, restoration, and maintenance of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander languages”, Southwest Journal of Linguistics, 15/1–2: 1–22. Black, P., and Breen, G. (2001). “The School of Australian Linguistics”, in Simpson et al. 2001: 161–78. Blake, B. (2002). “Reclaiming languages in Aboriginal Victoria”, in D. Bradley and M. Bradley (eds.), Language Endangerment and Language Maintenance. London: RoutledgeCurzon, 156–66.
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Dixon, R. M. W. (1972). The Dyirbal Language of North Queensland. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. —— (1977). A Grammar of Yidin. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. —— (1980). The Languages of Australia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. —— (1991). “The endangered languages of Australia, Indonesia and Oceania”, in R. H. Robins and E. M. Uhlenbeck (eds.), Endangered Languages. Oxford: Berg, 229–55. —— (2002). Australian Languages: Their Nature and Development. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Evans, N. (1995). A Grammar of Kayardild, with Historical-Comparative Notes on Tangkic. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. —— (2003). Bininj Gun-Wok: A Pan-Dialectal Grammar of Mayali, Kunwinjku and Kune. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics. Fishman, J. (1991). Reversing Language Shift: Theoretical and Empirical Foundations of Assistance to Threatened Languages. Clevedon: Multilingual Matters. Granites, R. J., and Laughren, M. (2001). “Semantic contrasts in Warlpiri verbal morphology: a Warlpiri’s verbal view”, in Simpson et al. 2001: 151–9. Green, J. (2001). “ ‘Both sides of the bitumen’: Ken Hale remembering 1959–1961”, in Simpson et al. 2001: 29–43. Hale, S. W. (2001). “Reminiscences of the trip to Australia 1959”, in Simpson et al. 2001: 19–28. Hartman, D., and Henderson, J. (eds.) (1994). Aboriginal Languages in Education. Alice Springs: IAD Press. Henderson, J., and Nash, D. (1997) (appeared May 1998). Culture and Heritage: Indigenous Languages. [Abstract] State of Environment Report Technical Paper Series (Culture and Heritage). Canberra: Environment Australia, part of the Department of Environment. Accessible as pdf file (view with Adobe Acrobat) via www.ea.gov. au/soe/ techpapers/series1/pubs/ indigeno.pdf. Hoogenraad, R. (2001). “Critical reflections on the history of bilingual education in Central Australia”, in Simpson et al. (eds.) 2001: 123–50. —— (2002). “Language and culture programs in NSW: the view from Central Australia” (www.boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au/ aboriginal_research/#language_d). Hosking, D. F., Lonsdale, T. J., Troy, J. F., and Walsh, M. J. (2000). Strong Language Strong Culture: New South Wales Strategic Language Study. Final Report and Strategy Action Plan. Canberra: AIATSIS. House of Representatives Standing Committee on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs (1992). Language and Culture: A Matter of Survival. Canberra: Australian Government Printing Service. Laughren, M. (2000). “Australian Aboriginal languages: their contemporary status and functions”, in R. M. W. Dixon and B. Blake (eds.), The Handbook of Australian Languages, vol. v. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1–32. Lee, Jennifer (1987). Tiwi Today: A Study of Language Change in a Contact Situation. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics. Lo Bianco, J., and Rhydwen, M. (2001). “Is the extinction of Australia’s Indigenous Languages inevitable?”, in J. A. Fishman (ed.), Can Threatened Languages be Saved? Reversing Language Shift, Revisited: A 21st Century Perspective. Clevedon: Multilingual Matters, 391–422. McCarty, T. L., Watahomigie, L. J., Yamamoto, A. Y., and Zepeda, O. (1997). “School– community–university collaborations: the American Indian Language Development
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Institute”, in J. Reyhner (ed.), Teaching Indigenous Languages. Flagstaff: Northern Arizona University, 85–104. McConvell, P. (1992). “Review of Fishman (1991)”, Australian Journal of Linguistics, 12/1: 209–20. —— (2000). “Two-way research resources for Indigenous languages: positioning resources in the Garma”. Paper to Linguistic Exploration: Workshop on Web-Based Language Documentation and Description. —— (2001). “Looking for the two-way street: Indigenous Australians battle to keep their languages strong”, Cultural Survival Quarterly, 25/2: 18–25. —— (2002). “Linking resources, linking communities: an Australian Indigenous Languages database, multimedia projects, and the role of metadata”. Paper for workshop on Resources and Tools in Field Linguistics, LREC Conference, Las Palmas, May 2002 (accessible through www.mpi.nl/lrec). —— and Thieberger, N. (2001). State of Indigenous Languages in Australia: 2001. Canberra: Department of the Environment and Heritage (www.ea.gov.au/soe/ techpapers/languages/). —— Amery, R., Gale, M.-A., Nicholls, C., Nicholls, J., Rigney, L. I., and Tur, S. U. (2002). ‘Keep that Language Going!’ A Needs-Based Review of the Status of Indigenous Languages in South Australia. Canberra: AIATSIS. McKay, G. (1996). The Land Still Speaks: Review of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Maintenance and Development Needs and Activities. National Board of Employment, Education and Training, Commissioned Report 44. Canberra: AGPS. Mercurio, A., and Amery, R. (1996). “Can senior secondary studies help to maintain and strengthen Australia’s Indigenous languages?”, in J. Bobaljik, R. Pensalfini, and L. Storto (eds.), Papers on Language Endangerment and the Maintenance of Linguistic Diversity. MIT Working Papers in Linguistics 28. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 25–57. Molnar, H., and Meadows, M. (2001). Songlines to Satellites: Indigenous Communication in Australia, the South Pacific and Canada. Annandale: Pluto Press. Nash, D. (1993). “Gerhardt Laves [obituary]”, Australian Aboriginal Studies, 1/1993 [1994]: 101–2. —— (1998). “Indigenous Languages component” (esp. pp.19–20, 77–86), in M. Pearson et al., State of the Environment: Environmental Indicators for National State of Environment Reporting—Natural and Cultural Heritage, by State of Environment (Environmental Indicator Reports). Canberra: Environment Australia, Department of the Environment. Pearson, M., Johnston, D., Lennon, J., McBryde, I., Marshall, D., Nash, D., and Wellington, B. (1998). State of the Environment: Environmental Indicators for National State of Environment Reporting—Natural and Cultural Heritage, by State of Environment (Environmental Indicator Reports). Canberra: Environment Australia, Department of the Environment. Productivity Commission (2000). Broadcasting: Inquiry Report. Report No. 11. Canberra: Ausinfo, 3 Mar. Reid, N. (2002). “Creating Aboriginal placenames: applied philology in Armidale City”, in L. Hercus, F. Hodges, and J. Simpson (eds.), The Land is a Map: Placenames of Indigenous Origin in Australia. Canberra: Pandanus Books, 241–54. Schmidt, A. (1990). The Loss of Australia’s Aboriginal Language Heritage. Canberra: Aboriginal Studies Press.
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Simpson, J., Nash, D., Laughren, M., Austin, P., and Alpher, B. (eds.) (2001). Forty Years On: Ken Hale and Australian Languages. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics. SSABSA (1996a). Australia’s Indigenous Languages Framework. Wayville: Senior Secondary Assessment Board of South Australia. —— (1996b). Australia’s Indigenous Languages in Practice. Wayville: Senior Secondary Assessment Board of South Australia. —— (1996c). Australia’s Indigenous Languages, ed. D. Nathan. Wayville, SA: Senior Secondary Assessment Board of South Australia, and Wakefield Press. With CD-ROM. Thieberger, N. (2002). “Extinction in whose terms? Which parts of a language constitute a target for language maintenance programmes?”, in D. Bradley and M. Bradley (eds.), Language Endangerment and Language Maintenance. London: Routledge Curzon, 310–28. Walsh, M. (2001). “A case of language revitalisation in ‘settled’ Australia”, Current Issues in Language Planning, 2/2–3: 251–8. —— (2002). “Teaching NSW’s Indigenous languages: lessons from elsewhere” (www. boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au/ aboriginal_research/#language_e) (www.boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au/aboriginal_research/pdf_do/teach_indig_lang_nsw_walsh.doc). —— (2003). “Raising Babel: language revitalization in New South Wales, Australia”, in R. M. Brown (ed.), Endangered Language and Identity. Proceedings of the FEL Conference, Broome, Western Australia, 22–4 Sept. 2003. Bath: Foundation for Endangered Languages, 113–17. Wurm, S. A. (ed.) (2001). Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger of Disappearing, 2nd edn., revised, enlarged, and updated. Paris: UNESCO. —— Mühlhäusler, P., and Tryon, D. T. (eds.) (1996). Atlas of Languages of Intercultural Communication in the Pacific, Asia, and the Americas. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
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Languages of New Guinea Alexandra Y. Aikhenvald and Tonya N. Stebbins
13.1. Linguistic situation in New Guinea area 13.2. Genetic diversity in the New Guinea area 13.2.1. The Austronesian languages in New Guinea 13.2.2. The Papuan languages in New Guinea 13.3. Typological diversity among Papuan languages 13.3.1. Phonology 13.3.2. Morphology 13.3.3. Syntax 13.3.4. Documentation 13.4. Linguistic diversity and language endangerment in Papua New Guinea
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13.1. Linguistic Situation in New Guinea Area The New Guinea region (as defined below) is one of the most linguistically diverse and complex areas in the world, with over 1,000 languages spoken in an area of about 900,000 square km. About three to four hundred languages spoken there belong to the Austronesian family. Other, non-Austronesian, languages are often referred to as “Papuan” (see Foley 1986: 1–3, 8; 1997a; Dixon 1991: 245). The term “Papuan” is a rough denomination subsuming over sixty language families, which are not demonstrably related, and a fair number of isolates in the area. This term is used for convenience (similarly, perhaps, to terms like “Paleo-Siberian” (§ 20.1, this volume) or “Amazonian” (§ 10.1, this volume)). The island of New Guinea includes the state of Papua New Guinea and the Indonesian province of Papua (formerly known as Irian Jaya). The language area centred on New Guinea stretches from the Halmahera and Timor islands in the west to the Solomon Islands in the east. Due to the limitations of space, we will be able to mention only a fraction of languages in the area, and a small portion of the varieties of genetic groupings that have been put Our deepest gratitude goes to Les Bruce, Wiem Burung, Cathy Easton, Karl Franklin, Claudia Gerstner-Link, John Hajek, Anthony Grant, Gerd Jendraschek, Joan Kale, Ger Reesink, René van den Berg, Sheena Van der Mark, Adam Bowles, and Perihan Avdi and especially R. M. W. Dixon, for their insightful comments. Endless thanks go to Cindi and Jim Farr, Steve Parker, and René van den Berg for allowing Aikhenvald to undertake research in the SIL archives in Ukarumpa in 1997 and 2004. Abbreviations: A–subject of transitive verb; AN–Austronesian; DS–different subject; du–dual; O–object; sg–singular.
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Figure 13.1. Papuan languages of the New Guinea area and their approximate locations
forward. Figure 13.1 indicates the approximate locations of some of the major Papuan families which are referred to in this chapter. For an overview of Austronesian languages spoken in the area, see Chapter 14 (this volume), and discussion in Lynch et al. (2002). The state of Papua New Guinea (independent since 1975) features over 830 languages (Grimes 2000; Nekitel 1998; Ford n.d.; Landweer 2000; Whitehead 1994 gives a figure of 870), with the number of Papuan languages exceeding 600 (see Foley 1986: 1–3; Dixon 1991: 245). Only about 20 per cent of the population speak Austronesian languages. The approximate numbers of languages and their speakers are given in Table 13.1 (based on Ford n.d., Nekitel 1998: 90–116, and Grimes 2000). The only language spoken by over 100,000 people is Enga (Engan family, EHP),
Table 13.1. The languages of Papua New Guinea and approximate numbers of speakers Number of speakers
Austronesian
Non-Austronesian
Over 10,000–100,000 1,000–10,000 Over 500–under 1,000 Between 100 and 500 Fewer than 100
about 12 about 100 about 30 under 50 about 10
about 60 about 230 about 105 about 170 about 50
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whose speakers number between 164,750 (Grimes 2000: 755) and 200,000 (Foley 2000b: 359). Indigenous languages traditionally used as lingua francas include the Austronesian languages Suau (Milne Bay), spoken over the south-west end of Papua New Guinea (now with only about 6,795 L1 users and about 14,000 L2 users), and Dobu (Milne Bay), spoken off the islands of Eastern Papua (now with 8,000 L1 and 100,000 L2 speakers). Kuanua (or Tolai), an Austronesian language with about 100,000 speakers, is still used as a lingua franca in East New Britain (Fry 1977). (See Wurm 1977a and Foley 1986 on missionary lingua francas.) Three post-contact lingua francas dominate the linguistic scene in contemporary Papua New Guinea. Tok Pisin (Melanesian Pidgin) is currently the most important language spoken in most provinces (especially in the northern parts of New Guinea: see Ch. 7, this volume). The estimated numbers are 50,000 first language speakers, and over 2,000,000 second language users (Grimes 2000). (The total population of the country is 4,600,000 people.) English was the official language of the colonial administration in the southern half of the country (formerly known as Papua) from 1875 and of the northern half (formerly called New Guinea) from 1919. It is now rapidly gaining ground as a means of schooling and communication, especially in East Sepik province, Western province, and a number of other coastal provinces (see Sankoff 1980: 126–70). Hiri Motu is a Creole based on the Austronesian language Motu (still spoken by about 14,000 people in Central province).1 It developed around 1900 as a contact language for speakers from different language backgrounds in the Motu-speaking environment around Port Moresby (Dutton 1997), especially members of the indigenous police (hence its alternative name Police Motu). Hiri Motu is still widely used in the southern part of country (roughly corresponding to the old administrative division of Papua, covering Central, Oro, Gulf provinces, and parts of Milne Bay, as well as of Western province), but appears to be receding under the pressure from Tok Pisin. It has hardly any mother tongue speakers. The number of second language learners reported for Hiri Motu varies from 120,000 (Grimes 2000: 276) to 200,000 (Foley 1986: 31). 1 The origin of Hiri Motu remains uncertain (Dutton 1997). Until recently, it was assumed that Hiri Motu was a continuation of a trade language used by the Motu on annual trading voyages, or hiri, to the Gulf of Papua, where they traded with other linguistic groups. However, present-day Hiri Motu most likely developed from a special variety of simplified “foreigner talk” the Motu used with those who came to visit or trade in their own area.
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The 1975 constitution of Papua New Guinea gives recognition to all languages, specifying that every citizen has the right to literacy in English, Tok Pisin, Hiri Motu, or a vernacular (Whitehead 1994). Traditional multilingualism, however, tends to be replaced by new diglossic and triglossic patterns with Tok Pisin and English. This, typically unstable, relationship often results in the dominance of the two lingua francas and the loss of the vernacular. According to materials in Sankoff (1980: 129–30), in 1971 the percentage of Papua New Guineans aged 10 and over who were unable to speak any of the official languages ranged from 5.7 per cent in New Ireland to 82.9 per cent in the Southern Highlands. Now the number of people with no knowledge of at least one official language is negligible. We return to the problems of language endangerment in Papua New Guinea in § 13.4. The Indonesian province of Papua has about 260 languages (Grimes 2000: 469; Wurm 2001), many of them non-Austronesian. Over 50 Papuan languages are also spoken in Northern Halmahera, Alor and Pantar, west of Timor, and the coastal areas and mountainous interior of eastern Timor. According to Wurm (2001: 394), at least forty-three languages in Papua are highly endangered or already extinct, and over seventy have fewer than 400 speakers. Languages in the Bird’s Head Peninsula spoken by over 10,000 people include Maybrat (Dol 1999), Hatam, and Meyah (Reesink 2002a, 2002b). The largest language in Papua is Western Dani in the Central Highlands area, with 180,000 speakers. Due to the current political situation in the Indonesian-controlled province of Papua and the compulsory spread of Indonesian and other languages (resulting from a settlement policy known as “transmigration”: Dixon 1991: 242–3), all minority languages in the area are endangered. According to Wurm (2001: 393–4), “the slide from a healthy state of a language to endangerment and extinction tends to be more rapid in Irian Jaya than is usual in Papua New Guinea” (despite the state’s obligation to support the maintenance of “regional languages” proclaimed in the constitution: Jones 1994). The main causes for language endangerment in Papua include migration to the centres and the impact of Indonesian-language electronic media and, especially, of compulsory Indonesian-language education (the latter contributing towards negative attitudes to the minority languages). The activities of the Summer Institute of Linguistics in the domains of language documentation, literacy, and education in local languages are nowadays restricted, to the detriment of language maintenance (Wiem Burung, p.c.).
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When the Solomon Islands became independent in 1978, English was proclaimed its official national language. The main lingua franca in the country is Solomons Islands Pidgin (or Pijin) (French 1994). Of sixty-nine living languages in the state of Solomon Islands, seven are non-Austronesian. These are: Bilua, on Vella LaVella Island, with 8,000 to 9,000 speakers; Lavukaleve, on Russel Islands, with 2,000 speakers; Baniata, on South Rendova Island, with 1,480 speakers; Savosavo, on Savo Island, with 2,200 speakers; and Nanggu, with 450 speakers; Ayiwo, with 7,100, and Santa Cruz, with 5,000, on the Santa Cruz Islands. Terrill (2003: 11–12) reports that, in spite of the current number of 2,000 speakers, Lavukaleve is seriously endangered: many children grow up learning just Pijin. The same fate appears to face Bilua (Obata 2003), in spite of a higher number of speakers. Santa Cruz languages have undergone drastic simplification and restructuring under the influence of Pijin, and are just as threatened as all the rest (see Wurm 1992). With the current political turmoil in the area the future for these languages appears grim. The remainder of the chapter is organized as follows. In § 13.2, we consider the genetic make-up of the New Guinea languages and their major families. Some distinctive typological characteristics of Papuan languages are discussed in § 13.3. We briefly discuss the problems of language endangerment in Papua New Guinea in § 13.4.
13.2. Genetic Diversity in the New Guinea Area With over sixty language families and dozens of isolates, the genetic diversity of the New Guinea area is without parallel. First, we briefly look at Austronesian languages in New Guinea (§ 13.2.1). Then, in § 13.2.2, we focus on Papuan (non-Austronesian) languages.
13.2.1. The Austronesian Languages in New Guinea The largest family of languages spoken in New Guinea is the Austronesian family. It is also one of the largest well-established families in the world, with 1,000–1,200 member languages spread from Taiwan and South-East Asia to Hawaii and Madagascar. The migration of Austronesian peoples into New Guinea is considered to be fairly recent (going back to approximately 4,000– 5,000 years ago: Foley 1994, 2000b).
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The ancestors of Austronesian languages are believed to have arrived from the west, spreading through the Philippines and Indonesia to the north coast of the island of New Guinea. This hypothesis is corroborated by the distribution pattern of Austronesian languages: they are spoken along the northern and eastern coasts of the New Guinea island and neighbouring islands. Hardly any Austronesian languages are spoken inland, or along the south coast of New Guinea, from around 200 km west of Port Moresby to the western tip of the island. The expansion of Austronesian languages in the islands close to New Guinea (including the Bismarck Archipelago, Bougainville, and Solomon Islands) resulted in the contraction and extinction of non-Austronesian languages spoken by earlier inhabitants. Nowadays, Kuot is the only nonAustronesian language spoken in New Ireland (Lindström 2002). Just two non-Austronesian languages are left in West New Britain: Anêm (Thurston 1987, 1992), on the north-west coast, and Wasi (Ata, Pele-Ata) in the Nakanai mountains. It is likely that many more non-Austronesian languages were originally spoken in these areas (see Thurston 1987, 1992: 125; Chowning 1996: 8–9); a number of non-Austronesian languages have become extinct during the past hundred years (for instance, Butam and Makolkol in East New Britain: Stebbins forthcoming). For possible effects of a nonAustronesian substratum in the Oceanic subgroup of Austronesian, see Lynch et al. (2002: 15–19). The Austronesian languages of New Guinea belong to the CentralEastern Malayo-Polynesian subgroup—see Fig. 13.2 (Foley 2000b; Lynch et al. 2002: 4). Oceanic languages in New Guinea (over 250) are spoken to the east of Cenderawasih Bay in Papua. A few Austronesian languages in Papua belong to the South Halmahera-West New Guinea branch. A small group
Central-Eastern Malayo-Polynesian
Central Malayo-Polynesian
Eastern Malayo-Polynesian
South Halmahera/West New Guinea
Oceanic
Figure 13.2. Austronesian languages and their subgroups in the New Guinea area
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of languages in the Bomberai Peninsula in Papua are Central MalayoPolynesian. Oceanic is one of the best-known subgroups of Austronesian, with fairly detailed reconstructions of its proto-language (see Lynch 1998; Lynch et al. 2002; Pawley and Ross 1995). Considerably less is known about the two other Austronesian groups in the New Guinea area (see Blust 1993; and a summary in Foley 2000b: 362). A state-of-the art description and study of the subgrouping, and reconstruction of Oceanic languages, is in Lynch et al. (2002). The Oceanic languages spoken in New Guinea display unusual features, due to their interaction with non-Austronesian languages (see Ross 1994, on the influence of the non-Austronesian substratum on the phonologies of Oceanic languages in New Ireland). Many Oceanic languages of New Guinea have lost the typical Austronesian decimal counting system (Lynch 1998: 244, 245), replacing it with quinary systems common among Papuan languages. Prolonged contact between Austronesian and non-Austronesian languages often resulted in further structural changes. As an outcome of the impact of the non-Austronesian language Waskia (Ross 2001), Takia developed postpositions and verbal enclitics as clause-linking devices, and the orders Noun-Adjective and Noun-Determiner. All Oceanic languages of the Bel subfamily in Madang province—to which Takia belongs—have adopted verb-final order and developed medial verb forms; one of these languages, Dami, has also developed a same-subject/different-subject switch reference system, typical for Papuan languages (Roberts 1997: 123, 192; Ross 1987). In a comprehensive case study of a language contact situation in New Guinea, Thurston (1982, 1987) presents ample evidence of lexical and grammatical borrowing between Anêm, the only Papuan language of the north-west of New Britain, and the coastal Austronesian languages Kabana, Amara, Kove, and Lusi. In these languages, reciprocal is marked by a suffix on the verb, rather than by a prefix, as is usual in Oceanic languages, just as in Anêm (Thurston 1987: 79–80). Tense/aspect, negation, and modality are marked at the end of the verb phrase rather than with prefixes or preverbal particles, as would be the case in other Oceanic languages outside the contact area with Anêm. Due to the influence of Anêm, or other, now extinct, Papuan language(s), the four Oceanic languages have lost prenominal articles, another typically Oceanic feature, which survive only as part of a nominal stem. Anêm, in its turn, acquired a number of typically Oceanic features,
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such as the inclusive-exclusive distinction in pronouns, and the division of nouns into inalienably possessed and two types of alienably possessed (“edible” and “neutral”) (Thurston 1987: 91). Semantic convergence between Anêm and its Oceanic neighbours resulted in a large number of shared idioms and semantic patterns (e.g. “my ankle” is literally “neck of my foot”, “my toenail” is “claw of my foot”: Thurston 1987: 80–7). Contacts with Papuan languages have contributed to the typological diversity of Oceanic languages, resulting in the development of unusual features. A striking example is the multiple classifier system in Kilivila (Senft 1996), somewhat reminiscent of multiple classifiers in Papuan languages elsewhere in New Guinea (see § 13.3.2).
13.2.2. The Papuan Languages in New Guinea The extreme genetic diversity among the non-Austronesian languages in New Guinea, with numerous families interspersed with isolates, remains a puzzle for comparative linguists. We first discuss well-established genetic units, and then turn to proposals on a larger scale. A. The Sepik river basin (which includes East Sepik and Sandaun provinces) is the most complex linguistic area within New Guinea. It has about 200 languages, a language density unparalleled anywhere else in the world. The Sepik river basin displays cultural as well as linguistic diversity and fragmentation, perhaps more so than other areas of New Guinea. Reasons for this include geographic diversity, inaccessible terrain, patterns of language contact, and language attitudes (see Foley 1986, 1988: 167–8; Aikhenvald 2004b). The average size of language communities is significantly lower than in the Highlands. Established families in the Sepik area include (see code labels on Figure 13.1): The Lower Sepik-Ramu family. This consists of: S1. The Lower Sepik family with six languages spoken by about 12,000 people, in the Lower Sepik and the adjoining riverine and coastal regions, and S2. The Lower Ramu family with eight languages spoken by about 11,000 people in the lower reaches of the Ramu river. The genetic relationship of S1 and S2 was demonstrated by Foley (2000a). S3. The Ndu family with eight languages spoken by over 100,000 people along the course of the middle Sepik river and to its north (Laycock 1965; Aikhenvald 2004b, forthcoming);
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S4. The Sepik Hill family with sixteen languages spoken by about 8,000 people in the foothills between the central range and the flood plain of the Sepik river, with the southernmost members extending across the central range in the Southern Highlands and the Enga Provinces (Bruce 1984: 296); S5. The Ram family with three languages spoken by about 1,200 people in the southern foothills of the Torricelli Range in the Sandaun Province (Feldman 1986); S6. The Tama family with four or five languages spoken by about 10,000 people in the Ambunti district of the East Sepik province and the Sandaun province, stretching into the lower foothills of the Torricelli mountains (see Foreman 1974).
An attempt has been made to establish genetic links between S3–S6, and a few other languages of the Sepik area, such as Wogamusin-Chenapian, Kwoma-Kwanga, and Abau (Foley 2000a, 2000b), grouping them into a larger Sepik family. Though some similarities in pronouns appear suggestive, much more comparative analysis is required, including low-level reconstructions for individual language families, before any definitive conclusion can be reached. S7. The Skou family with eight quite closely related languages, spoken by about 6,000 people along the northern coast of New Guinea and the adjacent areas of Papua (Donohue 2002a, 2002b, forthcoming). S8. The Torricelli family with about fifty languages spoken by over 80,000 people in the area of the Torricelli mountains, between the north coast and the Sepik river, spreading to the north into coastal areas of western Madang province.
The Torricelli languages share a number of highly unusual typological features, such as complex noun class systems with largely phonological assignment, irregular plurals for nouns, and complicated pronominal cross-referencing on the verb (see Fortune 1942; Nekitel 1985; Conrad and Wogiga 1991; Dobrin 1999; a brief comparative study of Arapesh languages is in Conrad 1978). Further comparative work is required to demonstrate convincingly that these languages form a family and not just an area (Foley 1986: 241–2). B. The New Guinea Highlands are home to over a dozen well-established genetic units, including: H1. Angan family, with twelve languages spoken by over 60,000 people in the mountains in the Eastern Highlands, Morobe, and Gulf provinces, and in the lowland areas of the Gulf province;
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H2. Binanderean family, with fourteen languages spoken by over 50,000 people in Oro province; H3. Kalam-Kobon family, with three languages and about 15,000 speakers on the northern slopes of the central highlands in Madang and Western Highlands province; H4. Huon family, with fifteen languages spoken by over 80,000 people on the Huon Peninsula; H5. Engan family, with eight languages spoken by over 330,000 people in Enga province and the adjacent areas of East Sepik and Southern Highlands province; H6. Gorokan family, with eight languages spoken by over 180,000 people in the Eastern Highland province around Goroka; and H7. Kainantu family, with four languages spoken by about 40,000 people in the Eastern Highlands province.
The Gorokan and Kainantu family (Foley 1986: 245–63) appear to be genetically related. C. Within the southern part of Indonesian Papua and adjacent Papua New Guinea areas, the well-established units include: H8. Asmat-Kamoro-Sempat (or Asmat) family with four languages and about 50,000 speakers in southern parts of Papua; H9. Marind family, with six languages with about 20,000 speakers, in southern Papua and the adjacent areas of Papua New Guinea in the Lake Murray area of the Western province; and H10. Awyu (or Awyu-Dumut) family, with nine languages and about 20,000 speakers in the lowlands of Papua between the areas of the Asmat and Marind families. An attempt has been made to group H1–H10 and numerous other language families in the New Guinea Highlands, from the Huon Peninsula across the island (covering the Fly river area and extending probably as far as the languages of Timor and Alor), into a large genetic unit called the “Trans New Guinea” phylum.2 These languages share a number of typological features (see § 13.3), and are mostly spoken by mountain dwellers. This macrogrouping, however suggestive, has not yet been provided with systematic justification following the established principles of comparative linguistics
2 This genetic and areal unit was first proposed by Wurm (1975a), who did not provide much linguistic evidence to justify it. The original hypothesis has been revised in the recent studies by Pawley (1995, 1998, 2000) and Ross (1995, 2000). The exact language membership and subgrouping within the putative phylum is still a matter of debate. For instance, Engan languages are treated as bona fide Trans New Guinea languages by Pawley (2000), but only as its “likely” members by Foley (2000b).
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(covering lexicon, phonology, and all aspects of the grammar including paradigmatic correspondences). The Trans-New Guinea features suggested so far include: (a) some person markers, for instance a first person in *n and second person in *k (this may well be a coincidence, given the frequency of both n and k in personal pronouns);3 (b) alternation of vowels showing number in independent pronouns with the initial consonant being the same, e.g. *a “singular”, *i “plural”, as in * na “first person singular”, *ka “second person singular”, *ni “first person plural”, *ki “second person plural” (Ross 1995) (which may well be an areally diffused typological feature); and (c) a small set of lexical cognates (most of which are either monosyllabic, or involve conjectural semantic and/or phonological correspondences). The Madang area includes over a hundred distinct languages forming five or six large families, among them Southern and Northern Adalbert, Mabuso, and Rai coast. These have been provisionally grouped into a larger unit under the name of Madang (this also includes the Kalam-Kobon family, under H3 above). This hypothesis is currently under investigation (see Ingram in press). Other established families within Papua (not suggested for incorporation into the Trans New Guinea phylum) include (see Foley 2000a): P1. The Border family, with over twenty languages spoken by about 13,000 people in the Sandaun province and the border areas of Papua New Guinea and the province of Papua (Seiler 1985, for the Waris subfamily; see discussion by Gerstner-Link 2004); P2. The Lakes Plain family, with twenty-four languages spoken by about 5,000 people, in the northern lowlands of Papua, in the basin of the Taritatu and Tariku tributaries of the Mamberamo river (Clouse 1997); P3. The Wissel Lakes family, with four languages spoken by over 80,000 people in the central highlands of Indonesian Papua; and P4. The Sentani family, with three languages spoken by about 10,000 people on the northern coast of Papua, to the west of Jayapura around Lake Sentani and to its west.
Reesink (1998, 2000) postulated a “West Papuan” linguistic area covering up to twenty-six non-Austronesian languages spoken in the area of Indonesian Papua, from Cenderawasih Bay westward to the islands of 3 Along similar lines, Campbell (1997: 345) criticized the proposed diagnostic trait of n “first person” and m “second person” for the putative “Amerind” as a chance coincidence.
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Timor, Alor, and Pantar, including the Bird’s Head Peninsula and the island of Halmahera. These languages (spoken by a total number of under 200,000 people) share a number of typological features (see under W(est) P(apua), on Figure 13.1). D. The non-Austronesian languages of Bougainville, the Bismarck Archipelago, and the Solomons present a complex picture.4 The Bougainville family (B on Figure 13.1) consists of eight languages, four in the north and four in the south of the island of Bougainville (Onishi 1994), spoken by about 40,000 people. The question of the genetic relationships between the four nonAustronesian languages in the Solomons remains open: they may well be isolates, or relics of now extinct language families. Kol and Sulka, in Central New Britain, and Kuot, in New Ireland, are also isolates. Ross’s (2000) hypothesis that Anêm and Ata in West New Britain are related requires further substantiation. The only well-established language family in East New Britain is the Baining family (TB on Figure 13.1), consisting of six languages (probably including the extinct Makolkol). There are over 10,000 speakers of Baining languages today. Structural and formal similarities between Taulil (and the extinct Butam) and the Baining family are equally suggestive of a distant genetic relationship and of contact. In summary: in quite a few cases in New Guinea it is premature to go beyond establishing small families. Given the time depth of human occupation of the area (estimated as about 50,000 years: Bellwood 1998; Foley 2000a), the erstwhile genetic relationships tend to be obscured by borrowing and multilayered diffusion, “a major source of diversification in Papuan languages” (Foley 1986: 262). Much more comparative and descriptive work is required before genetically inherited features can be usefully distinguished from typological similarities or chance resemblances (see Foley 2000a).
13.3. Typological Diversity among Papuan Languages In addition to their extreme genetic diversity, Papuan languages are typologically diverse. A few Pan-Papuan tendencies are typical for the New Guinea 4 Typological similarities between these languages were investigated by Dunn et al. (2002), and Terrill (2002). For instance, in contrast to the neighbouring Austronesian languages, many have genders and multiple classifier systems. No linguistic justification has been provided for grouping them into an “East Papuan” phylum (as advocated by Wurm 1975b, 1982; see extensive criticism in Terrill 2003: 8–10).
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Highlands languages within the putative Trans New Guinea areal grouping. Exceptions occur elsewhere.
13.3.1. Phonology Phonological systems of Papuan languages are relatively simple, usually with three places of articulation for consonants (labial, dental/alveolar, and velar; some languages, such as Yimas, also add a palatal). Languages of the Sepik area have the same number of distinctions in place of articulation for stops and nasals, while the Highlands languages have fewer distinctions for nasals than for stops. Some Ndu (S3) languages have a series of labialized stops. In contrast to neighbouring Austronesian languages, many Papuan languages tend to have only a few fricatives and one liquid (r/l). Voiced stops tend to become prenasalized in the syllable-initial position. Papuan languages tend to have a standard five vowel system /i, e, a, o, u/. Languages of the northern half of Papua New Guinea often have at least one non-low central vowel, for example Fore (Scott 1978) and Kewa (Franklin 1971). A “vertical” vowel system consisting of three central vowels -i , ә, and a has been reported for Iatmul, a Ndu language (Staalsen 1966) (however, other Ndu languages have up to seven vowels: see Wendel 1993: 36; Wilson 1980; Aikhenvald forthcoming). The most complex vowel systems are found in Skou (S7) and some Waris (P1) languages. Both Skou and Dumo have seven vowels, two front, three central, and two back. In Skou, all except the high central vowel have a nasalized counterpart. In Dumo, all the vowels exist in long and short form, and all have a nasal counterpart except for the front mid-rounded vowel (Ingram 2005). The Papuan languages of the Lower-Sepik Ramu (S1–2), Torricelli (S8), and numerous families in the Sepik–Ramu area have stress systems. No tonal languages have been found in the languages of the Bismarck Archipelago, Bougainville, and the Solomons. Tone is a prominent feature in numerous languages in the Trans New Guinea and West Papuan (WP) areas. In contrast, most Austronesian languages have stress (some Huon Gulf languages are an exception: Ross 1993). Tone appears to be a family feature of Lakes Plain (P2) and Skou (S7) languages. In the Skou family, Skou has three tones (high, low, and rising: Mark Donohue, p.c.), while Dumo has high and non-high. The most complex tone system is found in Iau (Lake Plains family), which is said to have eight contrastive tones and up to two tones per syllable (Edmondson et al. 1992; Donohue 1997: 356). The development of these tones in Iau is most
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probably due to loss of vocalic and consonantal segments. Other languages of this family have at least high and low tone; some are reported to have four (Clouse 1997: 152). An overview of tone in New Guinea is in Donohue (1997); see a summary in Foley (2000b).
13.3.2. Morphology In their morphological type, Papuan languages vary. Mildly synthetic languages with little bound morphology include those in the West Papuan area (WP on Figure 13.1; see Reesink 1999, 2000), Lake Plains languages (P2; Clouse 1997: 151), and the Skou family (S7; Ingram forthcoming). Complex polysynthetic languages include Yimas, from the Lower Sepik subfamily (S1) of the Lower Sepik–Ramu family. Papuan languages often have complex patterns of pronominal cross-referencing. Marking transitive subject and object on the verb in Yimas is illustrated in (1) (Foley 1991: 291). Yimas (1) na-ŋa-tmi-kwalca-t 3sgA-1sgO-say-rise-PERFECTIVE “She woke me up” (by verbal action) In contrast, Watam, from the Lower-Ramu branch (S2) of the Lower Sepik–Ramu family, has no cross-referencing on the verb (Foley 1999). Most languages from the Trans New Guinea area employ a bound agreement prefix for object and a suffix for subject, for instance Fore (Scott 1978). So does Anamuxra, from Madang area. In Manambu, from the Ndu family (S3), suffixes cross-reference the subject and, optionally, another constituent, provided it is topical (this second suffix position is absent from its relatives Iatmul, Wosera, and Abelam). Skou languages encode the subject with partly predictable alternations of the first consonant of (a monosyllabic) verb root. The only other morphological mechanism is reduplication of the verb, to mark irrealis. Various aspectual and modal meanings are often expressed using verb serialization, a mechanism found in most Papuan languages, including Skou (S7), Lower Sepik–Ramu (S1–2), Sepik Hill (S4), and languages of the Trans New Guinea area (see Ingram 2005, in press; Foley 1991; Pawley 1993; Bruce 1984). Many heavily serializing languages have a closed class of verbs, with fairly generic meanings. The verbal lexicon in Kalam (H3; Pawley 1993) has under 100 monomorphemic lexemes. New lexemes consist of a generic verb preceded by several verb stems (together forming one serial verb), or by one
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or more nominal or adverbial complements. For instance, the generic verb ag “make a sound, utter” enters into the following combinations: mnm ag(speech utter) “speak”, kmap ag- (song utter) “sing”, swk ag- (laughter utter) “laugh”, sb ag- (bowel utter) “fart” (Pawley 1993: 98). Serial verbs are absent from the languages of the south coast of New Guinea, Torricelli languages (S8; e.g. Arapesh), and most languages of the Bismarck Archipelago and Bougainville (B). Languages without extensive verb serialization tend to have complex verbal morphology (Stebbins forthcoming). There is typically no passive, but at least one causative. Grammatical relations are frequently expressed with verbal crossreferencing, as in Motuna, Anamuxra, Yimas, and numerous languages from the Trans New Guinea area. A few have core cases, e.g. Imonda (Waris: P1) and Ndu languages (S3). The marking of verbal arguments may be semantically rather than syntactically based. In Bauzi, from the Mamberamo river region of Papua (Briley 1997), a suffix marks an agentive argument with both transitive and intransitive verbs. Similar systems are attested in a few languages from the New Guinea Highlands (e.g. Ku Waru: Merlan and Rumsey 1991: 335; Folopa: Anderson and Wade 1988). In addition, Bauzi has a typologically unusual split marking of core participants conditioned by tense-aspect (the progressive/continuative aspect does not require the agentive suffix, while the completive aspect does), and by polarity (no agentive suffix is required in negative clauses). Papuan languages exhibit the world’s most sophisticated systems of noun classification. The Lower Sepik (S1) and Torricelli languages (S8) have extremely complex systems of noun classification and plural marking (Foley 1986: 222–9, 1991, 2000a; on Arapesh languages, see Fortune 1942; Nekitel 1985; Dobrin 1999). Yimas has eleven noun classes, four of which are assigned to nouns by their semantics: I—human males; II—human females; III—animals; class IV—culturally important plants. Classes V–XI are motivated phonologically: the agreeing constituent repeats the last consonant of the nominal root. Small gender systems are found in the West Papuan area (WP), Skou languages (S7) and numerous families in the Sepik basin, and in numerous language isolates, such as Burmeso, Sulka, Kuot, Bilua, and Lavukaleve of the Bismarck Archipelago. In Alamblak (S4) and Manambu (S3), from the Sepik area, feminine gender is associated with small size, and masculine gender with large size and long shape (Bruce 1984: 9; Aikhenvald 1998). In contrast, feminine gender assignment to inanimates is associated with large size, with masculine gender assignment being linked with slender elongated objects in
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Yonggom (Ok, Western province: Christensen 1995: 9–10) and in Olo (S8: Torricelli: McGregor and McGregor 1982: 55). The Baining languages of East New Britain (TB) have two noun classification systems and a threeway number contrast (singular, dual, and plural). A simple masculine, feminine, and neuter (“everything else”) gender system is used for subject cross-referencing on the verb and in possessive constructions; a more complex, multi-term shape- and size-based system is realized through agreement within noun phrases of other types. Complex classifier systems in multiple environments are a feature of the languages of Bougainville (B). Nasioi (Hurd 1977) has over a hundred classifiers used in possessive constructions, with numerals, demonstratives, adjectives, and verbs. Motuna, from the same language family, has fifty-one classifiers used in the same environments as Nasioi (Onishi 1994), in addition to five noun classes (masculine, feminine, diminutive, local, and manner) realized through agreement with articles, demonstratives, and some adjectives in a noun phrase, and with a topical constituent on the verb. Anamuxra (Pomoikan, Madang province: Ingram 2003) has several dozen classifiers as suffixes on post-head modifiers (adjectives, numerals, demonstratives, articles, and the general question word), the possessive marker, the vocative, and most nouns. Unusual multiple classifier systems are attested in Awará and Wantoat (Davis n.d; Susan Quigley, p.c.), from the Finisterre family; Angan languages, and Santa Cruzan languages in the Solomons (Aikhenvald 2000: 218) Classificatory verbs which combine reference to the orientation of the noun and to its inherent properties are widespread in the languages of the New Guinea Highlands, especially Engan (H5), Chimbu, and East New Guinea Highlands families (Foley 1986: 89 ff.), and also languages of the Border family (P1: Brown 1981; Aikhenvald 2000: 170–1). Enga (Lang 1975; Foley 1986: 89–91) has seven classificatory verbs. Men and other referents judged to be tall, large, strong, and powerful (such as houses and trees) are classified as “standing”, while women, possums, and referents judged to be small, squat, horizontal, and weak “sit”. Protruding objects “hang”, subterranean creatures and objects (such as worms or sweet potatoes, as well as internal organs, such as the heart) “lie inside”. Liquids and gases “come”; crawling or aquatic creatures, as well as orifices and locations, “lie”, and genitalia “carry”. Ku Waru (Merlan et al. 1997: 75) has a similar, albeit smaller, system of classificatory existential verbs. Waris (Border family, P1: Brown 1981) has verbal classifiers which categorize the direct object in terms of its shape and size, in addition to “stance”
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classificatory verbs used to categorize the intransitive subject as to its orientation in space. Prefixed verbal classifiers in Waris derive historically from compounded verbs (as they do in the closely related Imonda: Seiler 1985). A few languages have rather unusual evidentiality systems. Oksapmin, an isolate from Sandaun province (Lawrence 1987), distinguishes visual, nonvisual, and reported information sources. The systems in Foe and Fasu, from the Kutubuan family in the Southern Highlands, are among the most complex in the world, with at least six distinctions (Rule 1977: 71–4; May and Loeweke 1980: 71–4; Aikhenvald 2004a).
13.3.3. Syntax Table 13.2 features a comparison of typical syntactic features of Austronesian languages contrasted with those found in most Papuan languages (Foley 1998: 513–16). Clause chaining is a prominent syntactic property of the Papuan languages. It strongly correlates with their verb-final constituent order (atypical for Austronesian languages: see Foley 2000b: 385). A great number of languages distinguish between independent (“final”) and dependent (“medial”) verbs. Final verbs have a full range of inflectional possibilities, such as pronominal agreement, tense, aspect, and mood. Medial verbs typically occur before the final verbs, and have fewer inflectional possibilities. A medial verb carries a special morpheme indicating whether its subject is the same as that of the final verb, or different from it. This is known as switch reference. Medial verbs typically distinguish relative tense (sequential versus simultaneous forms).
Table 13.2. Some syntactic features of Austronesian and of Papuan languages: a comparison Syntactic feature
Austronesian
Papuan
Constituent order Prepositions or postpositions Determiners
Verb medial Prepositions Determiners precede noun within a noun phrase Follow the head noun
Predominantly verb final Postpositions No determiners
Position of modifiers Clause linking
Coordinating or subordinating conjunctions
Either follow or precede the head noun Clause chaining
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Switch reference markers are typically suffixed to the verb (but in a few Angan languages in the Highlands some switch reference markers are suffixes, and others are prefixes). Switch reference is found throughout the Trans New Guinea area, in numerous languages of the Sepik area and of Madang, as well as in the languages of Bougainville (Onishi 1994). It is absent from Lakes Plain (P2), Skou (S7), Lower Sepik–Ramu (S1–2), and Torricelli languages (S8), as well as from most languages in the Bismarck Archipelago. And we have mentioned above that Austronesian languages from the Bel family, in Madang province, have developed the distinction between medial and final verbs, and even switch reference, under the impact of neighbouring Papuan languages. No other Austronesian languages have switch reference. For an upto-date overview of switch reference in Papuan languages, see Roberts (1997). This sample of the unusual features of Papuan languages illustrates, in a nutshell, their considerable typological diversity.
13.3.4. Documentation The major centres for the description and analysis of languages of the New Guinea area are the Summer Institute of Linguistics (Ukarumpa, Papua New Guinea), the Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies in Canberra (Departments of Linguistics and of Anthropology), the Department of Linguistics at the University of Sydney, the University of Leiden (with major concentration on the languages of Indonesian Papua and the islands off the coast of New Guinea), and the Research Centre for Linguistic Typology at La Trobe University in Melbourne. Pacific Linguistics continues to be the major publisher for grammars, dictionaries, and other materials on New Guinea languages. In spite of the large amount of materials produced (see the bibliography in Carrington 1996), only a few score non-Austronesian languages have been well documented. Among these are Alamblak, Amele, Arapesh, Dani, Hua, Kewa, Kilmeri, Korafe, Marind, Usan, Yimas, and a few others. Several scholars are active in the area of Skou languages, and Papuan languages of the Solomons. But the majority of languages are still in urgent need of documentation.
13.4. Linguistic Diversity and Language Endangerment in Papua New Guinea We will now briefly discuss problems of language endangerment in Papua New Guinea. There are few documented instances of the “sudden death”
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of a language (when all the speakers are exterminated or die of a disease: Campbell and Muntzel 1989), or of “radical death” whereby a rapid language loss is associated with genocide or severe political repression.5 Sudden death of Mansim, due to disease and intertribal warfare, was discussed by Reesink (2002a). Most instances of language obsolescence are those of “gradual death”, that is, the loss of a language due to a shift to the dominant language with an intermediary stage of bilingualism, and subsequent contraction in the sphere of usage of the erstwhile vernacular. Numerous communities in the Sepik area with a small number of speakers have effectively undergone language shift. Children tend to acquire Tok Pisin rather than the vernacular as their first language, and full competence in the vernacular is only found among adults. A classic case of such shift is Taiap (an isolate spoken in Gapun village, ESP, by about 100 people) documented by Kulick (1992). Language socialization in Taiap involves the conceptualization of Tok Pisin as a symbol of modernity and sought-after prosperity, while the vernacular is associated with “backwardness”. A similar example is Yimas (Lower Sepik: Foley 1991: 4–6) spoken by about 250 people in two villages (and further examples in Loving 1980). Languages with fewer than fifty speakers have hardly any chance of survival (see Smith 1992, on the imminent extinction of Susuami, an Angan language from Morobe province). One of the reasons for the vitality of the Mehek language in Sandaun province (Bugenhagen 1980: 93) is that, with over 6,000 speakers, it is numerically the dominant language in the area. The political situation in the Indonesian province of Papua is hardly promising for the survival of the vernaculars. Processes of rapid language shift have been observed for languages with seemingly large numbers of speakers. Murik (1,200, Lower Sepik) is not being learnt by children, and neither is Abu’ Arapesh, an ethnic group of over 5,000 (S8; Nekitel 1985). A similar situation has been described for Cemaun Arapesh (Lise Dobrin, p.c.) and Makopin Arapesh (Nidue 1990: 65–6) (see Aikhenvald 2004b, for further examples). Language prestige is another factor. Smith (1992)—in his discussion of the apparently healthy situation of Musom, an Austronesian language of Morobe province—stresses the importance of pride in one’s language and identity, and “an ideology that newcomers must adapt to village norms of language and culture” (1992: 119). In contrast, speakers of Kuot, which is
5 Indications are that, before European contact, intertribal warfare did result in extinction of some tribes and languages. See Harrison (1993).
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now endangered (Lindström 2002), do not attach any particular importance to their language. Even if the language is acquired by children, its acquisition may be incomplete. For instance, the knowledge of a ritual “pandanus” language used by a number of peoples of the Southern Highlands province during the harvest of pandanus nuts has decreased during the past thirty–forty years, as Franklin and Stefaniw (1992) report for Kewa and Imbongu (Kewa has over 40,000 speakers, and Imbongu has 16,000; neither of these languages is in immediate danger of becoming extinct). Stylistic reduction often pre-dates language obsolescence. For instance, the oratorical style sesade kwanif associated with the ritual food exchange in Abu’ Arapesh was dying out in the 1960s, long before children stopped acquiring the language (Nekitel 1985: 182). Similar observations on Ilahita Arapesh can be found in Tuzin (1976). Also see Foley (1991, 1997b) on Yimas and Watam, Ingram (2003, 2006) for Dumo and Anamuxra, and Aikhenvald (2004b) for Manambu. Balanced and stable di- or triglossia involves Tok Pisin and often also English as the languages of government, local council, missions, and schooling, with the vernacular used in day-to-day communication in other circumstances (including the domestic). The tendency towards a triglossic situation in Papua New Guinea was first identified by Sankoff (1980: 35). If the di- or triglossic situation is stable, the vernacular is not endangered, as appears to be the case with Kilmeri (Border family: Brown 1980 and Claudia Gerstner-Link, p.c.), and Kaki Ae (Eleman family, Gulf province: Clifton 1994). See further examples in Loving (1980). In a situation where prestige and economic opportunities come to be associated with proficiency in Tok Pisin, diglossic relationships between languages often become unstable. Wom (Torricelli family: Moeckel and Moeckel 1980) had 2,500 speakers spread over five villages. Besides diglossic relationships with Tok Pisin, the Wom-speaking villages preserved traditional patterns of bilingualism in Urat (Southern Arapesh) and Bumbita Arapesh. But most speakers regard Tok Pisin and now often English as the language of economic opportunity. As a result, numerous parents preferred speaking Tok Pisin to their children—this is indicative of a tendency towards destabilization, at least in the long run. Destabilized diglossia is becoming the norm in many areas of Papua New Guinea, including the Sepik. This is conducive to increasing endangerment of the vernaculars. What factors enhance the vitality of indigenous languages? A wellplanned and well-executed teaching programme at the primary school level is extremely important for language maintenance (Nidue 1990 considers this
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crucial for the survival of Makopin Arapesh). Watam (Lower Ramu: Foley 1997b), spoken by 700 people in three villages, is used by all generations. The fact that all speakers are bilingual in Tok Pisin does not appear to affect Watam’s vitality. Indeed, the Watam community school has been opened to the children of a neighbouring Kopar-speaking village (Kopar, from the Lower Sepik family, no longer has any real speakers under 50). These children are now bilingual in Watam. Watam is thus expanding at the expense of Kopar. The Summer Institute of Linguistics is playing an important role in promoting literacy and enhancing the prestige of indigenous languages (see Cahill 1999), having produced literacy and other materials on over 100 languages. Dixon (1991: 246–7) reports how the Urat language (Torricelli family) in the East Sepik province underwent a strong revival as a result of the work of the SIL team, Robert and Dawn Barnes. The vitality of some indigenous languages is enhanced by the maintenance of traditional patterns of subsistence agriculture. In such cases, there is no motivation to drop the vernacular and just speak Tok Pisin and/or English (see Bugenhagen 1980: 93, on Mehek and Siliput). In contrast, communities which are dependent on economic transactions involving Tok Pisin are in danger of losing their language (cf. Landweer 2000: 15). Emblematicity of a language can enhance its chances for survival. Anêm is a case in point. This Papuan language, markedly different from Austronesian languages in the area, is a mark of ethnic distinctiveness, and is being maintained as such (Thurston 1992). Most Austronesian languages in the area are too similar to each other to serve as proper markers of ethnicity; as a result, people have a low degree of language loyalty, and the languages are in danger of disappearing. There is additional cause for optimism in the decision of the Papua New Guinea government to support “tok ples” (lit. “language (of) village”) programmes, or “vernacular based pre-primary education” (Dixon 1991: 247; Nekitel 1998: 179–80). (These programmes allow children to acquire basic literacy skills in their first language before moving on to English language education in later primary school.) By the end of 1991, the number of provincial vernacular schools amounted to ninety-four, with programmes in twenty-one languages (Wurm 2001: 389), scattered across most provinces. Since then, more active vernacular teaching programs have been implemented. (The latest figures, for mid 2005, are of over 4,000 schools: Joan Kale, p.c.). Tok Ples Elementary programmes for children in the first three
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years of school are now available in densely populated parts of East New Britain and across Sandaun and Madang provinces. As funding allows, this programme is being rolled out into other areas. Communities across the country have been enthusiastic in their support for this programme. Funding limitations are hampering its expansion into less developed areas. Additional complications arise in the areas where schools have to service a number of different language communities, and are compelled to choose one indigenous language over another (as in the case of Kopar and Watam mentioned above), or Tok Pisin. Establishing a comprehensive language education programme across Papua New Guinea requires a dramatic increase in the number of schools. These education programmes, together with urgent documentation of hitherto undocumented or poorly described languages, are the most compelling tasks for those who have the future of New Guinean languages at heart.
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Wurm, S. A. (1992). “Change of language structure and typology in a Pacific language as a result of culture change”, in T. E. Dutton (ed.): 149–65. —— (2001). “Language endangerment in the insular Greater Pacific area, and the New Guinea area in particular”, in A. Pawley, M. Ross and D. Tryon (eds.), The Boy from Bundaberg: Studies in Melanesian Linguistics in Honour of Tom Dutton. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics, 383–97.
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Languages of the Pacific Region: Malayo-Polynesian Osamu Sakiyama
14.1. Linguistic background 14.2. Linguistic strata 14.3. Minority languages and common languages in the Pacific region 14.3.1. China 14.3.2. Malaysia 14.3.3. Indonesia 14.3.4. Belau (Palau), Micronesia 14.3.5. Yap, Micronesia 14.3.6. Propinsi Papua and Papua New Guinea, Melanesia 14.3.7. Solomon Islands, Melanesia 14.3.8. Vanuatu, Melanesia 14.3.9. New Caledonia, Melanesia 14.3.10. Polynesia 14.4. Conclusion
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14.1. Linguistic Background The languages that are currently spoken in the Pacific region can be divided broadly into three groups: the Australian and New Guinean languages were formed by people who participated in the region’s earliest migrations over a period of 20,000–30,000 years starting several tens of thousands of years ago, and the Malayo-Polynesian (Austronesian) languages were spoken by Mongoloid people who migrated from the Asian continent around 3000 bc. The Pacific region has numerous languages, including 250 Aboriginal languages in Australia and 750 Papuan languages on the island of New Guinea (including Irian Jaya of the Indonesian territory, now called Propinsi Papua) and neighbouring areas. There are also 350 Malayo-Polynesian languages in Melanesia including New Guinea, twenty in Polynesia, twelve in Micronesia, and 100 in New Guinea (Comrie et al. 1996). There is wide variation not only among language groups, but also among the families of languages. Few language families have been identified among the languages of Australia and New Guinea using the methods of comparative linguistics. In the north-west Pacific, Malayo-Polynesian languages are spoken not only in Taiwan (see Ch. 15, this volume) but also over an area ranging
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Figure 14.1. Malayo-Polynesian languages
from the Philippines to Indonesia, Malaysia, Indochina, and as far even as Madagascar. Nowadays the Austronesian family is used as a general term to include the indigenous languages of Taiwan, but when referring to the so-called extra-Formosan languages it is usual to use the term MalayoPolynesian. It is estimated that there are currently about 1,000 languages belonging to the Austronesian family (Blust 1990), some 6.6 times as many as the number of Indo-European languages. There is very little documentary material concerning these languages from the period before European colonialization, apart from a few exceptions such as epigraphic documents. Even today, perhaps no more than one-third of the 1,000 Austronesian languages have all three of grammars, dictionaries, and texts available. For many of them we do not even have simple word lists. Malay inscriptions have been found dating as far back as the seventh century ad, and its role as an interisland lingua franca was of great importance. It is thought that there are well over 100 million speakers of the language, mainly in Malaysia and Indonesia (Gordon 2005). Malay was an important medium of communication among various peoples for
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over a millennium, and it did not come by this role by virtue of being the language of a colonizing nation or of an ethnic majority, but as the result of very peaceful development. Ironically, the present “globalization” of this language is contributing to increasing the number of languages in danger of extinction. It is unfortunate, moreover, that “problems of bilingualism or rather multilingualism in Indonesia have not attracted much interest from linguists” (Uhlenbeck 1971). There has not been much change in the state of research in this field since then. The situation seen in Malaysia and Indonesia has also been observed in recent years in Oceania, where the growth of Melanesian Pidgin has driven languages with small speaking populations to the brink of extinction. In the People’s Republic of China and in Taiwan, too, Chinese (the language of the Han ethnic majority) is similarly endangering the survival of the languages of ethnic minorities, apart from fifty-five designated languages in the PRC that enjoy various privileges (see also § 17.4). Languages in the Pacific region are also characterized by the small size of speaker populations and by the absence of dominant languages. However, there are usually bilingual people who can speak or at least understand the languages of neighbouring peoples, and it is believed that this situation has existed for a long time. In terms of cultural factors, it appears that linguistic peculiarities in the Pacific region were emphasized for the sake of identity, and over the millennia the emblematic function of language has generated differences (Comrie et al. 1996). The languages of New Guinea and the region around it show diverse linkages and wide variations between languages. The Malayo-Polynesian languages of the Pacific region are mostly classified as Oceanic languages, while the Chamorro and Palauan of Micronesia are classified into the languages of Western Malayo-Polynesian (WMP, previously called the Indonesian family), and the indigenous languages of Propinsi Maluku and Propinsi Papua in Eastern Indonesia into the Central Malayo-Polynesian (CMP) and the South Halmahera-West New Guinea (SHWNG) subgroups. In particular, there are strong similarities between the linguistic characteristics of the CMP and SHWNG languages and those of the Melanesian family of the Oceanic languages. These linguistic conditions and characteristics are attributable to ethnic migrations within the region over a long period of time, accompanied by contacts and linguistic interference with indigenous non-Austronesian or Papuan languages. Papuan languages are still found in parts of Indonesia, including Northern Halmahera and the islands of Pantar
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and Alor and central and eastern Timor in Propinsi Nusa Tenggara. In New Guinea, contact with Papuan languages has caused some Malayo-Polynesian languages to exhibit a word order change from Subject-Verb-Object to Subject-Object-Verb (see also § 13.2.1).
14.2. Linguistic Strata With the start of colonization by the European powers in the nineteenth century, a new set of linguistic circumstances developed in the region. First, pidgin languages based on European and Melanesian languages gradually emerged as common languages. The establishment of plantations in Samoa and in Queensland, Australia, which had concentrations of people who spoke Melanesian languages, was important in providing breeding grounds for pidgin languages. A pidgin language is formed from elements of the grammar of both contributing languages, though the pidgin languages tend to be looked down upon from the perspective of the more dominant of the two parent languages (see Ch. 7, this volume). The region’s newly formed common languages, including Tok Pisin, Bislama, and Solomon Pijin (Pidgin), flourished after they were taken back to the homelands of the various speakers. This was possible because Vanuatu, the Solomon Islands, and Papua New Guinea were all multilingual societies without dominant languages. The number of speakers of pidgin languages increased rapidly in this environment. At the same time, the continuing existence of ethnic minority languages came under threat. Examples of pidgins that were creolized (adopted as mother languages in their own right) include Solomon Pijin, which eventually had over 1,000 speakers aged 5 and over (1976) in the Solomon Islands. Bislama, overspreading about 100 indigenous languages and the former official languages of English and French, is now spoken by almost the entire population of Vanuatu (170,000 in 1996) and is partially creolized. Of particular interest is the fact that a group of more than 1,000 people who emigrated to New Caledonia have adopted Bislama as their first language. The situation in Papua New Guinea, which has a population of 4.3 million (1996), is even more dramatic. Although exact figures are difficult to establish, by 1982 the number of people using Tok Pisin as their first language had reached 50,000, while another four million used it as a second language (Gordon 2005).
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14.3. Minority Languages and Common Languages in the Pacific Region The revised edition of the Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger of Disappearing published by UNESCO (Wurm 2001) provides a brief overview of the current situation in the Greater Pacific Area including Japan, Taiwan, Philippines, Malaysia, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, New Caledonia (Loyalty Islands), Fiji (Rotuma), Micronesia, Polynesia, and Australia. It is a pity that language names in this atlas are missing on the page opposite to the Pacific language map (p. 65); no meaningful discussion of the map is possible. According to Lynch, over 160 languages in Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, and Vanuatu, with fewer than 200 speakers each, are on the edge of extinction (1998). The following reports cover areas and endangered languages that I have researched.
14.3.1. China Ten languages are spoken on the island of Hainan off the south-eastern coast of China’s mainland. The languages with the largest speaker populations are Hainanese (the common language of the island’s inhabitants) and the Li language (which has the longest history and belongs to the Kadai stock of the Tai-Kadai phylum) with over 1.1 million speakers (see also § 16.2.2). With one exception all the other languages have speaker populations numbering tens of thousands. The exception, called Huihui-hua in Chinese, is the only Malayo-Polynesian language on the island and has about 5,000 speakers living in two villages. The language is tonal, with a monosyllabic structure, and was once classified as belonging to the Malayo-Sino family (Ni Dabai 1988). However, it seems certain that it belongs to the Chamic branch of Western Malayo-Polynesian (see also § 16.2.1). We may conclude that its tonal feature is the result of contact with and linguistic interference from the surrounding monosyllabic languages of Hainan following the tenth-century Cham migration to Hainan from the Indo-Chinese coast facing the island. “Huihui” is not really an appropriate name for the language since it is the name of only one of the two villages where it is spoken. In English it is simply called “Tsat”. Pronouced /caanʔ/, the word derives from the Chinese zhan, denoting the Cham (Champa), so this is also not an appropriate name (Gordon 2005). The speakers themselves call it “Poi Tsat” (“speech/speak” + Cham, “the Cham language”), and the term they use to refer to themselves is “U Tsat”
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(Proto Malayo-Polynesian *uRang “people” + Cham). In 1951 the population had dropped to between 1,000 and 1,500 people, but it has been significantly revitalized since then. Poi Tsat speakers live in a society characterized by multilevel language use and their language, as a vernacular spoken only within their villages, is at the bottom of the hierarchy, with Chinese (the official language), Hainanese (the language of the marketplace), and Arabic (the language of their religion) ranked above. They are thus forced to constantly switch linguistic codes and their attitude to Poi Tsat is neutral or even negative, perhaps partly because they have no script to represent their language (Sakiyama 1997). The language has great importance as an example of an Austronesian language that has undergone extreme changes, situated as it is on the periphery of the region. We must not be complacent about its future. It is to be welcomed that there is one report on Poi Tsat, with an account of the grammar, a comparison with the Chamic languages, basic word list, and sample phrases, although it is of limited accessibility since it is in Chinese (Zheng 1997).
14.3.2. Malaysia It is estimated that the eighteen indigenous ethnic groups in Malaysia number about 93,000, constituting 0.5 per cent of the population. The government agency responsible for the affairs of indigenous peoples (the Department of Orang Asli Affairs) looks after the education and welfare of this indigenous population, and addresses any problems that may arise. However, the peoples designated as indigenous are restricted to those located within the Malay Peninsula and exclude those in East Malaysia. As regards the ethnic groups making up the indigenous population, the oldest stratum is made up of a number of Negrito communities. These are followed by several Austroasiatic Senoi communities, and finally the Jakun, Temuan, Seletar, Orang Kuala, and Orang Kanaq peoples (see also § 16.3.1). The latter peoples are Malayo-Polynesian in terms of language and of Proto Malay stock, the ancestors of modern Malays. The Semelai, alone of the Proto Malay communities, are linguistically not Malayo-Polynesian but Austroasiatic. According to official figures, the Orang Kanaq and Orang Kuala (with populations of 65 and a little over 2,000 respectively) are numerically in the most critical state among the Malayo-Polynesian speakers (JHEOA 2003). The authorities have as their priority the social welfare of the indigenous population and their integration into Malay society, and although some measures such as the building of a museum to preserve their cultures are being taken, no particular steps are being taken to record and
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preserve their languages. The situation differs from that in China, where for designated ethnic minorities local education is conducted bilingually in Chinese and their mother tongue (Okamoto 1999).
14.3.3. Indonesia Indonesia is a multilingual state. Article 36 of its constitution stipulates that the national language is Bahasa Indonesia, but that where inhabitants of an area have their own language and it is preserved in good condition, this language will be respected and maintained by the state. Currently, however, only major languages like Javanese, Sundanese, Madurese, and Balinese, which have speaker populations in the millions and tens of millions, enjoy such benefits as having elementary schools where education is carried out in the local language as well as Bahasa Indonesia and having numerous publications in the language. The over 500 languages said to be extant in Indonesia, including Propinsi Papua, include languages on the point of extinction. Among these are Lom, spoken on the island of Bangka near Sumatra (2–10 speakers, Wurm 2000) and Dampal, spoken on Sulawesi (1–2 speakers, Wurm 2000). No special action is being taken in connection with these critically endangered languages. The Education and Culture Ministry’s Center for Language Construction and Development is, however, undertaking surveys of regional languages as well as working for the diffusion of Bahasa Indonesia. In this connection, the country was divided into ten regions in 1974 under the Second Five Year Plan, with a further five regions designated in 1983. A considerable number of reports have been published by the Center. (Unfortunately these are not for sale, so they are difficult to acquire by official means.) Many of these are on the major languages with large speaker populations, although it should be noted that they include reports on regional aspects of Malay, which make a useful contribution to the study of language dynamics. Also included is a report on Bajau, with around 3,000 to 3,500 speakers on the island of Laut to the south-east of Kalimantan, which is a contribution to research on endangered languages (Djebar Hapip et al. 1979). The Bajau live on the sea (they are sometimes referred to as “sea nomads”), although some have started to establish themselves on land. It is therefore difficult to form an accurate picture of the state of their language. According to the report, almost all Bajau adults speak Bahasa Indonesia and Banjarese, the dominant language around them. Bajau children only speak Bajau at home. Outside, they use Banjarese even among themselves.
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Fortunately data on two endangered languages with less than 1,000 speakers in the southern part of Sulawesi (Propinsi Sulawesi Selatan) have been published based on recent surveys: Topoiyo (400–500 speakers, Wurm 2000) and Panasuan (750 speakers, Wurm 2000). The data include basic vocabularies with English translations and simple accounts of their grammars (Nurhayati et al. 2003; Manda et al. 2003). As regards the languages of southeastern Sulawesi, basic vocabularies of 226 words each have been published for twenty-seven languages (Mead 1999). These include a number of languages with small speaker populations, such as Taloki (500 speakers), Koroni (500), Bahonsuai (200), Tomadino (66), and Waru (350). The area in Indonesia with the next largest number of languages after Propinsi Papua is Propinsi Maluku. The Atlas Bahasa Tanah Maluku (Taber et al. 1996) covers 117 vernaculars (Malayo-Polynesian and Papuan), including numbers of speakers for each language, areas of habitation and migration, access routes, simple cultural information, and basic numbers and expressions. This work is especially valuable since it corrects inaccuracies and errors in the 1977 Classification and Index by Voegelin and Voegelin. It also distinguishes languages and dialects according to their a priori mutual intelligibility. Fifteen languages are listed as having fewer than 1,000 speakers. They include the Nakaela language of Seram, which has only five speakers, the Amahai and Paulohi languages, also of Seram, which are spoken by fifty people each, and the South Nuaulu and Fatamanue (hitherto called Yalahatan) languages, which have 1,000 speakers each on Seram Island. The data, however, are not complete. For example, Bajau languages are not included, presumably because of the difficulty of accessing the various solitary islands where the Bajau people live. The author researched the Fatamanue language spoken in two villages, Yalahatan and Haruru, in 1997 and in 1998 (Sakiyama 1999), and the Bajau language (2,000 speakers) on Sangkuwang Island to the east of Bacan Island in 1997.
14.3.4. Belau (Palau), Micronesia According to Belau (Palau) government statistics (1990), the total population of 15,122 people includes sixty-one people living on outlying islands in Sonsorol State, and thirty-three in Hatohobei (Tochobei) State. Apart from the Sonsorol Islands, Sonsorol State also includes the islands of Fanah, Meril, and Pulo An. In addition to the Hatohobei language, the languages scattered on these isolated islands also include Nuclear Micronesian (Chuukic or Trukic) languages, which are mainly spoken in the Carolines. They differ
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from Palauan, which is a branch of WMP. To lump these languages together as the Sonsorol languages with a total of 600 speakers (Tryon 2000) is as inaccurate as combining the Miyako dialects of Okinawa into a single dialect group. The number of Chuukic speakers has declined steadily since these figures were compiled. Starting in the German colonial period of the early twentieth century, people have been relocated from these outlying islands to Echang village on Arakabesan Island in Belau. Today there are several hundred of these people. Many of those born in the new location only speak Palauan. A study by Oda (1977) estimated that there were fifty speakers of Pulo Annian. The language of Merir continued to decline and has now become extinct.
14.3.5. Yap, Micronesia Ngulu Atoll is situated between the Yap Islands and the Belau Islands. The Nguluwan language is a mixture of Yapese and Ulithian, and belongs to the Chuukic family. It has inherited the Ulithian phonemic system and a partial version of Yapese grammar (Sakiyama 1982). Nguluwan appears to have evolved through bilingualism between Yapese and Ulithian. In 1980 there were twenty-eight speakers. Even with the inclusion of people who had migrated to Guror village, which is the traditional trading counterpart on the Yap Islands, the number of speakers was fewer than fifty. Speakers are being assimilated rapidly into the Yapese language and culture.
14.3.6. Propinsi Papua and Papua New Guinea, Melanesia Detailed information about the names, numbers of speakers, and research data for over 800 Malayo-Polynesian and Papuan languages spoken in New Guinea and its coastal regions can be found in the works of Barr and Barr (1978), Voorhoeve (1975), and Wurm (1982). In Papua New Guinea, Nekitel (1998) reckoned languages with less than 1,000 speakers constitute more than half the number (417), including six languages (MalayoPolynesian: Getmate, Kaniet, Karore, Ahi/Lae, and Papuan: Karami, Mulaha) extinct since 1950. These six languages have either vanished leaving us with virtually no information about them, or else they are in the process of vanishing (Carrington 1996). For Lae, speaker counts were taken twice: No. 6 pegged Ahi/Lae and Marobe (sic) at no speakers; No. 16, meanwhile, listed Lae/Marobe as having ten speakers (Nekitel 1998). No. 6 is probably incorrect. Ahi, spoken at the eastern end of the Markham Valley,
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is also called Lahe or Aribwatsa. Only one speaker of this language remains, but there are said to be concerted efforts by the direct descendants of this last speaker to at least partially revive it (Wurm 1997). It seems likely that the number of speakers reported in count No. 16 takes this circumstance into account. The sudden death of Professor Otto I. M. S. Nekitel is all the more regrettable as he was planning a survey of Lae in the Aribwatsaspeaking area deep in Morobe province. For the present, not only the minority languages but even the majority languages, other than a few, have yet to be surveyed and researched adequately. There are many languages for which vocabulary collection has yet to be undertaken. It appears that dictionaries or grammars have been published for less than one-tenth of the region’s languages. Many speakers of various languages in Papua New Guinea—although their numbers are perhaps not yet so reduced as to be critical—are switching to Tok Pisin, i.e. are becoming creolized (Dixon 1991). Ever fewer young people speak these languages as they find they have to intermarry with other ethnic groups and work in districts away from home in order to acquire an education and an occupation. Papuan languages like Koiari, Murik, and Kâte are examples of this trend (see also § 13.4). Information about the languages of Propinsi Papua in western New Guinea is in many cases scant or inaccurate. A case in point is the language of the Tobati people. The Tobati live in pile houses over the sea along the coast of Yotefa Bay in Jayapura. When I conducted fieldwork there in 1982 they numbered around 700, but information about their current numbers is confused. While one report (Tryon 2000) puts the number of speakers at 2,460, classifying “Yotafa” (sic) as “endangered”, another puts the number at 100 and considers the language (“Tobati”) to be “seriously endangered” (Wurm 2000). If the plans the Indonesian government had in 1982 to resettle such people on land for reasons of hygiene and public order have been implemented then we may surmise that their languages and cultures are being lost (Sakiyama 1989b). A grammar sketch on Tobati has been made also by Donohue (Lynch et al. 2002). There is also confusion in the information we have about the Serui people based in Yapen Island in Cenderawasih Bay. The Serui live in the east and the west of the island, the central part being occupied by a people speaking the Papuan language Yava. In addition, many Serui have moved to the Hamadi and Dok 9 districts in the environs of Jayapura, where they live in seaside communities (Sakiyama 1989a). Serui is made up of two dialects, Ambai in east Yapen and Ansus in west Yapen, but the differences between the two are slight. The Serui themselves call their language Bahasa Serui. The number
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of speakers is estimated to be in the range of 10,000 to 15,000. The Serui are bilingual in their vernacular and Bahasa Indonesia, but children only speak Serui in the home. “Serui-Laut” (“Sea-Serui”) is what the Ansus dialect is called in some of the settlements where it is spoken. It is not necessary, therefore, to classify Serui speakers into Ambai, Ansus, and Serui-Laut communities (Voorhoeve 1975; Barr and Barr 1978). The state of the languages spoken in the Raja Ampat Islands and the size of their speaker populations was unknown (Voorhoeve 1975; Barr and Barr 1978). It has been reported, however, that the Ma’ya dialect of Salawati is tonal and has about 4,000 speakers. It has also been suggested that it should not be considered as belonging to the above-mentioned SHWNG Subgroup of Malayo-Polynesian, which exemplifies the languages of this region (Leeden 1993).
14.3.7. Solomon Islands, Melanesia The total population of the Solomon Islands is 390,000 (1996). There are sixty-seven Papuan, Melanesian, and Polynesian indigenous languages, of which only thirty-three are spoken by over 3,000 people (Gordon 2005). The Kazukuru languages (Guliguli, Doriri) of New Georgia Island, which were known to be endangered as early as 1931 and were referred to Papuan, have become extinct already, leaving behind just some scant linguistic information. The Melanesian language Laghu of Santa Isabel Island was considered to have become extinct but five speakers were subsequently discovered. Zazao (100 speakers) and Vano (Vanikolo Island) are also considered to be seriously endangered. Other Melanesian languages are in the endangered category, with around 100 speakers each, including Ririo, Kokota, Asumboa, Tanimbili, Tanema, Oroha, and Buma (Tryon 2000). Of these, the number of speakers of Ririo on Choiseul Island had at one time sunk to eighteen (Tryon 1979), but has since risen to seventy-nine (Gordon 2005). And Buma, also known Teanu, spoken on the island of Vanikoro, is sketched by Tryon (Lynch et al. 2002). But because of bilingualism with or even a shift toward Mbambatana (the regional common language), the size of the speaker population does not necessarily correspond to the state of the language. The large number of languages in Melanesia that have small speaker populations has been attributed to the fact that multilingualism has been historically common in the region for social reasons such as trade and intermarriage (Comrie et al. 1996). A survey of the Solomon Islands found that 60 per cent of men
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and 42 per cent of women spoke at least three languages. But the fact that 83 per cent of the population speak Solomon Pijin (Solomon Islands 1992; the figure for English is 26 per cent) gives grounds to fear that minority languages with small speaker populations are being driven into a critical state.
14.3.8. Vanuatu, Melanesia The situation in Vanuatu is very similar to that in the Solomon Islands. The official view, written in Bislama, is as follows: “I gat sam ples long 110 lanwis evriwan so i gat bigfala lanwis difrens long Vanuatu. Pipol blong wan velej ol i toktok long olgeta bakegen evridei nomo long lanwis be i no Bislama, Inglis o Franis” (Vanuatu currently has 110 indigenous languages, which are all very different linguistically. On an everyday basis people in villages speak only their local languages, not Bislama, English, or French) (Institute of Pacific Studies 1980). Among the Melanesian and Polynesian indigenous languages spoken by 170,000 people, or 93 per cent of the total population (1996), there are many small minority tongues. These include Aore, which has only a single speaker (Tryon 2000; extinct, Lynch and Crowley 2001); Maragus (Tape) and Ura (with ten speakers each); Nasarian and Sowa (Seke) (with twenty); and Dixon Reef, Lorediakarkar, Mafea, and Tambotalo (with fifty). If languages with around 100 speakers are included, this category accounts for about one-half of the total number of languages. The spread of Bislama has had the effect of putting these languages in jeopardy except to make dominant vernaculars such as Uripiv and Hano (Raga) survive, although languages with no information available, or not well known at all, amount to two-thirds or more (79) of a total of 106 languages (Lynch and Crowley 2001). Among potentially endangered languages, only Vinmavis (Neve‘ei), which is spoken probably by about 500 people on the northern part of Malakula, is outlined by Crowley (Lynch et al. 2002).
14.3.9. New Caledonia, Melanesia New Caledonia has a total population of 145,000 people, of whom 62,000 are indigenous. As of 1981, there were twenty-eight languages, all Melanesian except for the one Polynesian language, Uvean. The only languages with over 2,000 speakers are Cemuhi, Paici, Ajie, and Xaracuu, along with Dehu and Nengone, which are spoken on the Loyalty Islands. Dumbea (Paita), which is spoken by several hundred people, has been described by Shintani and Païta (1983). And Osumi (1995) described Tinrin,
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which has an estimated 400 speakers. Speakers of Tinrin are bilingual in Xaracuu or Ajie. Nere has twenty speakers and Arho ten, while Waamwang, which had three speakers in 1946, is now reported to be extinct (Gordon 2005). Descendants of Javanese, who began to migrate to New Caledonia in the early part of the twentieth century, now number several thousand. The Javanese language spoken by these people, which has developed in isolation from the Javanese homeland, has attracted attention as a new creole language.
14.3.10. Polynesia Penrhyn, a language spoken on the Northern Cook Islands with around 1,500 speakers according to a recent survey, has recently had a word list published (Shibata 2003). In the terms of the Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger of Disappearing, its degree of endangerment corresponds to an endangered language whose “youngest speakers are young adults”. At the same time, judging by this atlas, Hawaiian (the Hawaiian Islands) and Maori (New Zealand) share this degree of endangerment, yet both appear to have escaped the danger of extinction. The revival of these languages is not something that could have been accomplished by positioning them as passive cultural indicators. At work here was the political factor that associated speaking these languages with prestige (Lynch 1998). There is food for thought here when considering the revitalization of the Ainu language in Japan.
14.4. Conclusion The Pacific has been heavily crisscrossed by human migration from ancient to modern times. All Pacific countries except the kingdom of Tonga have experienced colonization. This historical background is reflected in the existence of multilevel diglossia in all regions of the Pacific. Depending on the generation, the top level of language in Micronesia is either English (the official language) or Pidgin Japanese (used as a lingua franca among islands). The next level is made up of the languages of major islands that exist as political units, such as Palauan, Yapese, and Ponapean. On the lowest level are the various vernaculars spoken mainly on solitary islands. In the Maluku Islands of Indonesia, local Malay languages, such as Ambonese Malay, North Maluku Malay, and Bacanese Malay, form a layer beneath the official language, Bahasa Indonesia. Under them are the dominant local languages, such as Hitu, which is spoken by 15,000 people on Ambon Island, and Ternate and
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Tidore, which are spoken in the Halmahera region. These are important as market languages. On the lowest level are the various vernaculars. In Papua New Guinea, standard English forms the top level, followed by Papua New Guinean English. Tok Pisin and Hiri Motu are used as common languages among the various ethnic groups. Beneath these layers are the regional or occupational common languages. For example, Hiri Motu is used as the law enforcement lingua franca in coastal areas around the Gulf of Papua, Yabêm as a missionary language along the coast of the Huon Gulf, and Malay as a trade language in areas along the border with Indonesia. On the next level are the ethnic and tribal languages used on a day-to-day basis. An example of a similar pattern in Polynesia can be found in Hawaii, where English and Hawaiian English rank above Da Kine Talk (also called Pidgin To Da Max for fun!—Simonson et al. 1981), which are grammatically mixtures of English and Oceanic languages and are used as common languages among the various Asian migrants who have settled in Hawaii. Beneath these are ethnic languages, including Hawaiian and the various immigrant languages, such as a common Japanese based on the Hiroshima dialect, as well as Cantonese, Korean, and Tagalog. All of the threatened languages are in danger because of their status as indigenous minority languages positioned at the lowest level of the linguistic hierarchy. Reports to date have included little discussion of the multilevel classification of linguistic strata from a formal linguistic perspective. It will be necessary in the future to examine these phenomena from the perspectives of sociolinguistics or linguistic anthropology.
References Barr, D., and Barr, S. (1978). Index of Irian Jaya Languages. Prepublication draft. Abepura: Universitas Cenderawashih and Summer Institute of Linguistics. Blust, R. A. (1990). “Summary report: linguistic change and reconstruction methodology in the Austronesian language family”, in P. Baldi (ed.), Linguistic Reconstruction and Reconstruction Methodology. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, 133–53. Carrington, L. (1996). A Linguistic Bibliography of the New Guinea Area. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics, D-90. Comrie, B., Matthews, S., and Polinsky, M. (1996). The Atlas of Languages. New York: Chackmark Books. Crowley, T. (2002). “Vinmavis”, in J. Lynch, M. Ross and T. Crowley (eds.), 638–49. Dixon, R. M. W. (1991). “The endangered languages of Australia, Indonesia and Oceania”, in R. Robins and E. M. Uhlenbeck (eds.), Endangered Languages. Oxford: Berg, 229–55.
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Djebar Hapip, A., Darmansjah, and Basran Noor (1979). Bahasa Bajau. Jakarta: Pusat Pembinaan dan Pengembangan Bahasa, Departemen Pendidikan dan Kebudayaan. Donohue, M. (2002). “Tobati”, in J. Lynch, M. Ross, and T. Crowley (eds.), 186–202. Gordon, R. G. (2005). Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 15th edn. Dallas: International Academic Bookstore. Institute of Pacific Studies (1980). Vanuatu. Suva. JHEOA (2003). www.kempadu.gov.my/jheoa/orang%20asli/proto-malay.htm Leeden, A. C. van der (1993). Ma’ya: A Language Study. LIPI-RUL Series. Jakarta: Indonesian Institute of Sciences. Lynch, J. (1998). Pacific Languages: An Introduction. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. —— and Crowley, T. (2001). Languages of Vanuatu: A New Survey and Bibliography. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics, 517. —— Ross. M., and Crowley, T. (eds.) (2002). The Oceanic Languages. Richmond: Curzon Press. Manda, M., Yamaguchi, M., and Nakashima, H. (2003). Kosakata Dasar Bahasa Panasuan serta Tata Bahasa Ringkas Bahasa Panasuan dan Kosakata Dasar Bahasa Tangkou serta Tata Bahasa Ringkas Bahasa Tangkou. ELPR A3-010. Mead, D. (1999). The Bungku-Tolaki Languages of South-Eastern Sulawesi, Indonesia. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics, D-91. Nekitel, O. (1998). Voices of Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow. New Delhi: UBS Publishers’ Distributions Ltd. Ni Dabai (1988). “The genealogical affiliation of the language of the Hui people in Sanya Hainan”, Minzu Yuwen, 2: 18–25 (in Chinese). Nurhayati, Yamaguchi, M., and Nakashima, H. (2003). Kosakata Dasar Bahasa Topoiyo serta Tata Bahasa Ringkas Bahasa Topoiyo. ELPR A3-009. Oda, S. (1977). “The syntax of Pulo Annian”, Ph.D. dissertation, University of Hawaii. Okamoto, M. (1999). Chugoku no Shosu-minzoku-kyoiku to Gengo-seisaku [Ethnic Minority Education and Language Policy in China]. Tokyo: Shakai-hyoronsha. Osumi, M. (1995). Tinrin Grammar. Oceanic Linguistics Special Publication 25. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. Sakiyama, O. (1982). “The characteristics of Nguluwan from the viewpoint of language contact”, in M. Aoyagi (ed.), Islanders and their Outside World: A Report of the Cultural Anthropological Research in the Caroline Islands of Micronesia in 1980– 1981. Tokyo: St Paul’s (Rikkyo) University, 105–28. (Reprinted in Studies of Minority Languages in the Western Pacific Rim. ELPR C-006. 2002, 107–28.) —— (1989a). “Serui”, in T. Kamei, R. Kono and E. Chino (eds.), The Sanseido Encyclopedia of Linguistics, vol. ii. Tokyo: Sanseido, 472–74 (in Japanese). —— (1989b). “Tobati”, in T. Kamei, R. Kono and E. Chino (eds.), The Sanseido Encyclopedia of Linguistics, vol. ii. Tokyo: Sanseido, 1326–28 (in Japanese). —— (1997). “What had happened in the Austronesian rims?”, paper presented at the 115th Meeting of the Linguistic Society of Japan, University of Kyoto, 11–12 Oct. —— (1999). “Nominals of Fatamanue, Seram Maluku: a subgrouping argument in Central Malayo-Polynesian”, Bulletin of the National Museum of Ethnology (Osaka), 24/3: 467–84. (Reprinted in Studies of Minority Languages in the Western Pacific Rim. ELPR C-006. 2002, 129–47.) Shibata, N. (2003). Penrhyn–English Dictionary. ELPR A1-005.
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Shintani, T., and Païta, Y. (1990). Grammaire de la langue de Païta. Nouméa: Société d’Études Historiques de la Nouvelle-Calédonie. Simonson, D., Sasaki, P., and Sakata, K. (1981). Pidgin To Da Max. Honolulu: Peppovision. Solomon Islands National Committee (1992). A Survey of Literacy and Language March–November 1991. Honiara. Taber, M., et al. (eds.) (1996). Atlas Bahasa Tanah Maluku (Maluku Languages Atlas). Ambon: Pusat Pengkajian dan Pengembangan Maluku, Universitas Pattimura and Summer Institute of Linguistics. Tryon, D. (1979). “Remarks on the language situation in the Solomon Islands”, in S. A. Wurm (ed.), New Guinea and Neighboring Areas: A Sociolinguistic Laboratory. The Hague: Mouton, 33–51. —— (2000). “The languages of the Pacific Region: the Austronesian languages of Oceania”, paper presented at the colloquium Language Endangerment, Research and Documentation-Setting Priorities for the 21st Century, Karl Arnold Academy, 12–17 Feb. —— (2002). “Buma”, in J. Lynch, M. Ross, and T. Crowley (eds.): 573–86. Uhlenbeck, E. M. (1971). “Indonesia and Malaysia”, in T. Sebeok (ed.), Current Trends in Linguistics, viii: Linguisitics in Oceania. The Hague: Mouton, 55–111. Voegelin, C. F., and Voegelin, F. M. (1977). Classification and Index of the World’s Languages. New York: Elsevier. Voorhoeve, C. L. (1975). Languages of Irian Jaya: Checklist, Preliminary Classification, Language Maps, Wordlists. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics, B-31. Wurm, S. (1982). Papuan Languages of Oceania. Tübingen: Gunter Narr Verlag. —— (ed.) (1997). Materials on Languages in Danger of Disappearing in the Asia-Pacific Region No. 1: Some Endangered Languages of Papua New Guinea: Kaki Ae, Musom, and Aribwatsa. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics, D-89. —— (2000). “Threatened languages in the western Pacific area from Taiwan to, and including, Papua New Guinea”, paper presented at the colloquium Language Endangerment, Research and Documentation-Setting Priorities for the 21st Century, Karl Arnold Academy, 12–17 Feb. —— (ed.) (2001). Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger of Disappearing, 2nd edn., revised, enlarged, and updated. Paris: UNESCO. Zheng Yiqing (1997). Huihuihua Yanjiu (A Study of the Huihui Language). Shanghai: Shanghai-yuandong-chubanshe.
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15
Indigenous Languages of Formosa Naomi Tsukida and Shigeru Tsuchida
15.1. Introduction 15.2. Language endangerment in Taiwan 15.2.1. Speakers over 60 15.2.2. Fifties to thirties 15.2.3. Late teens to twenties 15.2.4. Below mid-teens 15.2.5. Situation of small ethnic groups 15.2.6. Indigenous peoples in cities 15.3. Efforts for revitalization 15.3.1. Early movements by Yuanquanhui and the establishment of the Council of Indigenous Peoples (CIP) 15.3.2. Education 15.3.3. Literacy and publication 15.3.4. Media 15.4. Documentation 15.4.1. Amis 15.4.2. Atayal 15.4.3. Bunun 15.4.4. Kanakanavu 15.4.5. Kavalan 15.4.6. Paiwan 15.4.7. Pazeh 15.4.8. Puyuma 15.4.9. Rukai 15.4.10. Saaroa 15.4.11. Saisiyat 15.4.12. Seediq 15.4.13. Thao 15.4.14. Tsou 15.4.15. Yami
285 288 288 288 289 289 290 290 290 290 291 292 293 293 294 294 295 295 295 295 295 296 296 296 296 296 297 297 297
15.1. Introduction Taiwan (Formosa) is an island of about 36,000 square km, with a population of about 22,000,000. The population of Austronesian ethnic groups is about 370,000 people, occupying only 1.8 per cent. The rest is all Han Chinese.
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Figure 15.1. Formosan languages
Han Chinese are subgrouped into three: Holo (75 per cent), Hakka (13 per cent), and mainlanders (10 per cent). Their languages are not endangered. The ancestors of the Holo, which is one of their self-appelations, and the Hakka began to migrate to Taiwan in the seventeenth century. The Holo are from the Fujian province and speak a type of Southern Min dialect of Chinese, which is often called Taiwanese. The mainlanders came to Taiwan after the Second World War and held political power for almost half a century until 1988, when Li Teng-hui, a native Taiwanese, took over the presidency. According to Bellwood (1991), the Austronesian peoples came to Taiwan about 6,000 years ago. On the plains on the western side of Taiwan, after having contacted the Chinese people and culture, the Austronesian peoples became Sinicized over the centuries, and they almost lost their own languages and cultures by the end of the nineteenth century. They were called collectively “Peipo”, but are actually comprised of the following
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twelve different ethnic groups (from north-eastern to north-western, and down to south): Trobiawan, Basay, Ketangalan, Kulon, Taokas, Babuza, Papora, Pazeh, Hoanya, Taivoan, Siraya, and Makatao. These Peipo languages, except Pazeh, have become totally extinct and are not dealt with here. Readers who are interested in them are referred to Tsuchida (1992). As for Pazeh, there is only one competent speaker left, who is 83 years old, as of 2003. In the central mountain area and on the eastern side of the island, Austronesian peoples still retain their own languages. There are thirteen of them (more or less from north to south, and from west to east): Atayal, Seediq, Saisiyat, Thao, Bunun, Tsou, Kanakanavu, Saaroa, Rukai, Paiwan, Puyuma, Kavalan, and Amis. Among them Kavalan and Thao were often counted as Peipo but the Thao was officially recognized as a major Austronesian group in Taiwan in 2001, and the Kavalan in 2002. Orchid Island also belongs to Taiwan, and Yami, which belongs to the Batanic languages of the Philippine group, is spoken there. Their population, as officially reported in 2000, is approximately as follows (alphabetically arranged). Administratively Seediq is included in Atayal, and Kanakanavu and Saaroa in Tsou, so an administrative census on Seediq, Kanakanavu, and Saaroa is not available. Amis Atayal Bunun Kavalan Paiwan Puyuma Rukai Saisiyat Thao Tsou Yami
150,000 90,000 40,000 1,000 70,000 10,000 12,000 5,000 300 6,000 4,000
(including Seediq) (as of 2002)
(as of 2002) (including Kanakanavu and Saaroa)
The number of people who can speak their own language is far less than these figures. Aborigines were generally regarded as vulgar, brutal, uncivilized, and retarded. Even they themselves thought so, and were losing their self-respect in their own culture and language. Because of such an inferiority complex elders do not speak their language to their children or grandchildren, which obstructs the succession of their traditional languages. Aboriginal students achieve lower
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academic levels than Chinese students. The rates of delinquency, alcoholism, and unemployment are all higher than those of Han Chinese. Many aborigines have to engage in unstable jobs with low prestige, such as construction workers and truck drivers. Some women may work as bar hostesses.
15.2. Language Endangerment in Taiwan Fourteen Austronesian languages are still spoken in Taiwan, but all of them are on the verge of extinction due to the successive Japanization and Sinicization during the twentieth century. The Japanese occupation lasted for fifty years (1895–1945), during which period they tried to give a primary education to youngsters in Japanese. After the Second World War the Nationalist Party government came over from mainland China, and switched the official language to Mandarin. This situation lasted until Li Teng-hui eliminated the mainlanders’ control over languages and cultures in Taiwan in the 1980s. In contrast, Holo language is not endangered, though it was also suppressed in public in the same way as aboriginal languages were. Holo are the majority in the Taiwan population, with social and economical, and now political power, since the Democratic Progressive Party came to power.
15.2.1. Speakers over 60 People in their sixties or older can speak their own languages fluently. When elderly people of the same ethnic group talk to one another, they speak in their language. Old people still use Japanese as a lingua franca when they talk to people of other ethnic groups or Chinese of the same generation. They may sometimes code-switch between their languages and Japanese. In south-western Taiwan, they may be also able to speak Holo. Many old people can understand and speak Mandarin to some extent now because of the necessity in their daily life. They even try to talk to younger generations in Mandarin.
15.2.2. Fifties to Thirties People in their thirties, forties, or fifties are bilinguals of their traditional language and Mandarin, as education was conducted in Mandarin after the Second World War. They use Mandarin as their lingua franca. Code switching,
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or more often code mixing, between their language and Mandarin is very often observed. Even when only people of the same ethnic group are involved in the conversation, they may code-switch to or mix Mandarin, according as the topic of the conversation changes. The more young people are involved, the higher the proportion of Mandarin is. The younger the speaker is, the poorer the command of their tribal language is. They tend not to make the distinctions that older people do.
15.2.3. Late Teens to Twenties Young people in their late teens or twenties usually speak Mandarin and cannot speak their traditional language or do so very poorly if ever. This is true of all tribes, regardless of the size. They may utter exclamational expressions in the language of their ethnic group, but cannot utter sentences with more complex structure. Even when they try to speak their own language, it is likely to be affected by Mandarin or to be much simpler. Many young people of indigenous populations drop out of junior high school and stay in the village, doing nothing. Some of the teenage girls, unmarried, get pregnant and have to raise their children in their villages. Ironically, however, it is such girls that have more chances to talk with the elderly people and to learn their own language than those who go to a nearby city to work every day, or to study among Mandarin or Holo speakers, not to mention those who stay in cities for higher education.
15.2.4. Below Mid-teens Those children in their early teens and younger do not speak their traditional languages. Young aboriginal parents do not talk to their children in their native language, but only in Mandarin. The grandparents also try to use Mandarin in speaking to them. As a consequence, the children speak only Mandarin, and at best can only understand the traditional language when they hear it. The family’s attitude is an important factor which affects the language competence of young children. There are few exceptional cases. Some families think that a language is an integral part of their traditional culture, and thus parents and grandparents try to talk to their children in their own language and, as a result, exceptionally, children come to understand and speak the native language.
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15.2.5. Situation of Small Ethnic Groups Small groups often do not form a hamlet by themselves but tend to live together with other ethnic groups, and speak the language of the majority. The result is low proficiency in their own language. For example, the Kanakanavu and the Saaroa people have a very small population and are administratively classified into Tsou, following the tradition of anthropology. Geographically, however, they coexist in the same areas with the Bunun, and people in their thirties, forties, or fifties speak Bunun more fluently, and their own languages are seriously endangered. Those below thirty speak only Mandarin, as is true of other tribes. The Thao people, who live near Sun Moon Lake, a famous scenic spot, and earn their living by tourism, speak Holo by now better than their own language. There are only about ten old people who can speak the language fluently. The Kavalan people live in Ilan and Hualien counties. In Ilan, however, they live together with Holo and have been completely assimilated into them. In Hualien many live in the Amis-speaking area, and have almost lost their own language. The village Hsinshe in Hualien county is the only village where people speak Kavalan daily still today.
15.2.6. Indigenous Peoples in Cities Many indigenous peoples go to cities to seek jobs. In some areas aboriginals of the same group come to live in a neighbourhood, but in other cases, aboriginals in cities live alone surrounded by Han Chinese. In the latter case, their proficiency in their traditional language declines. Even people in their fifties or forties lose command of their languages, not to mention younger generations.
15.3. Efforts for Revitalization An effort for revitalization is being made in present-day Taiwan. In the background of this effort is the end of the closed-minded rule by the Nationalist Party, and the progress of democratization.
15.3.1. Early Movements by Yuanquanhui and the Establishment of the Council of Indigenous Peoples (CIP) Some indigenous students in National Taiwan University established Yuanquanhui (Association to Promote Aboriginal Rights) in 1984. Yuanquanhui made appeals
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persistently to the government. This movement developed into the Council of Indigenous Peoples (CIP) which was established within the government in 1996 “for the purpose of organizing aborigine-related matters under one general organization” (Section 1 of the law concerned). The chairperson and two vice-chairpersons are aborigines and more than half of the members are mandatorily aborigines. It has been working on development programmes of Austronesian native peoples ever since, focusing on political participation, education, preservation of their cultures, social welfare, economics, and land affairs. Education includes rejuvenation of indigenous languages also. One thing Yuanquanhui gained in the early 1990s is the term yuanzhumin “aborigines”. Before 1994 the Nationalist Party government called aborigines shan-pao “mountain-fellows”. This term was misleading because not all the groups are inhabitants of the mountains; the Amis and Puyuma people live on the plains and the Yami people on Orchid Island. Aborigines claimed to be called Yuanzhumin “aborigines” (lit. “the people that originally inhabited [Taiwan] from the beginning”) and the government accepted it in response to their claim. The term yuanzhumin, however, is only an administrative label, and some peoples of Austronesian origin are not counted as Yuanzhumin. The Thao people were officially identified as Yuanzhumin only in 2001, and the Kavalan in 2002. Yuanzhumin can enjoy a specially arranged protection policy, such as tax exemption or favourable treatment in entrance examinations, and this encourages people of Austronesian origin to be identified as Yuanzhumin. They also made the government approve the use of their names in their own languages. Aborigines had to use Chinese names in public before. In 1995 there was a revision of an appropriate law enabling aborigines to register their names in their languages, though the names had to be transcribed in Chinese characters. In June 2000, the Full Name Registration Law passed and they are now able to register their names in Roman letters. In 1998 the Aboriginal Education Act (AEA) was enacted, and an implementation procedure was established in 1999, which will be dealt with more precisely in the following section.
15.3.2. Education In the mid 1990s, a class called “local culture” started in elementary schools. In this class aboriginal children learned their traditional language and culture, such as simple sentences and basic vocabulary, songs, and dances, although the class was optional and no grades were given.
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The purpose of the aforementioned AEA is to “safeguard the educational rights of aborigines and upgrade the aborigine ethnic education and culture” (Section 1 of the said act). This act applies to all stages of education of all the aboriginal peoples, from preschool to graduate school, including adult education. It also covers many areas relevant to education, such as curriculum, grant/budget/subsidies, teaching resources and materials, representation in media such as TV, radio, and Internet, and so on. Following this act an implementation procedure was established in 1999, and in January 2000 it was decided that all students have to take “mother tongue classes” starting from 2001. In the “mother tongue classes” Holo children are to study Holo and aboriginal children are to study an aboriginal language of their own tribe. It is compulsory for all students and they are graded. At this point it differs from the previous “local culture” class, which was optional and for which students were not graded. In principle indigenous children who live in cities can also take classes in the language of their ethnic group at their schools. Schools have to hire teachers who can teach the language. At present most schools have only one class per week, however, which does not seem sufficient. All other classes are given only in Mandarin. No immersion programme is offered yet. To motivate indigenous students to study their own languages, the CIP set quite pragmatic goals for the children. At present, aboriginal children are accepted in higher schools with 25 per cent lower scores than nonaboriginal descendants and can apply for a scholarship. From 2005, however, a certificate of mother tongue proficiency will be required to enjoy such benefits. This also aims to motivate parents to talk to the children in their mother tongue so that children will become proficient in their language to get the certificate. Children who study aboriginal languages at school may change the view of adults. A teacher who supervises a children’s choir at an elementary school gives us a good example. When children learn to sing songs with lyrics in aboriginal languages, they get interested in the lyrics and then in the languages. It motivates children to talk with parents and grandparents about their native languages. Talking with children about their indigenous languages also helps lessen the inferiority complex of the grown-ups toward their languages.
15.3.3. Literacy and Publication Many textbooks on aboriginal languages have been published since the mid 1990s. Publication other than textbooks is gradually increasing, but no
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magazines or newspapers are published in aboriginal languages yet. Most of the indigenous peoples adopted a Roman script which has been used by missionaries. There are Bible translations available in Amis, Seediq, Atayal, Bunun, Paiwan, Rukai, and Yami. Christian churches (mainly Presbyterian and Catholic) were the only organization that tried to invent a way of writing for the indigenous peoples except for Li (1991). They have still been playing an important role in compiling dictionaries and textbooks. The use of the Bible based on one of its dialects brought about the standardization of their language to some extent, especially among young people because their proficiency in their own language is not stable.
15.3.4. Media Until the 1980s the use of languages other than Mandarin was strictly prohibited on TV and radio. Holo and Hakka were not exceptions, either. This ban was lifted, and there have been radio programmes using aboriginal languages since the mid 1990s, although there are no TV programmes yet. The CIP recognizes the importance of mass media in language preservation. It is now working to establish a TV station which broadcasts programmes in aboriginal languages, as is reported in its newsletter (2003/1). This goal is based on the statement in the AEA. Aboriginal songs are being appreciated more and more, even among Han Chinese. As is well known, the German music group Enigma used a part of a traditional Amis song in their song titled “Return to Innocence”, which was broadcast all over the world as the official theme song of the Atlanta Olympic Games in 1996. Difang, an old Amis man who sang the original song, brought a lawsuit against the group over the copyright. This case made people in Taiwan appreciate the aboriginal music. The number of CDs of aboriginal music increased considerably after this. Recently, young aborigine singers are making pop/folk/ rock music in their languages, sometimes drawing on some elements of the traditional music of their tribes. This music has gained a measure of popularity in the Taiwanese market where most (98 per cent) of the listeners are Han Chinese.
15.4. Documentation Published before the Second World War, we cannot miss the great work by Ogawa and Asai (1935), which is a huge collection of texts in native languages written in broad transcription of IPA, with precise footnotes, a brief
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description of grammar for most of the languages and their dialects, and a comparative lexicon. This book is comparable to F. Boas’s Handbook of American Indian Languages (1911, 1922) (though only with a minimum amount of text), and still remains an invaluable source in Formosan Austronesian studies. After the war, we had to wait until the 1970s when Paul Jen-kuei Li and Shigeru Tsuchida started publishing the results of their fieldwork. In the 1990s as the Taiwan economy began to enjoy its prosperous years, many young and competent researchers grew up in Taiwan, and they have been publishing many valuable papers. Because of the limited space here, it is not easy to cover all of the extant documents and studies, however. Most of the historical studies are omitted, as well as those on the languages which have become extinct by now, such as Siraya or languages of other Sinicized populations. Only some of the major published works will be listed in the following sections under each language. The listing is divided into four categories: dictionary (or vocabulary), grammar (phonological, morphological, and syntactic studies), text collection, and others (subgrouping, sociolinguistic studies, conversation, etc.). For the more detailed information, including that of historical studies and of extinct Peipo languages, see Li (1975b) and Huang (2000d). Readers are also referred to the following URLs: www.ling. sinica.edu.tw/formosan/; www.alcd.nccu.edu.tw/index_0.html
15.4.1. Amis Fey (1986) is a pretty good dictionary, but unfortunately it is very hard to find a copy in the market. The Sakizaya dialect, located at the northernmost tip of the Amis area, seems to preserve the most archaic features, but probably it might be a little too late to collect linguistic materials of this dialect. Dictionary: Fey (1986). Grammar: Cao (1991), He et al. (1986a), Wu (2000). Texts: Ogawa and Asai (1935). Others: Tsukida (1993).
15.4.2. Atayal Egerod (1999) is a very good dictionary with plenty of examples. However, the lexical items were taken only from the texts he collected, and it is a pity that some very basic words in the Austronesian languages, such as “the louse found in clothes, as against that in one’s hair” and “nit (egg of a louse)”, which happen not to appear in his texts, are not found in his dictionary.
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Dictionary: Egerod (1999). Grammar: Huang (1993, 1995, 2000a), Rau (1992). Texts: Ogawa and Asai (1935). Others: Li (1980a, 1980b, 1981, 1986).
15.4.3. Bunun No good vocabulary or dictionary is available for Bunun. Grammar: He et al. (1986b), Jeng (1977), Zeitoun (2000a). Texts: He et al. (1986b), Sh.-Hs. Lin (1998), T. Lin et al. (1998), Ogawa and Asai (1935). Others: Li (1986, 1988), Moriguchi (1995).
15.4.4. Kanakanavu The population of the Kanakanavu people is not known, but most likely less than 200. The number of those who can still speak their own language is perhaps between five to ten. And yet a precise description of Kanakanavu has not been done. Vocabulary: Szakos (1999a). Grammar: Ho (1997), Szakos (1999a), Tsuchida (1976). Texts: Ogawa and Asai (1935), Szakos (1999a), Tsuchida (2003).
15.4.5. Kavalan A Kavalan dictionary is being prepared by Paul Jen-kuei Li and S. Tsuchida, and is expected to appear in 2006. Grammar: Y.-L. Chang (2000b). Texts: Shimizu (1998).
15.4.6. Paiwan Dictionary: Ferrell (1982). Grammar: H.-Ch. Chang (2000), Chen and Ma (1986), Egli (1990). Texts: Ogawa and Asai (1935).
15.4.7. Pazeh Dictionary: Li and Tsuchida (2001). Grammar: Li and Tsuchida (2001), Y.-J. Lin (2000). Texts: Li and Tsuchida (2002).
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15.4.8. Puyuma Dictionary: Cauquelin (1991b). Grammar: Cauquelin (1991a), Huang (2000c). Texts: Ogawa and Asai (1935), Quack (1981, 1985), Schroeder and Quack (1979). Others: Ting (1978).
15.4.9. Rukai Grammar: Li (1973), Zeitoun (2000c). Texts: Li (1975a), Ogawa and Asai (1935). Others: Ho (1983), Li (1977).
15.4.10. Saaroa Just as is the case with Kanakanavu, the population of the Saaroa people is not known because both of these groups are politically counted under Tsou. A rough estimation is about 500, but again, those who can speak Saaroa are far less, perhaps under twenty. This is one of the least studied languages. Vocabulary: Szakos (1999b). Grammar: Li (1997b), Tsuchida (1976). Texts: Ogawa and Asai (1935).
15.4.11. Saisiyat Since there is no Saisiyat dictionary yet, collections of words are listed here. Vocabulary: Li (1978), Yeh (2000). Grammar: Yeh (2000). Texts: Ogawa and Asai (1935). Others: Li (1978).
15.4.12. Seediq Although Pecoraro (1977) is a mimeographed version, containing quite a number of confusions of k with q, and what is more, it is not generally available, this is the only dictionary available for this language. Dictionary: Pecoraro (1977). Grammar: Y.-L. Chang (2000a), Holmer (1996).
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Texts: Catholic Association (1994), Ogawa and Asai (1935), Tsao (1997), Tsukida (1995). Others: Li (1986).
15.4.13. Thao Dictionary: Blust (2003). Grammar: Blust (2003), Huang (2000b). Texts: Blust (2003).
15.4.14. Tsou Dictionary or vocabulary: An et al. (1996), Nevskij (1993), Tung (1964). Grammar: Szakos (1994), Tsuchida (1976, 1990), Tung (1964), Zeitoun (2000b). Texts: Ogawa and Asai (1935), Szakos (1994), Tung (1964).
15.4.15. Yami Dictionary: Rau and Dong (2006), Li and Ho (1989), Tsuchida et al. (1987, 1989). Grammar: Hs.-H. Chang (2000). Texts: Benedek (1991), Ogawa and Asai (1935), Shi (1992), Tung (1995). Others: Numao (1996), Tsuchida (1984).
References Abbreviations used in the following references: BIHP The Bulletin of the Institute of History and Philology, Academia Sinica CIA Collectanea Instituti Anthropos. Augustin: Haus Voelker und Kulturen (later Berlin: Dietrich Reimer Verlag) IHPSP Institute of History and Philology, Special Publications PL Pacific Linguistic Series. Canberra: Department of Linguistics Research School of Pacific Studies, The Australian National University SBDMLC Series of Brief Descriptions of Minority Languages in China. Beijing: Minzu Publishing Co. (in Chinese) TALS Taiwan Austronesian Language Series. Taipei: Yuan-liu Publishing Co. (in Chinese) TULIP Tokyo University Linguitics Papers
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An, Ch.-Ch., et al. (1996). Compact Dictionary of Tsou in Alishan County, Jiayi County. Tapang Elementary School (in Chinese). Bellwood, P. (1991). “The Austronesian dispersal and the origin of languages”, Scientific American, 265: 70-5. Benedek, D. (1991). The Songs of the Ancestors: A Comparative Study of Bashiic Folklore. Taipei: SMC Publishing Inc. Blust, R. (2003). Thao Dictionary. Language and Linguistics Monography Series A5. Taipei: Institute of Linguistics, Academia Sinica. Cao, S.-J. (1991). Grammar of Amis in Taiwan. Beijing: Chung-yang Minzu Yuyuan Pub. Co. (in Chinese) Catholic Association for Rural People Research and Service (1994). Kari Pnsltudan Seediq Cbeyo [Folk Tales of the Seediq People]. Catholic Association for Rural People Research and Service) (in Sediq, Chinese, and English). Cauquelin, J. (1991a). “The Puyuma language”, Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde, 147/1: 17-60. —— (1991b). Dictionnaire Puyuma–Français. Textes et Documents Nousantrariens IX. Paris, (Jakarta): École Française d’Extrême-Orient. Chang, H.-Ch. (2000). Paiwan Reference Grammar. TALS 11. Chang, Hs.-H. (2000). Yami Reference Grammar. TALS 6. Chang, Y.-L. (2000a). Seediq Reference Grammar. TALS 6. —— (2000b). Kavalan Reference Grammar. TALS 12. Chen, K., and Ma, R.-Sh. (1986). Outline of the Formosan Native Languages (Paiwan). SBDMLC (in Chinese). Egerød, S. (1999). Atayal–English Dictionary, ed. J. O. Petersen., 2nd edn. Historiskfilosofiske Skrifter 20, Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters. Copenhagen: C. A. Reitzels Forlag. Egli, H. (1990). Paiwangrammatik. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz. Ferrell, R. (1982). Paiwan Dictionary. PL C-73. Fey, V. (ed.) (1986). Amis Dictionary. Taipei: The Bible Society. He, R.-F., et al. (1986a). Outline of the Formosan Native Languages (Amis). SBDMLC. —— et al. (1986b). Outline of the Formosan Native Languages (Bunun). SBDMLC. Ho, D.-A. (1983). “The position of Rukai in the Formosan languages”, BIHP 54/1: 121-68. —— (1997). “Kanakanavu”, in P. J.-K. Li (ed.): 228-71 (in Chinese). Holmer, A. (1996). A Parametric Grammar of Seediq. Travaux de l’Institut de Linguistique de Lund 30. Lund: Lund University Press. Huang, L. M.-J. (1993). A Study of Atayal Syntax. Taipei: The Crane Publishing Co. —— (1995). A Study of Mayrinax Syntax. Taipei: The Crane Publishing Co. —— (2000a). Atayal Reference Grammar. TALS 1. —— (2000b). Thao Reference Grammar. TALS 4. —— (2000c). Puyuma Reference Grammar. TALS 10. —— (2000d). “Formosan linguistics: past and future”, Chinese Studies, 18 Special Publication: 79-110 (in Chinese). Jeng, H.-Hs. (1977). Topic and Focus in Bunun. IHPSP No. 72. Li, P. J.-K. (1973). Rukal Structure. IHPSP No. 64. —— (1975a). Rukai Texts. IHPSP No. 64.2. —— (1975b). “Taiwan tuzhu yuyan de yanjiu ziliao yu wenti (Research materials and problems of Formosan languages)”, Bulletin of the Institute of Ethnology (Academia Sinica), 40: 51-84. —— (1977). “The internal relationships of Rukai”, BIHP 48/1: 1-92.
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—— (1978). “A comparative vocabulary of Saisiyat dialects”, BIHP 49/2: 133-99. —— (1980a). “The phonological rules of Atayal dialects”, BIHP 51/2: 349-405. —— (1980b). “Men’s and women’s speech in Mayrinax”, in Papers in Honor of Professor Lin Yu-k’eng on her Seventieth Birthday. Taipei: Wen Shin Publishing Co., 9-17. —— (1981). “Reconstruction of Proto-Atayalic phonology”. BIHP 52/2: 235-301. —— (1986). “Linguistic variations of different age groups in some Formosan languages”, in P. Geraghty, L. Carrington and S. A. Wurm (eds.), FOCAL II: Papers from the Fourth International Conference on Austronesian Linguistics. PL C-94, 33-50. —— (1988). “A comparative study of Bunun dialects”, BIHP 59/2: 479-508. —— (1991). Taiwan Nantao-yuyuan-de Yu-yuan Fu-hao Hsi-tung [Orthographic Systems for Formosan Languages]. Taipei: Ministry of Education (in Chinese). —— (ed.) (1997a). Gaoxiong-xian nandao yuyan [Austronesian Languages in Kao-hsiung Province]. Research Series on Kao-hsiung Province 7. Kao-hsiung: Government of Kao-hsiung Province. (in Chinese). —— (1997b). “Saaroa”, in P. J.-K. Li (ed.): 272-97 (in Chinese). —— and Ho, Y.-L. (1989). “Wordlist of Yami (Izanumilek dialect)”, in P.-Hs. Liu (ed.), Preservation and Development of Yami and Yami Culture. Taipei: Society for Wildlife and Nature, 44-86 (in Chinese). —— and Tsuchida, Sh. (2001). Pazih Dictionary. Language and Linguistics Monograph Series A2. Taipei: Institute of Linguistics, Academia Sinica. —— (2002). Pazih Texts and Songs. Language and Linguistics Monograph Series A2-2. Taipei: Institute of Linguistics, Academia Sinica. Lin, Sh.-Hs. (1998). Shadows of Mountain Palm under the Moon. Taipei: Chen-Hsin Pub. Co. (in Bunun and Chinese). Lin, T., et al. (1998). Moon Which Passed Over Time and Space [Daingasbae Tus? a tu Buan]. Taipei: Chen-Hsin Pub. Co. (in Bunun and Chinese). Lin, Y.-J. (2000). Pazeh Reference Grammar (巴則海語). TALS 3. Moriguchi, T. (1995). “Linguistic and anthropological analysis of avoidance in Bunun, Taiwan”, TULIP 14: 23-47. Nevskij, N. A. (1993). Vocabulary of Tsou, Taiwan. Taipei: Tai-yuan Publishing Co. (in Chinese). Numao, T. (1996). “On the classification of fishes among the Yami (Iranomilek)”, Studies of Cultural Anthroplogy 14. Nagoya: Department of Cultural Anthropology, Nanzan University, 20-47 (in Japanese). Ogawa, N., and Asai, E. (1935). Gengo ni yoru Taiwan Takasago-zoku Densetsu-shu [The Myths and Traditions of the Formosan Native Tribes]. Taihoku (= Taipei): Taihoku Teikoku Daigaku Gengo-gaku Kenkyu-shitsu (in Japanese). Pecoraro, F. (1977). Essai de dictionnaire Taroko–Français. Cahier d’ Archipel 7. Paris: SECMI. Quack, A. (1981). Das Wort der Alten. Erzaehlungen zur Geschichte der Pujuma von Katipol (Taiwan). CIA 12. —— (1985). Priesterinnen, Heilerinnen, Schamaninnen? Die poringao der Puyuma von Katipol (Taiwan), dargestellt und analysiert nach Aufzeichnungen aus dem Nachlass von D. Schroeder. CIA 32. Rau, D.-H. V. (1992). A Grammar of Atayal. Taipei: The Crane Publishing Co. Rau, D. V., and Dong, M.-N. (2006). Yami Texts with Reference Grammar and Dictionary. Language and Linguistics Monograph Series A10. Taipei: Institute of Linguistics, Academia Sinica.
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Schroeder, D., and Quack, A. (1979). Kopfjagdriten der Puyuma von Katipol (Taiwan), eine Textdokumentation. CIA 11. Shi, N.-L. (1992). Myth of Badaiwan: Myths and Stories from the Homeland of Flying Fish. Aboriginal Series 9. Taichung: Chenxing Publishing Company. Shimizu, J. (1998). Kvalan Myths and Traditions, as Recorded in the Original Language. Taipei: SMC Pub. Co. (in Japanese, English, and Chinese as well as Kavalan). Shun Ye Taiwan Aborigines Research Group in Japan (ed.) (2001). Taiwan Genjuumin kenkyuu gairan [General Survey of Taiwan Aborigines Studies]. Tokyo: Fukyosha. Szakos, J. (1994). “Die Sprache der Cou, Untersuchungen zur Synchronie einer austronesischen Sprache auf Taiwan”, dissertation submitted to Rheinischen FriedrichWilhelms-Universität zu Bonn. —— (1999a). Final Report of Kanakanavu Language and Culture. Kaohiung County, Sanmin Township, and Ching-yi University (with a CD). —— (1999b). Final Report of Saaroa Language: Vocabulary. CIP, Executive Yuan. 159 pp. Ting, P.-Hs. (1978). ‘‘Reconstruction of Proto-Puyuma phonology’’. BIHP 49/3: 321-92 (in Chinese). Tsao, R.-L. (Teminawi C. Tseng) (1997). A Study of Seediq Atayal’s Foods and their Stories, vol. i. Taipei: Tangshan Publishing Company (in Chinese and English). Tsuchida, Sh. (1976). Reconstruction of Proto-Tsouic Phonology. Study of Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa Monograph Series 5. Tokyo: Institute of Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa. —— (1984). “Fish names in Yami (Imorod dialect): second interim report”, TULIP 84: 11–90. —— (1990). “Classificatory prefixes of Tsou verbs”, TULIP 89: 17-52. —— (1992).「平埔族各語言研究瑣記(上・下)」[Miscellanies of languages of sinicized ethnic groups in Formosa (1, 2)], 『臺灣史田野研究通訊』 [Newsletter of Taiwan History Field Research], 22: 9-22; 23: 26-42. —— (2003). Kanakanavu texts (Austronesian Formosan), ELPR A3-014. —— Yamada, Y., and Moriguchi, T. (1987). Lists of Selected Words of Batanic Languages. Tokyo: Dept. of Linguistics, University of Tokyo. ——— and Constantino, E. (1989). Batanic Languages: Lists of Sentences for Grammatical Features. Tokyo: Dept. of Linguistics, University of Tokyo. Tsukida, N. (1993). “A brief sketch of the Sakizaya dialect of Amis”, TULIP 13: 372-413. —— (1995). “Texts in the Truku dialect of the Sediq language”, Asian and African Linguistics, 24: 103-48. Tokyo: Institute for the Study of Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa, University of Tokyo Foreign Affairs. Tung, M.-N. (1995). Praising Taros. Panchiao: Taohsiang Pub. Co. (in Yami and Chinese). Tung, T.-H. (1964). A Descriptive Study of Tsou Language, Formosa. IHPSP No. 48. Wu, C.-L. (2000). Amis Reference Grammar. TALS 11. Yeh, M.-L. (2000). Saisiyat Reference Grammar. TALS 2. Zeitoun, E. (2000a). Bunun Reference Grammar. TALS 5. —— (2000b). Tsou Reference Grammar. TALS 6. —— (2000c). Rukai Reference Grammar. TALS 8.
16
Languages of Mainland South-East Asia David Bradley
16.1. Introduction 16.2. Austro-Thai endangered languages 16.2.1. Austronesian 16.2.2. Thai-Kadai 16.2.3. Miao-Yao 16.3. Austroasiatic endangered languages 16.3.1. Aslian 16.3.2. Katuic-Bahnaric 16.3.3. Northern 16.3.4. Pakanic 16.3.5. Monic 16.3.6. Pearic 16.3.7. Vietic 16.4. Tibeto-Burman endangered languages 16.4.1. Digarish “Mishmi” 16.4.2. Nungish 16.4.3. Burmic 16.4.3.1. Burmish 16.4.3.2. Gong 16.4.3.3. Ngwi 16.4.4. Karenic 16.4.5. Sal 16.4.6. Kuki-Chin-Naga 16.5. Indo-European endangered languages 16.6. Conclusion
303 308 309 310 313 314 315 315 317 319 320 320 321 322 322 322 323 323 324 325 329 330 331 332 332
I am pleased to acknowledge the support of the UNESCO Endangered Languages programme and of the Australian Research Council (A59701122, A59803475, A00001357) and assistance from various institutions in China, especially the Yunnan Academy of Social Sciences; Thailand, especially Mahidol University; and France, especially the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique. Information from a number of colleagues is included here: 2000 China census figures from Colin Mackerras; information on Aslian from Geoffrey Benjamin; on various Mon-Khmer languages from Ilia Peiros, Suwilai Premsrirat, Theraphan Luangthongkum, and Gérard Diffloth; on languages of Burma from Denise Bernot; on Miao-Yao languages from Barbara Niederer; on Kristang from Alan Baxter; and on various Kadai and other languages of Vietnam from Jerry Edmondson. Of course, all remaining shortcomings and errors and any misunderstanding of information from others are my sole responsibility.
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Figure 16.1. Languages of mainland South-East Asia
l a n g uag e s o f m a i n l a n d s o u t h - e a st a s i a
303
16.1. Introduction This chapter discusses ninety-six endangered languages (ELs) and six extinct languages of mainland South-East Asia including Burma, Cambodia, Lao, Thailand, Vietnam, and the non-Austronesian languages of West or peninsular Malaysia, in the context of related languages and the dominant languages which are replacing them. The main generally recognized families in this area are Sino-Tibetan (ST) and Austroasiatic (AA). Both also extend into east and south Asia. The other languages are in families whose higher-level classification is a matter of controversy. The Austro-Thai (AT) superfamily proposed by Benedict (1942) includes the Thai-Kadai (TK) family (which includes Thai, and is found in southern China as well as South-East Asia and into the north-eastern part of south Asia) and the Austronesian (AN) family (mainly in the islands, but also on the coast). Benedict (1975) adds the Miao-Yao (MY) or Hmong-Mien family (mainly in southern China and extending into northern South-East Asia), and Benedict (1990) proposes to add Japanese as well. More recent proposals by Sagart (2002) based on more solid lexical, phonological, and morphological correspondences link AN and ST. An earlier proposed link was of AN and AA in Austric (Schmidt 1906), but this is not widely accepted nowadays. One endangered Indo-European (IE) creole is also spoken in the area. Languages of the longer-established politically dominant groups within these families have been replacing other related and unrelated languages in central areas for many millennia, leading to greatly reduced linguistic diversity in Cambodia, coastal areas of Vietnam and Malaysia, and the central plains of Thailand and Burma. Marginal upland areas both preserve preexisting diversity and accommodate migrations from adjacent areas where majority group pressure forces other groups away. This has led to the spread of numerous languages from south-western China into South-East Asia. Of at least 960 AN languages, only a few are spoken on the Asian mainland. This includes two endangered indigenous Malayic languages of southern Thailand and the extreme south of Burma. The other AN group here is Chamic, which includes four endangered languages and three other languages of southern Vietnam and north-eastern Cambodia, with one additional endangered language, Tsat, spoken on Hainan Island in China, as noted in the chapter by Sakiyama. Of more than eighty additional AT languages from subgroups other than AN, over fifty are TK, twenty-seven are MY, and a lexical component in Japanese may also fit here. Of the non-AN AT languages spoken in mainland
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Table 16.1. List of languages No.
Name
Austronesian Malayic 1. Moken 2. Urak Lawoi Chamic 3. 4. 5. 6.
Moklen
Mon-Khmer Aslian 18. Batek 19. Besisi 20. Chewong 21. Jah Het 22. Jehai 23. Kenaboi 24. Kensiu 25. Kintaq 26. Lanoh 27. Maniq 28. Mendriq 29. Semai 30. Semaq Beri 31. Semelai 32. Temiar Katuic-Bahnaric Katuic 33. Chatong 34. Dakkang 35. Triw
Speakers
6,000 3,000
4,000 2,000
250,000 11,000 25,000 20,000
Endangerment location
B/T T/M
100,000 9,000 22,000 18,000
PE PE PE PE
V/C/T/M V V V
150,000 100,000 150,000 7,863 2,100 200 689
2,000 50 3,000 5,000 800 200 400
SE SE SE E PE PE E
Ch/V Ch/V Ch/V V V V V/Ch
20,000 100,000 95,000
10,000 80,000 70,000
E PE PE
L/T L L
48,700
25,000
PE
Ch/V
960 2,185 400 3,193 1,200
500 235 350 Tonga’/Mos/Ten’en 300 Menriq 145 Senoi/Sengoi 29,000 2,488 4,103 17,000
800 1,500 300 2,500 1,000 0 400 200 300 200 100 10,000 2,000 2,500 15,000
E SE SE E E Ex E E E E E E E E PE
M M M M M/T M M/T M M T M M M M M
580 1,198 1,328
500 1,000 1,200
E E E
L L L
Hagei/Hoki A-o/A-uo Tudu Lati Khla Phlao Ainh Pupeo/Laqua
Saek Tai Daeng Tai Neua
Miao-Yao 17. Baheng
Population
E E
Cham Chru N. Roglai S. Roglai
Thai-Kadai Kadai 7. Gelao (Green) 8. Gelao (Red) 9. Gelao (White) 10. Lachi 11. Laha 12. Nung Ven 13. Pubiao Tai 14. 15. 16.
Other names
Pathen
Mah Meri Jahai
l a n g uag e s o f m a i n l a n d s o u t h - e a st a s i a No.
Name
Other names
Bahnaric 36. 37. 38. 39.
Chrau Juk Kaco’ Swoeng
Choro Suai “Lamam” Lavi
Northern Angkuic 40. Mok
Population
Speakers
15,000 1,500 1,000 492
7,000 1,400 800 450
E E E E
V L C L
10,000?
6,000?
E
B/L/Ch/T
5,000
2,000
SE
B
Mae Rim Lawa Lawa
200 20,000
0? 12,000
M E
T T
Tai Hat/Hat Phi Tong Luang Kha Bit/Bit
200 150 2,232
30 100 <1,000
SE E E
V/L T/L L/Ch
4,516
2,000
E
V/Ch
Tai Loi
Palaungic 41. Danau Waic 42. 43.
Phalok Lavüa
Khmuic 44. Iduh 45. Mlabri 46. Pasing Pakanic 47. Mang
Endangerment location
Monic 48. 49.
Mon Nyahkur
1,000,000 20,000
200,000 10,000
PE SE
B/T T
Pearic 50. 51.
Chong Chu’ung
2,000 167
500 37
SE PE
T/C T/C
250
200
200 0 50 0 40
SE Ex M Ex SE
C C C/T C T
500
300
E
C
500 <1,000 <1,000 31 <1,000 >1,000 2,000 200 3,000 500 1,000 1,500
250 <100 500 31 500 >500 1,000 100 1,500 250 500 450
E SE E SE E E PE E E E E E
L V/L V L L V/L V L L/V V/L V/L T/L
57.
“Sa-och”/Sa-ong/ Khamen Padong “Pear” of Preah Vihar Samray Samre East Pear Samre of Siem Reap Song Kasong/Chong of Trat Su’ung Souy
Vietic 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69.
Aheu Arem Hung Kri Maleng May Nguon Phong Pong Ruc Sach Thavung
52. 53. 54. 55. 56.
305
(Phonsung)
(Pakatan)
Poong Ahlao/Ahao
200
(Continued)
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Table 16.1. (Continued) No.
Name
Other names
Population
Speakers
17,300 30,000 15,000
3,500 ? ?
SE PE PE
B/Ch B B
1,500 <10,000
0? 5,000
M E
B B
500
150
SE
T
45,000
30,000
E
Ch/V
5,000 2,740
3,000 2,400
E E
Ch/B/T/L B/T/Ch
2,000 1,300 7,000 1,200 500? 23,618
1,000 450 3,000 800 300? 20,000
E E E E SE PE
L V Ch/B T Ch/L L
2,118
2,000
PE
L/V
1,000 5,500 55,000
800 4,000 30,000
PE E PE
V Ch/V Ch/V
PE PE PE
B B B
Tibeto-Burman Nungish 70. Anong Anung 71. Lungmi 72. Dvngsar Burmic Burmish 73. Hpun 74. Yaw Gong 75.
Gong
Ngwi, Central 76. Cosung Ngwi, Southern 77. Akeu 78. Bisu 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84–88.
Chepya Công Laomian Mpi Paha Sinsali
89.
Sila
Ngwi, South-Eastern 90. Laghuu 91. Mo’ang 92. Phula
Kucong/Lahu
Hpyen/Laopin/ Laopan
Bana Phunoi (2)/Pisu/ Phongku/Lawseng Sida/Kha Pai Xa Pho/Muji Mondi/Matsi Bokhopa, Pula
Karenic 93. 94. 95.
Manu Yintale Geba
10,000 10,000 10,000
Sal Luish 96. 97. 98. 99. 100. 101.
Ganan Kadu Malin Pyu Sak Taman
7,000 <20,000
Indo-European creole 102. Kristang
Thet
>5,000
10,000
Endangerment location
500? ? 0 0 4,000 0
SE/M B SE/M B Ex B Ex B PE Ba/B Ex B
2,150
E
M
Notes: Key to language endangerment abbreviations: PE: potentially endangered; E: endangered; SE: severely endangered; M: moribund; Ex: extinct. Key to country abbreviations (listed in order of population): B: Burma; Ba: Bangladesh; C: Cambodia; Ch: China; L: Lao; M: (West) Malaysia; T: Thailand; V: Vietnam.
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South-East Asia, eleven are endangered to some degree, including ten TK languages and one MY language. There are over 130 AA languages, including more than 120 languages of the Mon-Khmer (MK) subgroup, mainly in South-East Asia but also in south-western China and in south Asia (languages within Khasi in Meghalaya in northeastern India and the languages of the Nicobar Islands); the other subgroup of AA, the Munda languages, are found only in south Asia. Of over 100 known MK languages in the area covered, three are recently extinct, forty-nine are now endangered, and most of the rest are at least potentially endangered. There are probably additional MK languages not yet located, especially in Burma. The ST languages include the various Sinitic languages and more than 320 Tibeto-Burman (TB) languages in east, South-East, and south Asia. Of the TB languages in South-East Asia, twenty-nine are currently known to be endangered to some degree, two are recently extinct, and one is longer extinct. There are probably others in Burma. There is also one endangered IE Portuguese creole at Melaka (Malacca) in Malaysia. Population data are from 1997 Ministry of Interior data for Thailand, the 1995 censuses for Vietnam and for Lao, the 2000 census for China, 1999 scholarly estimates1 based on Malaysian government statistics, and my estimates for Burma and Cambodia where recent census information is not available. For more detailed maps, see Bradley (1981) and Bradley (1994). The history of mainland South-East Asia has been one of repeated dynastic changes over several millennia. It is likely that the main inhabitants of this region at an earlier date were speakers of MK languages; of these, the Vietnamese of what is now northern Vietnam came under the political and cultural domination of China to such an extent that some linguists used to reject the relationship of Vietnamese with the rest of MK or AA. As a result of Chinese expansion southward, some large groups were displaced and moved into SouthEast Asia. These include the TB-speaking Burmans, who most likely arrived in the valley of Upper Burma as a result of the conquest of the Pyu by the Nanzhao kingdom of what is now north-western Yunnan about ad 960, and subsequently spread into most of Burma. It also includes the TK-speaking Thai, who gradually moved from south-western Yunnan into what is now Thailand, Lao, and north-eastern Burma starting a century or so later, displacing and eventually assimilating the local ethnic groups of central Thailand such as the Mon and taking over Khmer-controlled areas of what is now north-eastern Thailand. The early history of southern South-East Asia was dominated by various AN groups, including the Cham of Champa in what is now south central Vietnam 1
In Benjamin (forthcoming).
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and the Malay of Srivijaya in what is now West Malaysia and the surrounding area, with the later Muslim Malay kingdoms after the arrival of Islam. The centre of gravity of AA is in mainland South-East Asia, where all subgroups of AA are part of the more closely linked MK family, named after two long-established literary languages, Mon and Khmer. MK also extends into southern China and south Asia. There are very substantial and long-established ethnic Chinese migrant communities throughout South-East Asia. Most are from south-eastern coastal areas of China, and speak various non-Mandarin varieties of Chinese; some in northern Burma, Thailand, and Lao came overland from Yunnan and speak south-western Mandarin. Languages of the AN family are a major presence in peninsular Malaysia and coastal areas to the north into Thailand and Burma. Furthermore, the Chamic group have long been in what is now southern Vietnam, with a small extension into north-eastern Cambodia a few hundred years ago at the time of the final Vietnamese conquest of southern Vietnam, with a few moving further into Thailand and Malaysia more recently. The TK languages were centred in southern China up until a millennium ago, when they expanded south-westward into South-East Asia and beyond. Within TK, the greatest internal genetic diversity is within the Kadai languages, now mainly in China but also scattered further south into northern Vietnam, with small and decreasing numbers of speakers. The Kam-Tai subgroup of TK includes the various Kam-Sui languages of China and the Tai languages, divided into Northern, Central, and South-Western. Northern Tai is mainly found in China; Central Tai groups are mainly in China but also in north-eastern Vietnam. South-Western Tai languages are found in western Yunnan in China, and provided nearly all of the migration into Burma, Lao, Vietnam, and Thailand over the last millennium or more. The MY languages have long been widely distributed in south central China. These groups have a long history of resistance to the spread of the Chinese majority into these areas, and large groups have moved southwestward away from the advancing Chinese over more than a millennium. They relatively recently spread into Vietnam, northern Lao, and northern Thailand, with a few in north-eastern Burma.
16.2. Austro-Thai Endangered Languages This superfamily was proposed in Benedict (1942) and has gained acceptance by many Asianist linguists, but few Austronesianists. It is based on the
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observation of about 200 basic vocabulary items which appear to be cognate (Benedict 1975), based on the principle that AN retains two-syllable forms, MY preserves the first syllable, Kam-Tai preserves the second syllable, and some Kadai languages, like AN, retain both syllables but with forms transitional to Kam-Tai. The competing hypothesis among some Chinese linguists is that Kam-Tai (or Zhuang-Dong as they call it) and MY are instead related to Chinese; but the forms proposed to support this hypothesis are mainly contact items borrowed from Chinese into Kam-Tai and MY. Another classification sometimes still seen in the literature is that AN and AA (including MK) form the Austric superfamily proposed by Schmidt (1906). Sagart (2002) links AN and Sino-Tibetan. An extremely conservative view would be that AN, TK, and MY are three independent families with some contact vocabulary from each other and from various stages and varieties of Chinese.
16.2.1. Austronesian Of course the AN language with the largest speech community on the Asian mainland, which is also replacing many endangered languages of Malaysia and Indonesia, is Indonesian/Malay. In slightly different varieties, this is the official language of Malaysia, of Indonesia, and of Brunei. Malay is in any case the first language of about two-thirds of the population of Peninsular Malaysia and is fluently spoken by nearly all the rest. It has many local dialects, which are receding in the face of standard Malaysian Malay, or of Thai in southern Thailand where there are over a million Malay speakers. The mainland AN languages which are endangered fall into two genetic subgroups: the Chamic languages, mainly in southern Vietnam but also in north-eastern Cambodia and one endangered language on the south central coast of Hainan in China, and all the other Malayic languages. The Chamic languages include the Cham (99,000 in Vietnam, about 100,000 in Cambodia around Kampong Cham, a few thousand refugees in Malaysia and the USA), Jarai (242,000 in Vietnam, about 20,000 in Cambodia), Rhade (in Vietnamese Ede, 177,000, about 5,000 more in Cambodia), Northern and Southern Roglai (together 72,000; about 55 per cent northern) and Chru (15,000) ethnic groups of Vietnam, and the Haroi (15,000 in Vietnam, not recognized as a separate ethnic group but included in the Jarai total); all of these languages are receding, and Cham, Chru, and the two languages within Roglai are becoming endangered. The most endangered Chamic language is Tsat, the language of two villages of Hui (Muslim) nationality in southern Hainan in China, as noted in the chapter by Sakiyama. It is typologically interesting because it has become fully tonal,
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unlike other Chamic languages, due presumably to contact with tonal languages like Chinese which is replacing it. There are four Malayic group languages which are endangered in the area covered. The dialect chain which includes Moken (2,000) further north and Moklen (4,000) further south is spoken by decreasing groups of seafarers along the coasts of southern Burma and the west coast of southern Thailand as far south as Phuket. Urak Lawoi is spoken by similar groups of about 3,000 ranging southwards from Phuket to beyond the Malaysian border. Two other endangered Malayic languages of West Malaysia are discussed in the chapter by Sakiyama: Orang Kuala (also known as Duano or Desin Dola) and Orang Kanaq. All these groups are known as Hsaloun in Burmese, as Chaw Thalee “sea people” in Thai, and as Orang Laut “sea people” in Malay, and all their languages have become endangered as these groups settle down. Urak Lawoi is well described, but the other languages still need work.
16.2.2. Thai-Kadai TK (sometimes just called Tai-Kadai or Kadai) is divided into three branches, including Tai with three subgroups, Northern, Central, and South-Western, and Kam-Sui which are quite close to each other and are also called Kam-Tai, and the Kadai languages. The term Kadai was coined by Benedict (1942) to refer to this third subgroup, from his reconstructed form of the Kadai word for “person”. The exact position of some languages in TK (Northern Tai, Kam-Sui, or Kadai) is a matter of disagreement between scholars; these include Li and the more or less endangered Lajia, Mulao, and the “Ong-Be” language of the Lingao area of Hainan. Chinese scholars refer to Kam-Tai and TK as ZhuangDong, from the Chinese name for the largest Thai nationality in China and the largest Kam-Sui nationality, the Dong which is the Chinese name for the Kam. The Tai group includes a wide geographical range of languages, classified into ethnic groups quite differently in different countries. In China there are Zhuang (16,178,811), Buyi (2,971,460), and Dai (1,158,989) nationalities; in fact there is a dialect continuum between northern Zhuang as spoken in north-western Guangxi and Buyi which is mainly spoken in Guizhou, but a major intelligibility break between northern and southern Zhuang in Guangxi. Southern Zhuang as spoken in south-western Guangxi forms a dialect continuum with the languages of closely related ethnic groups in Vietnam, the Nung (705,000), Tay or Tho (1,190,000), and Caolan (60,000). Northern Zhuang or Buyi and Saek are Northern Tai languages, as is Yay or Giay of China, Vietnam, and Lao (38,000, also known as Nhang or in Lao as
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Yang). Southern Zhuang or Nung, Tay and Tho and Caolan are Central Tai languages, and all the rest of the Tai group are South-Western Tai languages. These include Tai Pong in China (100,000), Yo (50,000), Phuan (80,000), and other small groups in Lao and Thailand, and a variety of larger groups. The Dai nationality of China speak various South-Western Tai languages including two large groups with distinct languages and literary traditions which are recognized as distinct ethnic groups in Burma, Lao, and Thailand. One is the Tai Lue of northern Lao (102,760), far northern Thailand (6,472), north-western Vietnam (3,700), and the extreme south-west of Yunnan in China (about 300,000, known as Xi-Dai from Xishuangbanna (in Thai Sipsongphanna “12,000 rice fields”), the place name for the area where most Tai Lue in China live, plus Dai, the Chinese term for South-Western Tai groups). The other is the Tai Mao, part of the Shan (Burmese name) or Tai Yai (own name) group of north-eastern Burma and far north-western Thailand (20,068); in China there are about 350,000 and they are referred to as De-Dai as they live mainly in Dehong. Another large group included within the Dai nationality are the Tai Neua “northern Tai” in south-west Yunnan along the Lancang (Mekhong) river, about 100,000 speakers; they should not be confused with the similarly named group of eastern Lao. Also included in the Chinese category of Dai are a few Thai Dam “black Thai” who are the main component of the Thai ethnic group of north-western Vietnam (1,040,000), are the largest part of the Phu Tai group of Lao, and are known as Lao Song in Thailand. None of these languages is endangered, and all are well described. This Vietnamese Thai category also includes Tai Khaw (“white Tai”), Tai Daeng (“red Tai”), and Tai Neua (“north Tai”) as in Lao. Other languages of the Dai nationality of China scattered across western, northern, and south central Yunnan are spoken by various smaller groups in Yongren, Xinping, and other counties; linguists from Thailand have been doing extensive fieldwork on these languages since the 1980s. Apart from a wide range of varieties of Shan, Tai Mao, or Tai Yai, the Tailanguage groups in Burma include two further languages sometimes viewed as part of Shan but better regarded as distinct languages: Khyn of the eastern Shan State around Kengtung, about 120,000 speakers, with a couple of thousand more nearby in China; and Khamti Shan “gold place Shan” of far north-western Burma and spreading into north-eastern India, about 70,000 speakers. There are three extinct Thai languages formerly spoken in Assam in India: Ahom, Tairong, and Nora; also severely endangered Khamyang with all speakers above 40 in one village, and potentially endangered Aiton and
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Phake (Morey 2005). As these are outside the area of the ELPR project, they are not included on the map or the totals of endangered languages here. The only Northern Tai subgroup language which is severely endangered is Saek, spoken in China by a small number of members of the Zhuang nationality, in Lao (2,459 by ethnicity, not all speak), and in Thailand. The total group population is about 20,000, but it is now divided into three communities out of contact with each other, and the language is being absorbed into local Lao. It is well described, especially the variety which is moribund in Thailand. Lao, apart from being the national language of Lao with over two million first language speakers and many second language speakers, is also the largest linguistic group in north-eastern Thailand, with about 25 million speakers who use it as a diglossic Low. It is also spoken by a few thousand Lao in north-eastern Cambodia and by the Lao ethnic group in Vietnam (10,000). Also in Lao are the Phu Tai (441,497), Nhuon (33,940), and Yang (3,447) groups. The first of these is a group which includes various South-Western Tai languages very close to Lao, such as Thai Dam “black Thai” and Tai Khaw “white Tai” both widely spoken also in Vietnam by the Thai group and in China by part of the Dai nationality; also more or less endangered Tai Daeng “red Tai”, Tai Neua “northern Tai” (from Samneua province of Lao), and so on. Each of these peoples has an original territory in northeastern Lao, and they are also found amalgamated in the south where they were moved as war captives some time ago and are losing their original languages. The languages of the Tai Daeng and Tai Neua groups within the Phu Tai category are undescribed and becoming endangered. The second group speak Kham Myang or Northern Thai, as in northern Thailand. The third is the same as the Giay or Nhang group of Vietnam, considered a part of the Zhuang nationality in China. Other major South-Western Tai languages include standard central Thai, Pak Tay or Southern Thai, and Kham Myang or Northern Thai. The domains of usage for Kham Myang, Pak Tai, and Lao in Thailand are being reduced as standard Thai takes over diglossic High roles, but these languages are vigorous in diglossic Low uses and have many millions of speakers. Central Thai is the mother tongue of over twenty million speakers, with over forty million additional fluent bilinguals. Languages of the Kam-Sui or Dong subgroup are only spoken in China; some are endangered. Nearly all of the Kadai languages are also only spoken in China, where all are endangered. There are also some Kadai communities in Vietnam where some of the languages are still spoken by another 2,400 people. Of the five Gelao languages, three, Hakhi or Green Gelao,
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Tolo or White Gelao, and A-uo or Red Gelao, are also spoken by very small groups in northern Vietnam where they are grouped in the Colao ethnic group and underenumerated at 1,500. Curiously, there are now more White Gelao and Red Gelao speakers in Vietnam than in their traditional areas in western Guizhou in China. There are several other southern outlier Kadai groups in Vietnam, all of whose languages are endangered. The 1,500 Pupeo (autonym Qabiaw, also called Laqua in the older literature) are a recognized ethnic goup of Vietnam; they and the 307 Pubiao of Yi nationality in Malipo county, Yunnan, share an endangered language. Another similar related pair are the Laji (1,643 with Yi nationality in China), Lachi (7,863, a recognized ethnic group of Vietnam), autonym Lipulio, or Lati in the older literature, with about 5,200 speakers from a combined ethnic group of over 9,500. The Nungven or Ainh group of 200 and the Laha (Vietnamese Klhaphlao) group of 2,100, both in northern Vietnam, are somewhat less endangered than the other Kadai languages, despite the small size of these groups. Apart from Laha and some varieties of Gelao, not enough work has been done on any of these languages.
16.2.3. Miao-Yao There are four clusters of MY languages, or, as they are sometimes now known from the autonyms of the south-westernmost Miao and Yao languages, Hmong-Mien languages: Miao, Yao, Bunu, and She, comprising at least eighteen languages. The largest and most complex and internally diverse is the Miao (Chinese), Meo (Vietnamese), Maew (Thai and Lao), Myaing (Burmese), or Hmong (autonym of the best-described language included in this subgroup). The total Miao population is China 8,940,116, Vietnam 556,000, Lao 231,168, Thailand 126,300, Burma a few thousand, and over 100,000 refugees from Lao in various western countries. Miao is divided by Chinese linguists into three clusters: Eastern, mainly in western Hunan and north-eastern Guizhou with about 800,000 speakers of two subvarieties; Central or Hmo mainly in southern Guizhou with about 1.5 million speakers of three subvarieties; and Western or Hmao/Hmong of western Guizhou, Yunnan, Vietnam, Lao, Thailand, and Burma with about 1.8 million speakers in China and nearly a million outside. Hmao/Hmong includes seven subvarieties, one of which is extremely well described: Hmong Dao “white Hmong” as spoken in Lao and Mong Njua “green Mong” as spoken in Thailand, which are very closely related dialects. There are also many millions of Miao in China who do not speak
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Miao. Applying the criterion of intelligibility, there are twelve or more Miao languages, most of which need further descriptive work. The smallest speaker populations are 40,000 for two of the Central Miao languages of south central Guizhou; none of these Miao languages is at present endangered. Names for all kinds of Miao are extremely confused in the literature, including some place names, descriptive names based on clothing, and various autonyms or exonyms. Often several names refer to the same group, or one name refers to several different groups. The Miao nationality in China also includes some groups who would like to be separate nationalities, such as the Gedou or Ge, and other formerly unclassified nationality groups amalgamated into the Miao nationality in the 1980s, such as the Laba and Sanqiao; but some Sanqiao who were classified as Dong (a Kam-Sui group) before then retained that nationality. Somewhat less complex but still including six distinct languages are the Yao (China 2,637,421 including Bunu, Yerong, and the TK-speaking Lajia or about two million without; also Vietnam 474,000, Lao 18,092, Thailand 48,357 and a few thousand refugees from Lao in western countries; conversely, all 50,000 members of the Miao nationality in Hainan actually speak a Yao language). About half those in China speak one of six languages within Yao, and nearly all those outside China. The approximately 700,000 Bunu [pu nu] are almost all in north-western Guangxi and are classified as Yao nationality. There are four core closely related Bunu languages (one endangered) and four other less closely related languages (three endangered). Of the latter, one, Baheng [pa hŋ] is a group of nearly 50,000, mainly in China but also 3,700 in Vietnam, where they are classified as Pa Then. Baheng has two dialects, perhaps different enough to be viewed as languages; they are both potentially endangered.
16.3. Austroasiatic Endangered Languages This section will discuss the MK languages which are autochthonous to mainland South-East Asia. It does not include the Munda languages of eastern south Asia, which form the other component of AA; nor the endangered MK languages of China, the MK Khasi languages of north-eastern India or the indigenous MK languages of the Nicobars. All but three MK languages could be regarded as potentially endangered. One exception is Vietnamese, the national language of Vietnam with nearly sixty million first language speakers in Vietnam, which has spread at the expense of MK and other minority languages there for centuries; it is also the
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language of the 18,915 Jing in China, and substantial groups in Lao who came during the French period and in Thailand who came in the 1940s and early 1950s; as well as the post-1975 refugees in western countries. The second nonendangered language is Khmer, the national language of Cambodia with at least ten million speakers, eight million in Cambodia. While it has been receding in the face of Thai and Vietnamese expansion for more than a millennium, it is still universally spoken in Cambodia and is still replacing some minority MK languages there. There are also 895,000 Khmer in southern Vietnam, a larger number in north-eastern Thailand, and 169 in Lao, but not all speak Khmer. Standard Khasi of eastern Meghalaya in India and surrounding areas of India and Bangladesh is the third non-endangered MK language cluster.
16.3.1. Aslian The fourteen remaining Orang Asli languages of Peninsular Malaysia and southern Thailand are all endangered, some severely. At least one other is already extinct, and many dialects of the surviving languages are also extinct. Northern Aslian includes Maniq/Tonga/Mos/Ten’en (over 300 group members) in southern Thailand, closely related to Kensiu (about 500) on the Thai/ Malaysian border. All other Aslian languages are only in Malaysia. The other Northern Aslian languages are Jehai (1,200), Batek (960, many dialects, some extinct), and Chewong (about 400). Kintaq (under 250) is sometimes viewed as a dialect of Kensiu, and Mendriq (about 150) is sometimes viewed as a dialect of Jehai. All are endangered, and all need further descriptive work. Central Aslian includes Lanoh (about 350), Temiar (about 17,000), Semai (about 29,000, many dialects), and Jah Het (about 3,200). Semai may appear safe judging from its population, but even this language is endangered. Temiar is perhaps the best described Aslian language, and the least endangered. Southern Aslian includes Semaq Beri (about 2,500), Semelai (about 4,100), and Besisi (about 2,200). Of the Aslian languages, Chewong and Besisi are the most seriously endangered, Majority community attitudes are very negative. Kenaboi, which became extinct about a century ago, is now believed to be a composite of Aslian MK with extensive Malayic AN lexical input and a third component of unknown origin (Hajek forthcoming). Some other southern Aslian languages and many dialects of surviving languages may have also become extinct, replaced by Malay.
16.3.2. Katuic-Bahnaric The Katuic-Bahnaric branch of MK has two subgroups, Katuic and Bahnaric. The Katuic subgroup is mainly in the inland of central Vietnam and adjacent
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areas of Lao and into north-eastern Cambodia and the south-east of northeastern Thailand. It is named after its south-eastern most member, Katu or Kantu, and can be divided into West Katuic (Kuy, So, and Bru) and East Katuic (Katu, Kantu, Pacoh, Phuang or Phuong, Katang, Kriang, Ta’oih, Ong, Yir, and a few others). The largest group included, the Kuy, are the westernmost; they are quite numerous in northern Cambodia and the south-eastern part of north-eastern Thailand, along the Cambodian border, and some in southern Lao. Most are in Thailand; the population in Lao in 1983 was 49,039. There are about 800,000 group members; at least half are speakers of a range of dialects, some mutually unintelligible. They are known as Suai in Thai and Lao. Another large cluster is the So (160,000) and Bru (45,000) of south central Lao, extending into central Vietnam and Thailand; many are losing their languages, especially in Thailand. The Bru are also known as Van Kieu in Vietnam. East Katuic groups include the Katu or Kantu (about 37,000 in Vietnam and 14,676 in Lao, various dialects), the Katang (80,000, including 72,391 in Lao), the Ta’oih (about 50,000 including 24,577 in Lao), the Pacoh (15,000 including 12,923 in Lao), the Phuang (6,000 in Lao and a few in Vietnam known as Phuang), the Kriang (autonym), Klor or Ngeh (Lao name, 8,917 in Lao and 1,200 in Vietnam for a total slightly over 10,000), also Ong and Yir, one language, two groups with slightly different dialects (12,000 in Lao). Three seriously endangered East Katuic languages were recently located in Xekong province of Lao by Theraphan Luangthongkum. One is Chatong, with 580 people in four villages. The others are Dakkang and Triw in the same area, with 1,198 and 1,328 people respectively; all three are undescribed apart from her work and endangered. The Bahnaric languages are quite numerous in south-eastern Lao, northeastern Cambodia, the northern part of the central highlands of Vietnam, and the interior of southern Vietnam just north-east of Saigon. The North Bahnaric branch is north of the Chamic languages, West Bahnaric is west of the Chamic groups, and South Bahnaric is south of them; thus clearly the seaborne AN Chamic incursion divided them. Despite fairly small populations, a complex dialect situation where various named dialects may lack a superordinate term for the language, and intensive contact with Vietnamese in the eastern part of the area, most of these languages are surviving, though contracting. West Bahnaric includes Brao/Krung/Kravet/Su in southern most Lao and north-eastern most Cambodia, a dialect cluster with about 35,000 total, including 350 Brao in Vietnam. Other languages here are Loven or Laven (from the place name for the Boloven plateau in southern Lao) or Jru’ (autonym), 28,057 in Lao; Nyaheun, 3,960 in Lao; Oi/Sok/Sapuan/
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Cheng 25,000 in Lao (Oi 11,194; Cheng 4,540); and Tampuan (15,000 in north-east Cambodia). The most endangered languages in this subbranch are Juk (autonym) or Suai (exonym), 1,500, and Swoeng (autonym) or Lavi (exonym), 492 (or 584 according to the Lao census), both recently located and described by Theraphan Luangthongkum in Xekong province of Lao. The North-West Bahnaric languages, between the West and North Bahnaric languages in southern Lao, include Tarieng or Dakchueng (6,000), Halak (autonym) or Alak (exonym) (13,217), Kaseng (1,200), and Yaeh (3,376 in the census, 4,916 located by Theraphan Luangthongkum in Xekong province). Most of the North Bahnaric languages are in the highlands of Vietnam south-west of Danang. These include Takua (6,000), Cua (12,000), Duan (2,500), Katua (4,000), Hre (94,000), Monom (6,000), Todrah (6,000), Kayong (25,000), Rengao (18,000); also extending into Lao, Sedang (97,520 of whom 520 in Lao), Jeh (12,000), Halang (15,000), and Khaco’ (1,000 in north-eastern Cambodia). Most are becoming potentially endangered; many in Vietnam are fairly well described, but more work is needed in Lao, especially on Khaco’ in Cambodia. The official ethnic classification in Vietnam divides South Bahnaric groups into Chrau in the south, Koho and Ma in the east, Stieng in the south-west including into Cambodia, and Mnong in the north, in Vietnam and eastern Cambodia. Census figures for Vietnam are 25,000 Chrau, 92,000 Koho, 25,000 for the Ma dialect of Koho which is recognized as a separate ethnic group, 50,000 Stieng, and 67,000 Mnong; there are probably another 35,000 Stieng and as many as 150,000 Mnong, also known there as Penong, in Cambodia. There are many named varieties of Koho and Mnong; linguists divide Mnong into three clusters, eastern, central, and southern. The most endangered language here is Chrau, whose traditional territory just east of Saigon now has a very high proportion of Vietnamese. Many of the smaller dialects of Koho and Mnong are also potentially endangered to endangered.
16.3.3. Northern The Northern branch of MK is divided into the two subgroups, Palaungic and Khumic. Palaungic is sometimes further subdivided into Palaungic, Angkuic, and Waic. It is scattered across the south-west of Yunnan and north-eastern Burma, and extends into northern Thailand and north-western Lao. Palaungic proper has perhaps 350,000 people and includes Riang, Ta-ang (Chinese De’ang, formerly known as Benglong) or Gold Palaung, Ka-ang, Rumai, Pale (Silver Palaung), Na-ang, Na-eang, and probably more in Burma.
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It also includes Lamet of north-western Lao (14,355), with one village of Khamet near Wiangpapao in Thailand. The De’ang nationality of China has 17,935 members; a few of them speak Angkuic languages such as U. The population of Palaungic languages in Burma is quite large but unknown. Some villages of Palaung (1,626 people) have recently migrated to Thailand from Burma. Palaungic also includes one endangered language, Danaw, reported to be moribund some time ago, but still spoken by about 1,000 people in one village just west of Inle Lake in the south-western Shan State of Burma (Robinne 2000: 17). Angkuic comprises Mok (mainly in the Eastern Shan State of Burma where it is known as Tai Loi, Shan for “hill Tai”, also in Thailand near Doi Saket, in Lao, and near Jinghong in China), Angku (Burma), U (also known as Puman; various widely scattered dialects in Shuangjiang county and other areas of west central Yunnan in China), Hu (near Jinghong in China), and Samtao (2,359) in north-western Lao. In China U is classified within the De’ang (i.e. Palaung) nationality; some other Angkuic speakers are classified within the Bulang nationality, which also includes Bulang itself, a Waic language. There are additional small unclassified groups in China. Most Angkuic languages are receding and potentially or actually endangered. Waic languages are very widely spoken in south-western Yunnan and the Wa areas of the north-eastern Shan State in Burma; the total population is approaching a million. There are 396,610 members of the Wa nationality in China, and a larger number in Burma. The “standard” dialect selected in China is Paraok, and the Wa nationality also includes La, Va, and probably other languages. In recent years substantial numbers of Paraok Wa from north-eastern Burma have moved from the north-eastern part of the Shan State of Burma to the border region near Chiangdao in northern Chiangmai province in Thailand, with a few villages actually in Thailand. Another Waic nationality in China is the Bulang (91,882) in the extreme south-west of Yunnan and nearby in Burma. One variety has been described under the name Samtao (not the same as the Angkuic Samtao), and another was formerly spoken in Kienka village, near Chiangmai. As in the case of Wa, there are various poorly described languages included here. Thailand also has its own indigenous endangered Waic languages, Lavüa, spoken by about 20,000 people between Chiangmai and Mae Sariang in north-western Thailand, and moribund Phalok, west of Mae Rim, just north of Chiangmai. Both are included within the composite Lawa (Thai) or Lua (Northern Thai) hill tribe; the Lavüa of Mae Sariang are the largest group within this category in Thailand.
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The major Khumic subgroup language is Khmu itself, with a large number of distinct named dialects covering much of northern Lao (389,694) and spreading into northern Thailand (13,674), north-western Vietnam (43,000), about 5,000 in Jinghong in south-western Yunnan, and a few in Burma. Some Khmu have relocated as far south as Kanchanaburi in western Thailand. In Lao, Vietnam, and Thailand, they are recognized as ethnic groups. In China they are still in the “unclassified” category, have applied for nationality status, but are unlikely to receive it. The language is not endangered. Mal, Phay, or Pray is a cluster of varieties which lacks a single combined autonym, spoken in Nan province of northern Thailand (38,823) and across the border in Saignabouri in Lao (13,977). They are locally called Lawa or Lua in Nan province in northern Thailand, but are officially known as Thin (or Htin) in Thai, a name resented by the community. The Mlabri are a hunter-gatherer group in the same area as the Mal/Phay/Pray, who are divided into small bands (125 people in Thailand, 24 in Lao). There are substantial lexical and other differences between the speech of different bands, and apparently fairly rapid lexical change. Some dialects are extinct, such as the one called Yumbri in the literature, and others are endangered. The Pasing, also known as Bit or Kha Bit, are in a few villages in southwestern Phongsaly in north-eastern Lao (1,530 people) and even fewer villages (202 people) across the border in Mengla county in China; their language is endangered. Khang and Khao (total about 5,000) are the north-easternmost Khumic groups, in north-western Vietnam. Further south, on both sides of the Lao/Viet border, are the Ksinmul, also known as Puoc (Lao 2,164, Vietnam 11,000). Thai Then was recently located by Frank Proschan to the east of Luang Phabang in northern Lao. Phong is a local term for a cluster of poorly known Khmuic languages of southern Samneua and northern Xieng Khouang provinces of Lao, not to be confused with the various Pong groups speaking Vietic MK languages. Finally, there is the recently located and seriously endangered Iduh language in east central Lao on the Vietnamese border, 200 in the group but only thirty speakers. Most of the Khmuic languages other than Khmu are at least potentially endangered, and Mlabri, Iduh, and Pasing are particularly so.
16.3.4. Pakanic This recently proposed branch of MK includes Mang (2,300 in Lai Chau province, northern Vietnam, 1,216 in Jinping county, China), Lai (autonym
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Paliu, 1,771 in north-west Guangxi in China) and Pakan (Bugan in Chinese, 3,000 in south-eastern Yunnan). These are the north-easternmost of the MK languages, and all are endangered or seriously endangered. There are few if any monolingual speakers; a large proportion of each group does not speak its original language.
16.3.5. Monic Although Mon is the state language of the Mon State in south-eastern Burma, and the Mon ethnic group comprises about 800,000 people, mainly in Burma, the language has been receding under Burmese pressure for nearly 800 years and is potentially endangered. Many Mon migrants who came from Burma about 200 years ago are settled around Bangkok but nearly all have assimilated and speak only Thai; another wave of Mon refugees came to Thailand in the last twenty years. Earlier Mon dominance in what is now central Thailand under the Dvaravati kingdom was broken by the Khmer more than a millennium ago. The Nyahkur in north-eastern Thailand speak a seriously endangered language which is a vestige of Dvaravati Mon; fewer than 10,000 speakers of three dialects remain, but younger speakers are fewer and less fluent, and in some areas have passive or no knowledge.
16.3.6. Pearic The Pearic languages are widely distributed in tiny populations across western Cambodia, with small numbers across the border in eastern Thailand and one transported community in western Thailand. Pear is the Khmer word for these groups, who have long been under Khmer dominance. They form a distinct subgroup of MK from Khmer. Curiously, some extremely small communities here have nevertheless maintained their languages, though the Khmer Rouge period further reduced the speaker populations. All are now endangered. The largest population is speakers of Chong in Thailand along the western border of Cambodia; now about 2,000 people and 500 speakers with the youngest in their mid twenties. This language, with three dialects, is the best-described Pearic language, but still needs more work. Song or Kasong, usually also known to outsiders as Chong, has a population of about 200 in eastern Thailand, with forty speakers, the youngest of whom is now over 30. A “Pear” group—the Khmer word for all these groups; autonym unknown —in Kompong Thom is in three to four villages, about 250 people,
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language status unknown but group size reduced from about 1,000 since 1975. East Pearic Samre has a population of about 100 displaced in Pursat province of Cambodia and another 100 in eastern Thailand, of whom fewer than twenty speak it, the youngest nearly 50. A further group whose autonym is unknown lived in Preah Vihar province before 1975; this “Pear” language is also endangered. The group who call themselves Su-ung but are usually called Saoch (which is the Khmer word for a kind of skin disease; obviously this term is unacceptable to the community) have an interesting history. Nearly the entire group were transported to western Thailand in 1833, leaving behind a small remnant. Of the remnant in Cambodia, three families comprising seventeen speakers including children remained in 1993. Among the population in Thailand, now called Khamen Padong “Padong Khmer” in Thai, the language is seriously endangered. It would be very interesting to determine what effect separation since 1833 has had on the speech of the two groups, and this is urgent as one of them is seriously endangered. At least one other Pearic language, West Pearic Samray, probably died during the Khmer Rouge period. Samre of Siem Reap province appears to have become extinct in the 1940s. Several of the other Pearic languages are also on their last legs. There were doubtless many more MK languages which have become extinct without scholarly attention. For example, the spread of the Khmer empire and its language must certainly have displaced a large number of indigenous languages of what is now Cambodia; the last vestiges of some of these are the remaining Pearic languages. The presence of the Khasi in north-eastern India, separated from the rest of MK by a large number of TB languages in Burma, could also imply the earlier disappearance of other MK languages between the Northern MK languages and Khasi.
16.3.7. Vietic The major Vietic language is of course Vietnamese. Most of the small groups speaking Vietic languages in Vietnam are lumped into the single Muong ethnic group of 914,000. Many of these no longer speak anything but Vietnamese, and the vast majority of the remainder speak Muong itself, which is divided into a number of dialects in three areas. The second largest language of this cluster is Nguon, about 25,000 people, mainly in Vietnam but also 988 in Lao where they are recognized as a separate ethnic group. This language is starting to be endangered.
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All other Vietic languages are spoken by tiny groups along the border between south central Lao and north central Vietnam, some in areas which are being inundated by dams. In Vietnam they are all classified in the Chut ethnic group, a Viet exonym. The term Arem is also used locally in Lao to refer to any of these groups, as well as more specifically for the Arem themselves. The former general term Bo, used during the French colonial period in Lao, still appears in some older sources. Included are the very close cluster of Ruc, Sach, and May totalling about 2,500 people in Vietnam and Lao; another close cluster of Hung, Pong, and Tum with about 6,000 people in Lao and Vietnam; a third cluster of Maleng (also sometimes known as Pakatan from a village name), Kri, and Phong, about 5,000 people in Lao; the Thavung (Ahlao and Ahao dialects), about 1,500 people in a few villages in north-eastern Thailand (where they are called So, the name of a Katuic MK group nearby) and in Lao; the Aheu (of Phonsung village), 500 in Lao; and the Arem, 1,000 people in Lao. The Kri and Arem languages are seriously endangered; the rest are all endangered. In summary, there are forty-nine endangered and three recently extinct MK languages in South-East Asia, with a few more in China. In several cases, all the languages in a subgroup of MK are endangered.
16.4. Tibeto-Burman Endangered Languages The only TB language which now has official national status in this area is Burmese in Burma; it is replacing some ELs in that country. These are discussed according to their genetic position within TB below.
16.4.1. Digarish “Mishmi” In India the cover term “Mishmi” refers to several distinct TB groups whose languages are quite different. One used to be known as Digaru Mishmi in India; these people call themselves Taruang, and are now called Taraon, Tayin, or Tain in India. There is one Taruang village in Burma where they are called Taraung; there are also 700 in China, where they are referred to as Darang Deng. The language is endangered in Burma and China, but not yet in India.
16.4.2. Nungish Among the 28,759 Nu nationality and 7,426 Dulong nationality in China and about 145,000 members of the Rawang ethnic group in far northern
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Burma, there are eight languages, including Raorou and Nusu in China which are Burmic, not Nungish. About 7,300 Nu in China are Anung (Anong in the Chinese literature), but only about fifty to sixty speakers, mostly over 40, remain; there are also several thousand speakers among a slightly larger community in Burma. The Anung language is seriously endangered, and is being described by Sun Hongkai (2005). In Burma there are five other distinct languages within Rawang, as spoken by clan clusters from south to north: about 30,000 Lungmi, 50,000 Mvtwang (with Dvmang included), 15,000 Dvngsar or Tangsarr, 35,000 Dvru, and 15,000 Zørwang. The Gvnøng supergroup includes the Dvru and the Zørwang as well as the Dulong of China. Mvtwang is used for writing, and is spreading at the expense of the others; some, especially the Mvtwang themselves, prefer to regard the other four varieties as dialects of Mvtwang, but the differences are very substantial. Gvnøng (Dvru and Zørwang) is close to Dulong in China and better maintained, but Lungmi and Dvngsar are potentially endangered and undescribed.
16.4.3. Burmic The Burmic languages comprise the Burmish languages, including Burmese; the Gong language; and the Ngwi languages (formerly known as Loloish), which can be further subclassified into Northern, Central, Southern, and South-Eastern. Yi is the post-1950 Chinese term for the largest nationality speaking various languages of this subgroup of TB; the term Yi branch is used in China to refer to all Ngwi languages, not just the languages of the Yi nationality. Before 1950 the Yi were known as Lolo, whence the term Loloish, but Lolo is now regarded as pejorative by many people in China and avoided. The term Ngwi is mine, derived from the probable autonym for these Loloish or Yi branch groups, and itself in turn derived from the TB word for “silver”.
16.4.3.1. Burmish Burmese or Myanmar, the national language of Burma with about thirty million first language speakers, is the least endangered TB language; however some of its more distinctive “dialects” are really distinct languages, many of which are becoming endangered as they undergo more and more influence from standard Burmese. The second largest ethnic group speaking a variety of Burmese is the Arakanese (now known as Rakhine in Burma); its best-known feature is the retention of the pronunciation of orthographic “r”. It is widely spoken in Arakan State in the west of the country; there are at least another
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100,000 Arakanese nearby in Bangladesh and India. Some other subgroups of Burmese are recognized as separate ethnic groups in Burma: Tavoyan or Dawe, Beik or Myeik, Danu, Intha, Taungyo, and Yaw. Of these, only Yaw is endangered, though Danu and Taungyo are starting to be, and all are heavily influenced by standard Burmese. Hpun is a virtually extinct Burmish language along the upper Irrawaddy in the gorges between Myitkyina and Bhamo in north Burma. Survey work in the early 1960s found fluent speakers of the two dialects of Hpun in their sixties, with some younger semi-speakers. Recent attempts by Shiro Yabu to collect further data during the ELPR project have not been able to locate any speakers. The other cluster of Burmic languages is in the north-east of the country and in China. None of those spoken in Burma is endangered. There are Tsaiwa (known as Atsi in Jinghpaw and as Zi in Burmese); Langwaw or Langsu (known as Maru in Jinghpaw and Burmese); Lacid (known as Lashi in Jinghpaw and Lachik in Burmese); Ngochang (known as Maingtha in Burmese and as Achang in China where they are a separate nationality of 33,936).2 The Zaiwa and Lachik are recognized as ethnic groups of the Kachin State of Burma and the Maingtha as an ethnic group of the Shan State there, but the Lawngwaw/Maru are not recognized in Burma. Apart from most Ngochang, all of these groups are part of the Kachin culture complex and most speak fluent to native Jinghpaw.
16.4.3.2. Gong This language, which forms a separate branch within Burmic, was formerly spoken along the branches of the river Kwai in western central Thailand; for sociolinguistic details, see Bradley (1989). The alternative name Ugong includes “person” [ʔu33] plus the group name [ɡɔŋ35]. It has disappeared from the original area, with the last speakers in two areas only recently deceased; but two communities which migrated to Suphanburi and Uthai Thani provinces to the north-east still maintain distinct dialects of the language; they are classified in the composite Lawa hill tribe of Thailand. Of 500 people in these two villages, about eighty still speak the language: about twenty fluent speakers over 50 and additional semi-speakers of varying ability as young as 30; the language is thus at best seriously endangered, and most dialects are extinct. Thai colleagues and I are studying Gong, which is crucial for the understanding of the Burmic subfamily of TB. 2 There are also individual Ngochang blacksmith families in many Jinghpaw and Shan villages across northern Burma; these are locally known as Tai Sa; my thanks to Jerry Edmondson for this information.
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16.4.3.3. Ngwi Ngwi is divided into four main parts: Northern, Central, Southern, and SouthEastern (formerly called Tonkin). Northern Ngwi languages are mainly in China, with one non-endangered language, Nisu, spreading into northern Vietnam where it is part of the Lolo ethnic group. Central Ngwi is found in west central Yunnan and south-westward into Burma, Thailand, and Lao. Southern Ngwi languages are located in south central and south-western Yunnan, in north-eastern Burma and in northern Vietnam, Lao, and Thailand. SouthEastern Ngwi is mainly found in south-eastern Yunnan and Guangxi in China, and extends into northern Vietnam. Phonologically, Southern Ngwi is the most conservative for final consonants, while Northern Ngwi is most conservative for initial consonants. All Ngwi languages share a number of grammatical developments, such as the use of verbs of dimensional extent in question, nominal, and adverbial forms (Bradley 1995). Another widely shared Ngwi pattern is kin group classifiers, which can only be used with a number to refer to a specific group of relatives, such as a father and his children (Bradley 2001). The main Ngwi groups in China include the highly composite Yi nationality (7,762,272), the multiple-group Hani nationality (1,439,673 in China, also 12,500 in Vietnam and 727 in Lao; in China Hani subsumes the Akha group, who are over 200,000 in Burma, 58,500 in Lao, and 56,616 in Thailand), the Lisu nationality (634,912 in China, about 250,000 in Burma, 33,365 in Thailand, and 1,200 in India), and the Lahu nationality (453,705 in China, about 250,000 in Burma, 85,845 in Thailand, 15,693 in Lao, and over a thousand in California), both of which also have substantial internal diversity and include some additional small groups whose languages are endangered. Hanhi (12,500), Phula (6,500), Lahu (5,400), Lolo (3,200), Công (1,300), and Sila (600) are recognized ethnic groups of Vietnam, mainly in the northwest of the country. The Lahu of Vietnam are in fact Cosung, a distinct group only integrated into the Lahu nationality in China in 1989 and whose language is endangered. Some of Vietnam’s Lolo are the same as the Nisu, the largest Southern Ngwi subgroup in China. The Phula speak two SouthEastern Ngwi languages also spoken by some members of the Yi nationality in China, and the Công speak a language similar to Phunoi or Sinsali of Lao. Cosung, Công, and Sila are endangered, as is one of the Phula languages. In Burma the Lahu and Kwi (Shan word for Lahu Shi or Yellow Lahu) are recognized separately, as are the Lisu and the Kaw (Burmese name for Akha), a part of the Hani nationality in China. In Lao the Musur (Shan name for the Lahu) and Kwi were also separately recognized in 1975, but have recently been united as the Lahu ethnic group. Also recognized in Lao are the Akha
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and the Sinsali (formerly Phunoi);3 the Lao list also includes one smaller endangered group, the Sila. There are also a few Lolo, speakers of a Central Ngwi language widely spoken in north central Yunnan and recently located by Japanese linguist Takashi Kato. In northern Thailand, the official list of hill tribes includes the Lahu (often under the Thai name Muser), the Lisu (as Lisaw), and the Akha (sometimes under the former, pejorative Thai term Ikaw). Some of the languages of smaller groups are endangered, and even within the larger groups, many live in urban settings and do not speak their traditional languages. All of these languages are losing domains even in their villages. Conversely, a number of smaller Ngwi and other TB languages are in the process of being replaced by a Yi language, mainly Hani, Lahu, Lisu, or a larger Yi language; this is particularly the case in China. Of the recognized groups, the languages of the Sila ethnic group in Vietnam and Lao, the Phin ethnic group of Burma (i.e. Bisu), and one of the languages of the Phula ethnic group of Vietnam (part of the Yi nationality in China) are all endangered. Many other small groups are included in the large nationalities, especially Yi in China but also Hani, Lahu, and Lisu; a large number of their languages are endangered. Within the Yi nationality (6,578,524) in China, there is very great linguistic diversity and there are many endangered languages of all four subgroups of Ngwi. The main language clusters within Northern Ngwi are Nosu, Nasu, and Nisu; these three groups account for more than half of the Yi nationality, and include a large number of endangered languages. The major non-endangered languages of Central Ngwi spoken in SouthEast Asia are Lisu and Lahu. The endangered language Cosung (Vietnamese term), Kucong (Yunnanese Chinese term, from which the Vietnamese term is derived), Lahu, or Lahlu (autonyms) is spoken in various dialects by a population (40,000 in China, 5,400 in Vietnam) widely scattered over southern central Yunnan and north-western Vietnam; unclassified until the 1980s, in China they were amalgamated into the Lahu in 1987 although their speech is not mutually intelligible with Lahu. As noted, there is also a small Lolo population in far north-eastern Lao, in addition to a much larger population in north central Yunnan. In China there are various other non-endangered Central Ngwi languages such as Lipo and endangered Jinuo, Laemae, Raorou, Lamu, Nusu, etc. 3 Phunoi “small men” is a Lue and Lao name also used as an autonym by two of six Phunoi or Sinsali groups; the term Sinsali became the new official name for this ethnic group in 1998.
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The main language cluster within the Southern Ngwi subbranch is HaniAkha. Hani is spoken, in a range of quite different dialects, by about 700,000 of the composite Hani nationality (1,439,673) all over south central Yunnan in China and across the borders in northern Vietnam (12,500) and northeastern Lao (727) where they are known as Hanhi. Very similar are Haoni and Baihong, about 120,000 speakers, to the north-west of Hani in north central Yunnan. The Akha migrated south-westward about 400 years ago, and about 300,000 now live in the hills of much of south-western Yunnan, especially Xishuangbanna prefecture but also elsewhere further north; and many have also moved on into Lao (58,500), Burma (over 200,000), and Thailand (56,616). Hani and Akha have merged voiceless aspirated and unaspirated stops, with complementary distribution: unaspirated stops occur in syllables with creaky phonation (derived from earlier final stops) and aspirated stops occur in syllables with normal phonation (derived from earlier syllables without final stops); this merger does not take place in Haoni and Baihong. While Akha/Hani is far from endangered, despite laughable and often slanderous claims from Matthew McDaniel, there are some smaller languages which fall within its cultural orbit and are being absorbed by it. One example is Akeu [a55 kә55], spoken by about 5,000 people classified as Akha in Thailand, Burma, and north-western Lao, and as Hani in the south-western tip of Yunnan in China. Their language is not intelligible to other Akha, though it is quite closely related, and is being replaced by Akha. Another such is Chepya [tɕe11 pja11] of north-eastern Lao, a small group of about 2,000. Various other languages being replaced by Akha/Hani are found in China. Also within the Hani nationality in China are the somewhat less closely related languages Kaduo (Chinese) or [kha21 tu55] and Biyue or [pi33 jɔ21] with about 300,000 speakers together. Both are in south-western Yunnan, and both are relatively well maintained. A third language similar to Biyue is Mpi, not to be confused with Bisu or the Phunoi subvariety Pisu. This is spoken in one large village near Phrae in northern Thailand; they were transported there from China as war captives about 200 years ago. Mpi is still spoken by most of the 1,200 people in the village, but all are now trilingual, speaking Northern Thai as a diglossic Low and standard Thai as a High. A dictionary exists, but is not very complete; other work is needed here. All languages of the distinctive Bisoid branch of Southern Ngwi are endangered, some of them seriously (in China). One is Laomian in Lancang and Menglian counties and nearby in Burma (7,000, about half speakers); another closely related language is Bisu in China (known as Laopin in Menghai County), nearby in Burma, (known as Phyin, an official ethnic
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group of Burma), in Lao (known as Laopan within the Phunoi or Sinsali ethnic group), and transported to northern Thailand (where they are included in the composite Lawa tribe, under 3,000 in total in all three countries). Others include Công of north-western Vietnam (1,300), Sangkong (locally known as Buxia in Chinese, under 2,000) in China; and, endangered to a lesser degree, the remaining five languages within the Phunoi or Sinsali ethnic group (23,618 in Phongsaly province, north-eastern Lao). These five other languages within Phunoi, two called [phu21 nɔj44] and the other three known as [phɔŋ33 ku55], [law21 s ε ŋ21] and [pi33 su44], are all potentially endangered. The Bisoid languages share an unusual sound change: certain prefixed nasals become prenasalized or non-prenasalized voiced stops, for example the widespread TB cognate for “fire” ([mi]in most TB languages other than the Sal group) becomes [mbi21] or [bi21]. There are two seriously endangered languages of another branch of the Southern Ngwi group which are almost completely undescribed: Pana or Bana in northern Lao and Sila in north-eastern Lao and north-western Vietnam. The Pana in Lao are included within the Akha ethnic group; in one village in north central Lao their language is being replaced by Akha, and in one village in north-western Lao it is being replaced by Lahu. It is not even clear how many there are; Chazee (1995: 193) says 4,000 in thirty-four villages, but this is clearly a major overestimate. Sila is recognized as an ethnic group in Lao (1,518) and in Vietnam (600); it also sometimes appears in Vietnamese sources as Sida. The same source gives a “Phana” vocabulary as well, which appears to be Pana. Thongpheth and Shintani (1999) give longer vocabularies for these two languages, showing that these languages are both quite distinct from any others in the area. Pana and Sila are being replaced by Lahu, Akha, and other surrounding languages. South-Eastern Ngwi, formerly known as Tonkin Lolo, has a number of languages in south-western Yunnan and also includes a number of small groups overlapping into northern Vietnam east of the Red river. Much more descriptive work is needed, and there are almost certainly additional unreported languages yet to be found. The largest group here are the Pula (Chinese term, over 50,000 included in the Yi nationality), Phula (Vietnamese ethnic group; about 5,000 people; also formerly known as Bo Kho Pa there), both from its autonym [phu55ɬa55]. There are various distinct subgroups within Pula, notably [pho55 lo55] and [phu55]. The former is becoming endangered; many young people cannot speak the language. A pair of closely related endangered languages are Muji (about 50,000 of the Yi in Mengzi county in China) and Laghuu (about 300 in northern
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Vietnam, classified as part of the Phula ethnic group, also known as Xa Pho). The local autonyms for Muji are [ɬæ31γә55] or [mu31 ʥi33]; most Muji in China speak Pula rather than Muji. Laghuu is spoken in just one village, but there it is well maintained and spoken by children (Edmondson and Lama 2000). Mo’ang or Mondi is another similar endangered language, spoken by a small group in China and an even smaller group in Vietnam. Others are spoken only in China. Overall, South-East Asia has one Central Ngwi, thirteen Southern Ngwi, and three South-Eastern Ngwi endangered languages. Nearby in China, there are at least another twenty-three endangered Ngwi languages, with more probably yet to be located (Bradley forthcoming).
16.4.4. Karenic Karenic can be divided into Southern Karen, mainly Pwo to the south and Sgaw to the north, mainly in the Karen State of Burma and known as Kayin in Burmese and Kariang in Thai; Central Karen, known as Kayah in Burmese and generally as Bwe in Karen, mainly in the Kayah State of Burma; and Northern Karen, including Pa-O (formerly Taungthu in Burmese and still Tawngsu in Thai) and Kayan (formerly Padaung in Burmese), mainly in the Shan State of Burma but some also further south. The 1983 census for Burma reported 2,122,825 Kayin and 141,028 Kayah. These are extreme underestimates; there are about 5 million Karen there. Many Southern Karen migrated to the western delta region of Burma and a few went further to the islands off southern Burma and even to the Andaman Islands during the British colonial period. There are officially 353,574 Kariang in Thailand, but this is also an underenumeration; others have assimilated into the Thai population. They speak mainly Pho in the west and Sgaw in the north-west; a few thousand in the far north-west speak Central Karen varieties. An additional 120,000 or so are at present in refugee camps, having fled oppression and religious persecution in Burma. Thailand also has 257 Tongsu or Pa-O and a few Kayan. Twelve Karen ethnic groups are listed under the Karen State in Burma, nine for the Kayah State, and three for the Shan State. Pa-O is listed and counted twice: for the Karen State and for the Shan State. Some of the smaller Central Karen languages within the Kayah ethnic group in Burma are potentially endangered, with group sizes of only 10,000 for the Manu, Yintale, and Geba and fewer speakers. Most Central and Northern Karen languages still need linguistic work, which is very difficult at present.
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16.4.5. Sal Sal is a branch of TB proposed by Burling (1983) which links the Baric languages, Jinghpaw (Kachin), and the Luish, Sak, or Kadu languages. The Baric group includes the main TB languages of the plains and low hills of Assam, including Garo, Bodo, and so on, and the Northern Naga languages of far northern Nagaland and south-eastern Arunachal Pradesh in India, as well as some of the same Naga groups in north-western Burma. The Luish, Sak, or Kadu languages are (or were) in western Burma and the eastern borders of India. The Jinghpaw (in Burmese known as Kachin) language is widely spoken in northern Burma and nearby areas of north-eastern India and northwestern Yunnan, China. One subgroup of core Baric represented in Burma is Northern Naga in the far north-west, including the Khienmungan (also known as Kalyokengnyu), Htangan, Konyak, Wancho, Haimi, Nocte, and Tangsa/Rangpan (which is the same as the Tangsa group of India).4 These languages go under a bewildering array of alternative names; curiously, none are recognized as separate ethnic groups in Burma; all are simply lumped together as Naga, a pejorative exonym of Indian origin. Apart from Haimi, most groups are also found in India, where there are additional related languages such as Chang and Phom. All, especially those further south or closer to India, are incipiently endangered by Nagamese, an Assamese pidgin which is creolizing in Nagaland in India and also spreading into Naga areas of Burma; however all these languages still have 20,000 or more speakers. The so-called Luish (from Manipuri lui “slave”) languages of western Burma are almost all extinct or moribund. The only such language not on its last legs is Sak, autonym [atsaʔ], Burmese name Thet, with nearly 3,000 speakers in Bangladesh and about a thousand speakers out of an ethnic population of 1,602 in Arakan State of Burma. Kadu was the language of a pre-Burman kingdom in the north of Burma, and is still spoken in north Katha by a couple of thousand from a vestigial ethnic group of about 20,000. Closely related and in the same area is Ganan, with a maximum of 500 speakers from an ethnic population of 7,000. Both languages are moribund, but fieldwork is at present impossible. Pyu, the extinct language of early kingdoms in what is now central Burma, was widely written up to the destruction of these cities around ad 960 and last attested in a multilingual inscription of ad 1112. The other pre-Burman languages of north central Burma in the 4 An orthography is being developed for the Moshang clan dialect of Rangpan/Tangsa in Burma, also intended for use by Nocte, Haimi, and Wancho.
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Luish subgroup of TB include at least two languages which became extinct during the twentieth century, Malin, Taman, and possibly Ganan by now as well. Three other Luish languages, Undro (Andro), Chairel, and Sekmai (Sengmai), were formerly spoken in villages of these names in southern Manipur State of India, to the south-west of the Taman; the parenthesized names are usually used in the linguistic literature. These three languages in India became extinct nearly a hundred years ago. A third large group which Burling links with Baric is the Jinghpaw [tɕiŋ31 h p ʔ31] group of northern Burma, known in Burmese as Kachin. Census figures for 1983 for Burma give 465,484 Jinghpaw, but this is an underestimate. As we have seen above, most of the Jingpo nationality of 132,143 in China have a Burmish first language and speak Jinghpaw as a lingua franca; only about 20,000 in China speak Jinghpaw as their first language. There are also about 2,000 Singpho (Jinghpaw) in extreme north-eastern India. A reasonable current estimate is that there are at least 600,000 speakers of Jinghpaw, which includes various dialects that are named as separate ethnic groups in Burma: Gauri and so on. There are at least a further 200,000 speakers who know it as an extremely fluent second language, mainly from Burmish groups, and more who use it as a lingua franca, including many Lisu and Nungish TB language speakers. It is replacing some small Burmish languages in China and has recently replaced one Tai language in north-eastern India. c
16.4.6. Kuki-Chin-Naga There are many languages in the Kuki-Chin-Naga (KCN) group in South Asia, as well as fifty-four listed among the 135 ethnic groups of Burma: fiftyone in the Chin State and three in Arakan State, all along the western border. Fieldwork is at present very difficult in Burma, so an adequate classification and report on their degree of endangerment is impossible. Chin is a Burmese name; beyond the border, most KCN languages are included in the category Naga in Nagaland, Manipur, and Assam, and Kuki in Mizoram and Tripura. The Chin in Burma are generally divided into North Chin, Central Chin, and South Chin. For most North and Central Chin, the indigenous name is Zo, and Sho or Asho for most South Chin. The best-described variety of North Chin is Tiddim (a town name; Henderson 1965); there are about 135,000 speakers of this cluster in Burma and some in India. Central Chin is also known as Laizo “central Zo”, and has about 400,000 speakers in Burma, including the Lushai who are now known in India as Mizo, with hundreds
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of thousands of speakers in Mizoram in India. South Chin or Sho/Asho has more internal diversity; many of the 250,000 in Burma no longer speak it. Also included here are the Khami/Khumi, about 50,000 in Burma and more in Bangladesh; and probably the Mro or Mru, about 40,000 total, mainly in Arakan in Burma, but also in the south-western Chin State and in Bangladesh. In the Chin State of Burma there are also a few Meithei or Manipuri, Chawte, Anal, and Miram (known in India as Mara or formerly as Lakher), but these languages are concentrated nearby in India. Further north are three KCN languages classified as Naga, mainly found in India but with a few in Burma: Maring, Tangkhul, and Yimchungrü. These languages have large speaker populations in India and are not endangered.
16.5. Indo-European Endangered Languages There is one seriously endangered Portuguese creole, Papia Kristang of Melaka in Malaysia. This is spoken among a group of Catholics concentrated in one neighbourhood; the group has about 10,000 people, and the language is still spoken by 2,150 people including most of those over 50, some younger adults and a few children; the language is being replaced by Malaysian English, and all group members also speak Malay. It is well described in Baxter (1988).
16.6. Conclusion In addition to the languages discussed here, it is not even known how many more languages there are in Burma and adjacent areas of China; our recent surveys (Bradley and Bradley 2002; Bradley 2005, forthcoming) covering a few areas in south-western China have located dozens of previously unknown endangered languages. In most mainland South-east Asian nations other than Burma, the situation is fairly well known. Documentation work on the endangered languages of Lao and Cambodia, carried out mainly by foreign scholars, is progressing slowly. Since 1975 there has been much less work on the endangered languages of Vietnam, but more is needed here as well. In Thailand both Thai and foreign scholars have been active over many years, and the documentation situation is fairly good. In West Malaysia there is considerable work under
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way on the Aslian MK languages, but more could be done on the non-Malay Malayic AN languages. Scholars now working on ELs in Burma include Shiro Yabu, Yasuhiko Kato, Hideo Sawada, and Yoshio Nishi from Japan, as well as George Bedell based in Japan, Stephen Nolan and David Bradley based at La Trobe University in Australia, Denise Bernot based in France, and various local scholars. Noel Kya Heh from Burma is also surveying language groups related to his own languages in Lao, Vietnam, and China. A number of SIL scholars based at Payap University in Thailand are also working on languages of Burma, including Ken Manson (Kayan), Mark Wannemacher (Zaiwa), Doug Inglis (Ngochang), and so on. Scholars doing EL research in Thailand include Takashi Kato and Makio Katsura from Japan; in the past a very large contribution was also made by Tatsuo Nishida. Others include Jørgen Rischel from Denmark, David Bradley from Australia, Gerard Diffloth from France, and very many local scholars from Mahidol University (Suwilai Premsrirat, Suriya Ratanakul, and others), Chulalongkorn University (Theraphan Luangthongkum and others), Payap University (Brian Migliazza, Kirk Person, and others), and so on. In Lao the leading local linguist is Thongpheth Kingsada. A team of Japanese scholars led by Tadahiko Shintani and including Takashi Kato, Ryuichi Kosaka, and others has been surveying languages of northern Lao for some years; see Thongpheth and Shintani (1999) and Shintani et al. (2001). Other work on Tibeto-Burman languages in the north is being done by David Bradley, Noel Kya Heh, Sue Wright, and others. Scholars from Thailand such as Suwilai Premsrirat and Theraphan Luangthongkum, French scholars such as Gerard Diffloth and Pascale Jacq, Americans Jim Chamberlain and Frank Proschan, and Australians Ilia Peiros and Paul Sidwell among others are working on various Mon-Khmer languages of central and southern Lao. For Vietnam the main effort is by local scholars, with work in the north on Kadai and Tibeto-Burman languages by Jerold Edmondson and his colleagues. Before 1975, a number of SIL scholars worked on many languages of southern Vietnam, and more recently, Russian scholars have worked on some languages of northern Vietnam, such as Laha and Ruc. In Cambodia the main recent work has been done by Gerard Diffloth; there was also some preliminary work by other French scholars prior to independence. In West Malaysia a large number of Malaysian scholars are working on Malay languages, and various foreign scholars are studying endangered Aslian Mon-Khmer languages, including Geoffrey Benjamin in Singapore, Nicole Kruspe at La Trobe University, and again Gerard Diffloth.
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A great deal of work remains to be done on the ELs of mainland South-East Asia. The most intensively studied area is Thailand, where surveys and preliminary documentation are complete and efforts to maintain or revive some ELs is under way: for Chong, Thavung, and Gong based at Mahidol University, for Bisu based at Payap University, and so on. The least advanced situation is in Burma, where fieldwork has been extremely difficult for over forty years, and additional unreported ELs doubtless will be found. There is still a lot more to do in Cambodia, Lao, West Malaysia, and Vietnam, but at least the dimensions of the problem are now clear there. There has also been little detailed investigation of the outcomes of longterm contact and the development of areal and subareal characteristics. This is particularly interesting for endangered languages, where the processes of change are much faster and more profound. For example, Bradley (1992) shows how the Gong tonal system has converged toward the Thai tonal system, losing its non-Thai-like characteristics and gaining a Thai tone. Scattered across the plains of Thailand, there are isolated pockets of groups transported from elsewhere. Up to the end of the nineteenth century, when Thai armies were in the territory of their neighbours, large groups of local people were relocated back into core Thai-controlled areas in villagesized units, since it was unrealistic to hold remote territory or collect taxes from people there. Other distant groups chose to move into land provided by the Thai government in the plains. In a surprising number of cases, these villages have maintained their language, while of course being fully bilingual in Thai. There are various MK groups, quite a few non-Thai TK groups, and a few TB groups like this. For example, the Lao Song scattered across western central and the northern part of southern Thailand still can speak Thai Dam, a TK language of north-eastern Lao, north-western Vietnam, and adjacent areas of China. These displaced languages have naturally evolved differently from what is spoken in the original area. In some cases, the displaced groups maintain their language better than those left behind. Virtually every language in this area which is not the official majority language of a nation is at least potentially endangered. This means that every AA language apart from Vietnamese and Khmer is at risk. Of the TB languages, all but Burmese are similarly threatened, though some of the larger languages, which are themselves absorbing some TB and other languages, are less so. Of the mainland AN languages, all Chamic languages will soon be endangered. Malay is of course safe; it and its Indonesian variety are replacing a large number of other AN languages in Indonesia and Malaysia. Of the TK languages, most other than Thai are also under varying degrees of danger, even Lao
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because of extensive influence from Thai. More MY languages are becoming endangered too, though some of the larger groups may persist as in the case of the larger TB and TK groups. In all cases, these non-majority languages have already lost many domains to dominant languages, and the proportion of each minority group who can speak their language is decreasing. The nominal policy in Vietnam is supportive of minority language maintenance, but the reality is that the national language is essential for participation in modern national life everywhere in this region. Education in small minority languages is almost completely absent in Cambodia, Lao, and West Malaysia, relegated to the non-school sector in Burma and Thailand, and often neglected, even by minority authorities themselves, in Vietnam. While some communities whose languages are endangered have started language maintenance efforts, this is the exception. Many of the endangered languages of this area, even those where maintenance efforts are under way, will soon disappear. Documentation efforts are urgent, and are fairly advanced in Thailand and Malaysia. Some such work is being done in Lao, Cambodia, and Vietnam, but far from enough; and a great deal remains to be done in Burma.
References Baxter, A. N. (1988). A Grammar of Kristang (Malacca Creole Portuguese). Pacific Linguistics B-95. Benedict, P. K. (1942). “Thai, Kadai and Indonesian: a new alignment in Southeastern Asia”, American Anthropologist, 44: 576–601. —— (1975). Austro-Thai Language and Culture. New Haven: HRAF Press. —— (1990). Japanese/Austro-Thai. Ann Arbor: Karoma. Benjamin, G. (forthcoming). “Introduction: endangered languages”, in J. T. Collins and H. Steinhauer (eds.), Endangered Languages in South-East Asia. Papers in Language Description. London: School of Oriental and African Studies. Bradley, D. (coordinating ed.) (1981). “Mainland Southeast Asia”, in S. A. Wurm and Sh. Hatori (eds.), Language Atlas: Pacific Area, Maps 35–7. Pacific Linguistics C-66. —— (1989). “The disappearance of the Ugong in Thailand”. in N. C. Dorian (ed.), Investigating Language Obsolescence. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 33–40. —— (1992). “Tone alternations in Ugong”, in C. Compton and J. Hartmann (eds.), Papers in Tai Languages, Linguistics and Literatures in Honor of William J. Gedney on his 77th Birthday. De Kalb: Northern Illinois University, 55–64. —— (section ed.) (1994). “Mainland Southeast Asia and China”, in C. Moseley and R. E. Asher (eds.), Atlas of the World’s Languages. London: Routledge, 159–92 and Maps 47–52. (2nd rev. edn. 2006.)
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Bradley, D. (1995). “Grammaticalisation of extent in Mran-Ni”, Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area, 18/1: 1–28. —— (2001). “Counting the family: family group classifiers in Yi (Tibeto-Burman) languages”, Anthropological Linguistics, 43/1: 1–17. —— (2005). “Introduction: language policy and language endangerment in China”, International Journal of the Sociology of Language, 173: 1–21. —— (forthcoming). “East and Southeast Asia”, in C. Moseley (ed.), Encyclopedia of Endangered Languages. London: Routledge. —— and Bradley, M. (2002). “Language policy and language maintenance: Yi in China”, in D. Bradley and M. Bradley (eds.), Language Endangerment and Language Maintenance. London: RoutledgeCurzon, 74–96. Burling, R. (1983). “The Sal languages”, Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area, 7/2: 1–31. Chazee, L. (1995). Atlas des ethnies et des sous-ethnies du Laos. Bangkok: Laurent Chazee. Edmondson, J. A. (2003). “Three Tibeto-Burman languages of Vietnam”, in D. Bradley, R. LaPolla, B. Michailovsky, and G. Thurgood (eds.), Language Variation: Papers on Variation and Change in the Sinosphere and the Indosphere in Honour of James A. Matisoff. Pacific Linguistics, 555: 305–21. —— and Lama Ziwo (2000). “Laghuu or Xá Phó, a new language of the Yi group”, Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area, 22/1: 1–10. Hajek, J. (forthcoming). “The mystery of the Kenaboi”, in J. T. Collins and H. Steinhauer (eds.), Endangered Languages in South-East Asia. Papers in Language Description. London: School of Oriental and African Studies. Henderson, E. J. A. (1965). Tiddim Chin: A Descriptive Analysis of Two Texts. London: Oxford University Press. Morey, S. (2005). The Tai Languages of Assam: A Grammar and Texts. Pacific Linguistics 565. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University. Naw Say Bay (1995). “The phonology of the Dung dialect of Moken”, in D. Bradley (ed.), Studies in Burmese Languages. Pacific Linguistics A-83, 193–205. Robinne, F. (2000). Fils et maîtres du lac: relations interethniques dans l’État Shan de Birmanie. Paris: CNRS Éditions. Sagart, L. (2002). “Sino-Tibeto-Austronesian: an updated and improved argument”, paper presented at Ninth International Conference on Austronesian Linguistics, Canberra, 9–11 Jan. To appear in L. Sagart, R. Blench, and A. Sanchez-Mazas (eds.), The Peopling of East Asia: Putting Together Archaeology, Linguistics and Genetics. London: RoutledgeCurzon. Schmidt, W. (1906). “Die Mon-Khmer Völker: Ein Bindeglied zwischen den Völkern Zentral-Asiens und Austronesiens”. Archiv für Anthropologie, ns, 5: 59–109. Shintani, T., Kosaka, R. and Kato, T. (2001). Linguistic Survey of Phongxaly, Lao P.D.R. Tokyo: Institute for the Study of Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa. Sun, H. (2005). “The Anong language: studies of a language in decline”, International Journal of the Sociology of Language, 173: 143–57. Thongpheth Kingsada and T. Shintani (eds.) (1999). Basic Vocabularies of the Languages Spoken in Phongsaly, Lao P.D.R. Lao-Japan Project Data Paper 1. Tokyo: Institute for the Study of Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa. Wurm, S. A., T’sou, B. K., and Bradley D. (eds.) (1987). Language Atlas of China. Hong Kong: Longman. (Chinese edn. Beijing: Academy of Social Sciences Press.)
17
Minority Languages of China Dory Poa and Randy J. LaPolla
17.1. Introduction 17.2. Migration, economics, and language contact 17.3. The classification of ethnic groups and languages 17.4. Minority language and education policies 17.5. Current documentation and maintenance efforts
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17.1. Introduction This chapter looks at language endangerment in the People’s Republic of China, focusing on three of the main factors that influence language maintenance in China today: increased contact due to population movements and changes in the economy; the population policies of the government, particularly the identification of nationalities and languages; and the education system, particularly bilingual education. Finally, we give a brief account of the major efforts to document endangered languages.
17.2. Migration, Economics, and Language Contact China officially recognizes fifty-six nationalities (mínzú),1 with the Han nationality comprising about 91.5 per cent of the population of 1.24 billion people, and the other fifty-five nationalities plus 734,438 unclassified people making up only 8.5 per cent of the population (2000 census). Despite their relatively small number compared to the Han, these ethnic groups are spread out in large geographic areas covering 60 per cent of China’s land area. According to Sun (2001: 3; see also Shearer and Sun 2002), 125 minority languages have been recognized in China (including nineteen in Taiwan),2 though Bradley (to appear) presents information on eighty-nine endangered 1 The Chinese term mínzú (borrowed from Japanese in the early 20th century) is used at two levels simultaneously. It is used for each of the fifty-six individually recognized ethnic groups, but at the same time it is used for the totality of all of the peoples of China, which together form what is called the Zhonghua Minzu [Chinese Nationality]. 2 Many of these were recognized only recently; in 1954 only forty-eight minority languages were recognized (Luo and Fu 1954), and even after the mass investigation of minority languages of the late 1950s only sixty languages had been recognized by 1966. Since the resurgence of work on minority languages after 1978 many more languages have been recognized (Sun 1992).
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Figure 17.1. Distribution of Tibeto-Burman languages in China
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languages just within the People’s Republic of China, forty-one of which are not on Sun’s list.3 Fifty per cent of the languages listed by Sun have less than 10,000 speakers, and 18 per cent have less than 1,000 speakers (see Huang 2000 for seventy-three of the languages and the number of their speakers). However, the number of speakers is not the only factor in determining the vitality of a language. Isolated languages, such as the Dulong language of north-western Yunnan (LaPolla 2003), can survive well even with only a few thousand speakers, whereas languages with a relatively large number of speakers, if dispersed over a wide area where there is intense contact with a dominant language, such is the case with the Qiang language (LaPolla with Huang 2003), can be in danger of language shift within a relatively short time. Within China the latter is by far the more common situation today. Even the Dulong area is being opened up now with a road through the mountains. Although there are five large autonomous regions (Tibet (Tibetan), Xinjiang (Uygur), Guangxi (Zhuang), Ningxia (Hui), Inner Mongolia (Mongolian)), and there are many Autonomous Prefectures and counties in Guizhou, Sichuan, Yunnan, Qinghai, and other areas, most minorities live in small clusters alongside the Han and other ethnic groups. For example, within Yunnan province, there are twenty-four different minority nationalities with populations above 4,000 (Zhou 1995: 195), and many live in areas where different minorities and Han people interact on a regular basis. For example, in Luquan Yi and Miao autonomous county in Yunnan, there are of course Yi and Miao, and a large number of Lisu as well, but in fact the dominant nationality is the Han, comprising 70 per cent of the population (Wang 2000). Even in the autonomous regions, which originally had large populations of a single ethnic group, the situation is now one of increased and increasing contact with Han people. Throughout the history of China there has been government-sponsored (sometimes forced) migration of people from the central regions of the empire to the border areas, to relieve population pressure on the central areas, alleviate the effects of natural disasters, solidify border regions, and water down ethnic populations to make it more difficult for them to unite and oppose the government (LaPolla 2001). There have of course also been large- and small-scale migrations which were not government sponsored, in reaction to foreign invasion, natural disaster, or the search for a better life. These migrations and the language and culture contact that they resulted in are two of the main factors that influenced the development of the language situation in China historically, and are 3 Ethnologue (Grimes 2000) says there are 202 languages in China, but counts the major and some subdialects of many languages as different languages. In some cases, such as with the Chinese “dialects”, an argument might be made to support this (see below), but in many other cases, such as with the northern and southern dialects of Qiang, this is not correct.
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also two of the main factors involved in language endangerment in China today. These migrations continue up to the present, with large numbers of Han people moving to Inner Mongolia, Xinjiang, Qinghai, Tibet, and other areas of western China. Some of this migration is government sponsored and encouraged as part of the effort to open up and develop the western part of the country.4 The effect is that the minorities become minorities even in their own areas. For example, after many years of Han migration into Inner Mongolia, the Mongolians account for only 15.8 per cent of the population (Zhang and Huang 1996: 35). This has led to the loss of use of the Mongolian language in all but the most northern areas of Mongolia. The same process is happening in Xinjiang, Qinghai, Tibet, and parts of Yunnan and Sichuan (see Ren and Yuan 2003 and other articles in Iredale et al. 2003). In China most minorities live in mixed communities of one type or another, and so bilingualism or multilingualism is the norm. In some cases the bilingualism is of the native minority language and a second minority language, such as in the case of the speakers of Anong, who generally also speak Lisu, but more commonly bilingualism is of Chinese and a minority language, and multilingualism will include Chinese and more than one minority language. The bilingualism is of an unequal sort, with speakers of the smaller languages being bilingual in the more dominant languages, but native speakers of the more dominant languages rarely being bilingual in the smaller languages (Wang 2000). Chinese is the main lingua franca in most areas where people speak different languages. Particularly with the rapid increase in inter-area economic activities in the last few years, this role of Chinese has become more and more important. Because of this, there has been a shift in the types of language situation found in the last few decades: in areas where traditionally there has been monolingualism, there has been a shift to bilingualism with Chinese; in areas where there was bilingualism of a dominant minority language and non-dominant minority languages, there has been a shift to bilingualism with the different minority languages and Chinese; in areas where there was bilingualism with the minority language being the major language and Chinese as a second language, there has been a shift to Chinese as the dominant language and the minority language being the second language; in areas where there was bilingualism with Chinese as the dominant language, there has been a shift to monolingualism in Chinese, or bilingualism in two varieties of Chinese (Wang 2000; see Xu 2003 for a 4 For example, to improve the education of Tibetan youth, thousands of secondary school teachers from the Han areas have been sent to teach in Tibet, and thousands of Tibetan students were sent to Han areas of the country to receive education (Iredale et al. 2003: 74; Stites 1999: 118).
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detailed examination of the example of language use among Bisu speakers, and Yuan 2001 for the case of Achang speakers). In the case of Anong (Sun 1999b), a language with less than seventy fully fluent speakers, all relatively old people who are generally more proficient in Lisu than Anong, the major language shift has not been from Anong to Chinese, but from Anong to Lisu. The simple dominance of Han people in administration and education and the dominance of the Han language in education, economics, and administration are major obstacles to achieving anything like true equality for the minority languages and people (cf. Harrell 1993: 110–11). While there has been a policy to train members of the minorities to be administrators, the majority of administrators are still Han, and what native cadres there are are the most Sinicized members of their nationality, often monolingual in Chinese. Minority people get ahead in China by adopting the Han language and culture. Pluralism is only possible on the local level. Another major problem for minority language maintenance is the historical attitude of the Chinese towards their own culture and minority cultures. Throughout its history China has seen itself as the most civilized and advanced culture, and “raising one’s cultural level” (tigao wenhua shuiping) is equated with learning Chinese.5 Many minority peoples have also internalized these attitudes, in part due to the education system (see e.g. Hansen 1999). Attitude is one of the greatest factors which influence language maintenance (Zhang 1988, Bradley 2002). There have also been changes in the economics of many minority areas that have led to greater contact with the Han or other minorities. Due to modernization, globalization, and increased tourism, there has been a change from an agricultural self-sufficient economy to a cash-based economy, and so the men more often go to the Han areas to work. This change has also accelerated because of the government policy of tui geng huan lin (“stop farming and allow the forests to return”), which was instituted because the denuding of the forests in the mountain areas in western China was seen as leading to or aggravating the flooding of the Yangtze river further east. This policy means the minorities in some areas can no longer farm as much as they could before, and so have more time to pursue cash-based work, and they have also been encouraged to 5 This is true even of many scholars. For example, Wang Yuanxin (2000: 6) contrasts “the rise in the cultural level of minority young people” (= their ability in Chinese) due to the spread of Chinese education with the loss of their ability in their native languages. 6 An extreme case is what happened in Jiuzhaigou (Nine Village Valley) in northern Sichuan province. In order to preserve the ecology of the area and turn it into a tourist site, all of the Tibetans living in the valley were moved out of the valley, and now live in the more urbanized (and Sinicized) areas selling tourist trinkets or doing other non-agricultural work.
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move to the lowlands to allow the forests to return to the mountain areas. In some cases whole villages have been relocated,6 but even where some people stay in the village, many do move to the plains, where they then have increased contact with Han people and/or other minorities. Even those who stay in minority areas have increased contact with Han people because of tourism. One minority this has had a big impact on is the Qiang. The Qiang people have a relatively large population (306,072), and a fair number, possibly 30 per cent, still speak the Qiang language, but because the population is rather spread out geographically and speakers of the language are classified into two different nationalities, and also because all literacy, education, and media are in Chinese, there has been a very rapid increase in bilingualism and shift to Chinese monolingualism, so much so that it is not inconceivable that within two or three generations the language could be lost, or at least limited to a few old people in remote areas. Now less than 7 per cent of the Qiang are monolingual in Qiang (Huang 2000: 63). The Qiang were originally rather isolated in mountain villages which often had no access roads and no electricity. Even though there was peripheral contact with the Chinese for centuries (see Sun 2002), the Qiang language was not threatened. With the change in the economic and political situation, many Qiang now go out to work in the Han areas, and often end up staying there, either for work or because they marry Han people, or because they have been moved there by the government because of the “stop farming and return the fields to the forests” policy. Many villages now have electricity, which allows access to radio and television, both of which are all in Chinese, so even the youngest children, who in the past would not have had any contact with Chinese before a certain age, are exposed to Chinese, and are now often heard reciting jingles from the TV in Chinese. The dominant language then has become part of the local context through mass media (cf. Grenoble and Whaley 1998: 39). Children now also have more access to school, which is generally all in Chinese (though Qiang may be used in the first two grades to help explain some concepts if necessary), and they have to live away from the village for schooling. Grinevald (1998: 140) has pointed out that this sort of situation sets the stage for rapid shift to the dominant language, and we see exactly that happening in the Qiang areas. Even with the large number of speakers, in Qiang we already find several of the symptoms of the beginning of language death pointed out by Dressler (1988), such as an increasing number of lexical replacements with little integration with Qiang phonology rather than the kind of loans that enrich a language and are integrated into the language, the loss of native proper names, and restricted grammatical and lexical competence on the part of younger speakers compared to the older speakers. (See also Tsung 2003 for the case of rapid shift to Jingpo among the Xiandao speakers due to migration.)
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Even with the minorities that have had more success with maintaining their languages, there has still been an increase in bilingualism, which might eventually lead to language shift. As reported by Y. Lin (1995), in 1943, when Lin first did fieldwork on the Yi minority of the Liangshan area of Sichuan, because the Liangshan area was cut off geographically from the surrounding Han cultural area by high mountains, the Yi people of the area were economically, culturally, and linguistically isolated, and so preserved their own language and culture with little outside influence. But in the fifty-odd years since the founding of the People’s Republic in 1949, the area has become much more open to the outside with the building of roads, rail lines, and modern communications, and has become more integrated with the Han areas in terms of government, economy, culture, and language. A large number of Han people have moved into the area, while a large number of Yi people have gone to the Han areas to study. This has led to the change in the Liangshan area from Yi monolingualism to Yi–Chinese bilingualism. In different areas this has taken on different forms: in the area of Leibo Little Liangshan and the Anning river area, Chinese is the dominant language, and Yi is the secondary language; in the heart of Liangshan, in the township towns and county towns of Xide, Zhaojue, Butuo, and Meigu counties and along the highways, Yi and Chinese are equally dominant languages; in areas far from the township and county towns and highways, Yi is the dominant language. This is in fact similar to what happened with the Qiang, and the trend is toward a greater degree of bilingualism and Chinese dominance.
17.3. The Classification of Ethnic Groups and Languages Ethnic identification is an important issue in the discussions of language endangerment in China. Ethnic groups were given a chance to apply for status as an independent nationality in the early 1950s. Starting in 1956, hundreds of scholars were sent out to the minority areas by the Chinese government to identify and classify minority nationalities.7 Although 400 groups applied initially, only fifty-five have been granted the status of an independent nationality. Currently there are still a number of unclassified ethnic groups, and a few ethnic groups that are contesting their status as part of some nationality (e.g. the Naze (Mosuo) of Yunnan, now classified as Naxi (Harrell 2001: ch. 11), and the Sherpa and the Ersu, both now classified as Tibetan (Sun 1992)). Ethnic groups 7 A similar study was done on the Sinitic dialects as well for the purpose of preparing materials for helping speakers of the different dialects to learn Putonghua (the Common Language, standardized Mandarin).
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in China were given official status and designation as one nationality supposedly on the basis of the Stalinist principle of having “a common language, territory, economic life, and psychological make-up manifested in a common culture” (Stalin 1913[1953]: 307). However, there is not always a one-to-one correspondence between nationality and language. As Bradley and Bradley (2002) point out, China went further than the Soviet Union in terms of the degree to which ethnic groups were lumped together into a single nationality. For example, in four of the counties in Aba Zang and Qiang Autonomous Prefecture in Sichuan province people classified as Zang8 speak the rGyalrong language or the Qiang language. In Heishui county those classified as Zang but who speak Qiang call themselves RRme in their own language, the same ethnic designation used by people classified as Qiang,9 and one dialect of Qiang spoken by them (the Mawo dialect) was originally chosen as the standard dialect for Qiang in the 1950s. Later all of the RRme in Heishui county were classified as Zang during the classification of the minorities, and so the dialect used for the standard Qiang language had to be reselected (as it seemed inappropriate to have the dialect of people classified as Zang being the standard language for people classified as Qiang). In fact speakers of thirteen different languages were classified as Zang, many of them willingly, as they shared at least the Tibetan style of Buddhism with the Tibetans, or felt that they would benefit from being associated with the larger nationality.10 In many cases ethnic groups that were lumped together had historical associations and had lived intermixed with each other for many years, even though they did not speak the same language, such as the Jingpo, who are made up of four groups which speak four languages belonging to two different branches of Tibeto-Burman. In some instances, group identification was based solely on geographic location. For example, the people living along the Dulong river were classified as belonging to the Dulong nationality, while speakers of the same language as those living in the Dulong river valley but who happened to live in the Nu river valley were classified as belonging to the Nu nationality (along with speakers of
8 The ethnic designation Zàng, a Chinese transliteration of part of the Tibetan name for central Tibet, is equated with “Tibetan”, but this designation is not one native to Tibetans, who call themselves Bod-pa (Tibet-person) or a variant of this word. 9 Because the people living to the west of the Central Plains were in ancient times called Qiang, when the linguist Wen Yu began work with the people who live in that area (who called themselves RRme or some variant of this word in their own language) in the early part of the 20th century, he identified them with the ancient Qiang, and so now the RRme are known as the Qiang in Chinese, and have assumed the history of the ancient Qiang as their own. 10 Aside from the prestige of being part of a larger and more influential nationality, there are also benefits in terms of promotion in government jobs, as members of smaller minorities are prevented from assuming positions higher in the government hierarchy.
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three other languages who happened to live along the same river), and speakers of the same language who happened to live on the other side of the Burmese border were considered to be Rawang (see Gros to appear for discussion). This meant speakers of a single language (who feel they are part of a single culture) were split into three different groups. Some groups were split by political rather than natural boundaries, such as the speakers of the Prinmi (Pumi) language. Those Prinmi speakers who live in Sichuan province are classified as Zang, while those living in Yunnan province are classified as the independent Pumi nationality (Harrell 1996, 2001: ch. 10). The lumping of people into large nationalities also often affected the classification of the languages spoken by those nationalities. For example, the languages spoken by people assigned to the Yi nationality are all assumed to be dialects of a single Yi language because they are all spoken by people classified as Yi, parallel to the situation with Chinese, even though a classification based solely on linguistic factors, such as that given in Bradley (1979), not only considers the mutually unintelligible Nuosu and Lipuo to be separate languages (the latter being more closely related to Lisu), but languages belonging to different sub-branches within the Loloish branch (cf. Harrell 1993; Bradley 1998: 99). The language affiliations assumed in China generally match the ethnic designations. Even when linguistic criteria are considered, languages varieties with as low as 40 per cent cognacy of basic vocabulary can be considered dialects of the same language (Sun 1992: 12). The opposite situation, where one language is considered to be two separate languages because the people who speak the language are divided into two nationalities, also occurs, as in the case of the Zhuang and the Buyi (Harrell 1993: 106). These two nationalities share a common language and culture, but were divided into two nationalities based on whether they lived in Guangxi (the Zhuang), or in Guizhou (the Buyi). As the people have been divided into two nationalities, the language they speak has been divided into two languages (Zhuang and Buyi). The lumping applies to the Han people as well, and the fact that the Han are lumped together this way is often mentioned as legitimizing the lumping of the ethnic minorities together. Official language counts treat all of the Sinitic dialects as one language, regardless of the fact that many are mutually unintelligible and represent different cultures,11 and so there are said to be 126 languages spoken in China, one by the Han nationality and the rest by the 11 The fact that all Han speakers use the same script and write using the lexicon and grammar of the Mandarin dialect (that is, except for the Cantonese speakers of Hong Kong, they do not write their own dialects), much as all Europeans wrote in Latin in medieval Europe, is seen as justification for considering all the Sinitic dialects as belonging to a single language.
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minority nationalities (Huang 2000; Sun 2001). Because Chinese dialects are given a single identity, the composite is called a language, and so the different varieties subsumed under this label are called “dialects”, and are not given the same kind of status or recognition as the minority languages. Unlike with the minority languages, speakers of dialects of the Sinitic group are not given the choice to use their own dialects in education or administration, and no writing systems have been developed for them. Because of this, the languages/dialects are under threat from Putonghua. Not only is there no effort being made to preserve them, at times there has been a policy of active suppression of the dialects. There are special circumstances involved in the maintenance and resurgence of two Sinitic languages, Cantonese and Taiwanese. The fact that Hong Kong was a colony and not part of China from the middle nineteenth century until 1997 allowed Cantonese to develop normally, now spoken by 96 per cent of the population and used in education (as a medium of instruction) and the media. With the return of Hong Kong to China in 1997, Putonghua is now a required subject in primary and secondary schools, and there are plans to change the language of instruction (at least for Chinese classes initially) from Cantonese to Putonghua. The Taiwanese language, a subvariety of the Southern Min (Fujian) dialect, was suppressed during the fifty years of Kuomintang (largely mainlanders who came to Taiwan after 1945) rule, and could have disappeared completely if the island had not become democratic, allowing the ethnic Taiwanese to take control. The language has made an amazing recovery, thanks both to natural factors and to efforts to promote the language. The lumping of the speakers of a language into a larger nationality or splitting speakers of a single language into two nationalities can affect the prospects for maintaining that language, whereas being recognized as a separate nationality with a common language can be beneficial for maintaining that common language. Bradley and Bradley (2002: 95) argue that this lumping has caused many languages to go unrecognized. They estimate that as many as fifty languages have gone unrecognized just among those people classified as the Yi, and so nationwide there must be many hundreds of unrecognized varieties.
17.4. Minority Language and Education Policies One of the crucial factors for language maintenance is whether there is governmental support for the use and maintenance of the language. In China the recognized minority languages are given legal status equal to that of
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Chinese, but sociopolitical realities, particularly the unequal political and economic development of the Han and the minorities, as well as centuriesold attitudes of Han superiority, have hindered their development. Minority languages in China are protected by the constitution. Article 4 of the constitution of the People’s Republic of China (1982)12 states that “the people of all nationalities have the freedom to use and develop their own spoken and written languages, and to preserve or reform their own ways and customs”. Furthermore, it also states that ethnic minorities have the right to use their own languages in court (Article 134) and in administrative functions (Article 121). Although minority languages are constitutionally protected, the same constitution (Article 19) also stipulates a national priority for the promotion of Putonghua. Article 12 of the Education Law of the PRC states that in schools where minority students are in the majority the minority language can be used for education, but the same article also states that schools and other educational organizations should promote the use of Putonghua (Nationalities Education Section of the Sichuan Education Bureau 2000: 2). From the early 1950s until 1958 a lot of work was done creating writing systems and establishing education programmes that at least used the minority languages in an ancillary role, but there was a change in policy after 1958, such that work on minority languages basically stopped, as it was felt that minority students should learn Putonghua right from the start without any help from the minority language (Dai et al. 1999: ch. 3; Zhou 2002). After 1978, another change in policy brought on a resurgence of work on minority languages and creation or re-emergence of minority scripts, and there has been some success in spreading the use of the scripts, especially among the Yi (Bradley and Bradley 2002) and the Hani (Bai and Ju 1995), but with the move toward a free-market economy in the 1990s, minority languages once again are getting less support, particularly from the minorities themselves, as they are seen as a hindrance to economic advancement and there is often not enough money to support the teaching of and publication in minority writing systems. Putonghua is also seen by many minority peoples as a key to economic advancement and social equality, while minority languages are seen as of limited use and having a stigma of low socioeconomic status. Local officials often do not feel any threat to the local languages, and so feel teaching
12 Constitution of China, translated in A. Tschentscher (ed.), International Constitutional Law (last modified 9 January 2004), www.oefre.unibe.ch/law/icl/ (FRG). See also: http://english.peopledaily.com. cn/constitution/constitution.html and for the Chinese version, see: http://szbo.myetang.com/xf.htm
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the minority languages is unnecessary and a waste of resources. Education is seen as very important for socioeconomic advancement, and almost all higher education is in Putonghua, although some institutions of higher education in minority areas, particularly Tibetan and Yi areas, since 1980 have been allowed to have their own entrance exams and accept students directly. Crucial to language education in the minority area is the role of “bilingual” teaching. As China has a centralized curriculum, minority students must study the same curriculum and use the same textbooks as the Han students or translated versions. Since 1991 there has been some flexibility in terms of being able to use different textbooks, but it is still the same curriculum. In some minority areas it has been recognized that students who do not speak Chinese need to be taught in their own language, though the minority language itself, and the culture it represents, is rarely taught (see Upton 1999 for a case where the culture is taught), it is simply used as an aid for getting the students to learn Chinese and the standardized curriculum (Wang 2000). Only those majoring in the language in the minority institutes continue to study in the minority languages. The goal of education is not stable bilingualism and the maintenance of the minority language, but the spread of Putonghua and the ideology of the state. While the education policies recognize and accept ethnic diversity, “they do not appear to reflect a ‘valuing’ of such diversity as national capital” (Iredale et al. 2001: 51). Stites (1999: 95) argues that “the most fundamental obstacle to native language schooling and literacy for China’s ethnolinguistic minorities may well be the fact that literacy in minority languages lies outside the cultural sphere defined by the Han language and writing system”. Another factor detrimental to the maintenance of the smaller minority languages is the standardization of the writing system and the promotion of the emblematic language. As we have mentioned, the relationship between language and ethnic identity is quite complex. There is not always a oneto-one relationship between language and ethnic identity. The promotion of bilingual education, that is the teaching of the mother tongue (or nationality language) alongside Chinese, has created problems in some areas such as the Aba Tibetan and Qiang Autonomous Prefecture in Sichuan. As mentioned above, people classified as Tibetans in four counties in the prefecture speak rGyalrong or Qiang as their native language, not Tibetan, but in carrying out the policy of bilingual education, because the students were classified as Tibetan, the elementary schools in the rGyalrong-speaking areas of the prefecture were all teaching in Tibetan (Lin 1985; Sun 1992: 5). This
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is also the case with the Prinmi speakers classified as Tibetans in Sichuan (Harrell 2001: 197). This is an extra burden to the students, as none of them speaks Tibetan, and inhibits their education and the maintenance of their own language. This is the same as considering Putonghua as the mother tongue of all the Han people regardless of what their true native language is. They are mistaking the emblematic language of the nationality for the true native language. Even for native speakers of a dialect of Tibetan, the standard may be quite different from their native dialect, and so cause problems in education (Kolås 2003). This problem also came up during the attempts to promote the standard Qiang language. As there are large discrepancies between dialects, many speakers of non-standard dialects felt it was just too much effort to learn the standard dialect in addition to Chinese and possibly English.
17.5. Current Documentation and Maintenance Efforts The earliest large-scale documentation project was the Brief Description series (Zhongguo shaoshu minzu yuyan jianzhi congshu) that came out of the investigations of the late 1950s. Because of the “leftist wind” that blew through China from 1958 until 1978, they were not published until the 1980s. These fifty-seven books were quite brief descriptions of fifty-nine different languages. They included phonology, grammar, a glossary of about 1,000 words in two or more dialects, and some detail about the difference between the dialects, but were quite brief, and did not include texts, though texts for some languages, and even briefer descriptions of other languages, have been printed since 1979 in the journal Minzu Yuwen (Nationality Languages) published by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. The Language Files Project (Zhongguo shaoshu minzu yuyan yindang) carried out by the Nationalities Institute of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, which began in the late 1980s and continued into the 1990s, produced short descriptions (phonemic system, 1,000 words, 500 sentences, some texts) of twenty-four languages and dialects, with the description and word lists being accompanied by audio recordings (up to eight hours in the case of some languages; Xu 2001: 307). A dictionary project called Dictionary Series of China’s Minority Languages (Zhongguo shaoshu minzu xilie cidian congshu) was also started in the 1980s. The dictionaries are bilingual minority language–Chinese and Chinese– minority language dictionaries, and have anywhere from 10,000 to 40,000
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entries. To date, the project has produced twenty dictionaries of minority languages and dialects. The goal is to produce a set of dictionaries for each of the recognized languages (Xu 2001: 307; Sun 2001). In 1992, the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences started the project New Found Minority Languages in China (Zhongguo xin faxian yuyan yanjiu). This project focuses on the study of forty selected languages, including newly discovered minority languages, languages which have a small number of speakers, as well as those languages that were not investigated or described in detail in earlier studies (Xu 2001: 307). A book on each language, roughly 300 pages long, including phonology, grammar, lexicon (roughly 2,000 items), sociolinguistic notes, and texts, will be or already has been produced (see Thurgood and Li 2003). In 1997, the National Minorities Commission began the Catalogue of the Ancient Texts of China’s Minority Nationalities Project, a major effort to collect oral and written literature from national minorities in all parts of China. In 1999 the Ministry of Education, the National Language Commission, the National Minorities Commission, the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, and seven other ministries and departments jointly began a nationwide survey of language and script use in China. Sun (2001: 6) reports that aside from the efforts just mentioned, the Chinese linguists, particularly the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, hope to do more extensive fieldwork on the dialects of certain minority languages, as well as utilize the dialect materials from the 1950s, create computer databases of the lexical material, and publish studies on the dialects (so far three volumes on dialects of certain minority languages have been published). Aside from these large-scale projects, individual scholars, such as Dai Qingxia (e.g. Dai 2003; Dai and Tian 2003a, 2003b; Dai et al. 2003) and Sun Hongkai (e.g. Sun 1992, 1999a, 1999b, 2001, 2002), have continued to work on minority languages and also to bring attention to the question of endangered languages. They have also trained a number of native speakers of minority languages to work on their own languages, and these minority scholars are now becoming important contributors to the field. There are also a number of long-term, large-scale documentation projects being carried out by scholars outside China, such as Jackson T.-S. Sun, of the Academia Sinica, who has been recording rGyalrong dialects; David Bradley, of La Trobe University, who has been recording languages spoken by various Loloish peoples; and Randy J. LaPolla and Dory Poa, also of La Trobe University, who have been carrying out a project to record Qiang dialects for a dialect atlas.
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Aside from Chinese publications, one of the main English-language journals which publishes information on endangered languages in China is Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area, published at La Trobe University. This journal often publishes translations of articles by Chinese scholars and also articles by scholars outside China working on endangered languages of China. Much work needs to be done recording languages, but the first step would be to recognize the many language varieties that now are not recognized as languages worth recording and possibly maintaining. Once recognized, archival work should be carried out. There are in fact many materials that were collected over the years, but these are not properly archived and not made available publicly. Only a small amount has been published. If the speakers wish to have a writing system, a standard should be selected and the script created, but as Grinevald (1998: 139) has pointed out in the South American context, if we hope to ensure the survival of a language, standardization of an orthography and development of language materials is not enough. Opportunities need to be created for the use of the language in different domains and the sociological and economic incentives for using the language must be improved. But the simple realities of globalization and the economic value of Chinese and English in the new economy mean that there are few economic incentives for maintaining most of the endangered languages of China.
References Bai B., and Ju J. (1995). “Ha-Han shuangyu jiaoxue yanjiu [A study on Hani-Chinese bilingual education]”, in Yunnan shaoshu minzu shuangyu jiaoyu yanjiu [Studies on Bilingual Education of the Minority Nationalities in Yunnan]. Kunming: Yunnan Minzu Chubanshe, 72–86. Bradley, D. (1979). Proto-Loloish. Scandinavian Institute of Asian Studies Monograph Series 39. London: Curzon Press. —— (1998). “Minority language policy and endangered languages in China and Southeast Asia”, in K. Matsumura (ed.), Studies in Endangered Languages. Tokyo: Hituzi Syobo, 49–83. —— (2002). “Language attitudes: the key factor in language maintenance”, in D. Bradley and M. Bradley (eds.), Language Endangerment and Language Maintenance. London: RoutledgeCurzon, 1–10. —— (to appear). “East and Southeast Asian languages”, in C. Moseley (ed.), Encyclopedia of Endangered Languages. London: Routledge. —— and Bradley, M. (2002). “Language policy and language maintenance: Yi in China”, in D. Bradley and M. Bradley (eds.), Language Endangerment and Language Maintenance. London: RoutledgeCurzon, 77–97.
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Dai Q. (2003). “Several theoretical issues faced by research on endangered languages of China”, paper presented to the Workshop on Endangered Languages of China at the 36th International Conference on Sino-Tibetan Languages and Linguistics, 25–8 Nov., La Trobe University, Melbourne. —— Cheng Y., Fu A., and He J. (1999). Zhongguo shaoshu minzu yuyan wenzi yingyong yanjiu [Research on Application of China’s Minority Languages and Orthographies]. Kunming: Yunnan Minzu Chubanshe. —— and Deng Y. (2001). “Binwei yuyan yanjiu zhong de dingxing dingwei wenti de chubu sikao [Initial thoughts on the question of nature and status of endangered languages]”, Zhongyang minzu daxue xuebao [Journal of Central University of Nationalities], 2001/2: 120–5. —— and Tian J. (2003a). “Binwei yuyan de yuyan zhuangtai—Xianren Tujiayu ge an fenxi [An analysis of the endangered condition of the Tujia language in Xianren district]”, in H. Kitano (ed.), Descriptive and Theoretical Studies in Minority Languages of East and Southeast Asia. ELPR A3-016, 1–14. —— (2003b). “Binwei yuyan de yuyan zhuangtai—Xianren Tujiayu ge an yanjiu zhi er [An analysis of the vitality of the Tujia language in Xianren district]”, in H. Kitano (ed.), Descriptive and Theoretical Studies in Minority Languages of East and Southeast Asia. ELPR A3-016, 15–20. —— and Wang C. (2003). “Xiandaoyu de yuyan ji qi binwei qushi [The origin of the Xiandao language and its movement towards endangerment]”, Minzu Yuwen, 2003/3: 1–10. —— Tian D., and Tian J. (2003). “Tujiayu chuyu binwei zhi zhong [Tujia language is in danger]”, in T. Ikeda (ed.), Basic Materials on Minority Languages of East and Southeast Asia. ELPR A3-004, 209–58. Dressler, W. U. (1988). “Language death”, in F. J. Newmeyer (ed.), Linguistics: The Cambridge Survey, vol. iv. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 184–92. Grenoble, L. A., and Whaley, L. J. (1998). Endangered Languages: Language Loss and Community Response. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Grimes, B. F. (ed.) (2000). Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 14th edn. Dallas: Summer Institute of Linguistics International. Grinevald, C. (1998). “Language endangerment in South America: a programmatic approach”, in L. A. Grenoble and L. J. Whaley (eds.): 124–59. Gros, S. (to appear). “The politics of names: the identification of the Dulong (Drung) of northwest Yunnan”, China Information, special issue on ethnic identification. Hansen, M. H. (1999). “Teaching backwardness or equality: Chinese state education among the Tai in Sipsong Panna”, in G. A. Postiglione (ed.): 213–42. Harrell, S. (1993). “Linguistics and hegemony in China”, International Journal of Sociology of Language 103: 97–114. —— (1996). “The nationalities question and the Prmi prblem” [sic], in M. J. Brown (ed.), Negotiating Ethnicities in China and Taiwan. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 274–96. —— (2001). Ways of Being Ethnic in Southwest China. Seattle: University of Washington Press. Huang X. (2000). Zhongguo shaoshu minzu yuyan huoli yanjiu [Study on the Vitality of Minority Nationality Languages in China]. Beijing: Zhongyang Minzu Daxue Chubanshe. Iredale, R., Bilik, N., Su, W., Guo, F., and Hoy, C. (2001). Contemporary Minority Migrations, Education and Ethnicity in China. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishers.
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Iredale, R., Bilik, N., and Guo, F. (2003). China’s Minorities on the Move: Selected Case Studies. Armonk, NY: M. E. Sharpe. Kolås, Å. (2003). “Teaching Tibetan in Tibet: bilingual education is survival”, Cultural Survival Quarterly, 27/3 (www.culturalsurvival.org/publications/csq/). LaPolla, R. J. (2001). “The role of migration and language contact in the development of the Sino-Tibetan language family”, in R. M. W. Dixon and A. Y. Aikhenvald (eds.), Areal Diffusion and Genetic Inheritance: Case Studies in Language Change. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 225–54. —— (2003). “Dulong”, in G. Thurgood and R. J. LaPolla (eds.), The Sino-Tibetan Languages. London: Routledge, 674–82. —— with Huang, C. (2003). A Grammar of Qiang, with Annotated Texts and Glossary. Mouton Grammar Library. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Lin X. (1985). “Aba Zangzu Zizhizhou shuangyu shiyong qingkuang diaocha [An investigation of the bilingualism in the Aba Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture]”, Minzu Yuwen, 1985/4: 42–8. Lin Y. (1995). Liangshan Yizu de jubian [The Great Change in the Yi Nationality of Liangshan]. Beijing: Shangwu Yinshuguan. Luo C., and Fu M. (1954). “Guonei shaoshu minzu yuyan wenti de gaikuang [Survey of the minority nationality languages in China]”, Zhongguo Yuwen, 1954/3: 21–6. Nationalities Education Section of the Sichuan Education Bureau (ed.) (2000). Minzu jiaoyu wenjian xuanbian [Selected Documents on Nationality Education]. Chengdu: Sichuan Minzu Chubanshe. Postiglione, G. A. (ed.) (1999). China’s National Minority Education: Culture, Schooling, and Development. New York: Falmer Press. Ren Q. and Yuan X. (2003). “Impacts of migration to Xinjiang since the 1950s”, in R. Iredale et al. (eds.): 89–105. Shearer, W., and Sun H. (2002). Speakers of the Non-Han Languages and Dialects of China. Lewiston: Edwin Mellen Press. Stalin, J. V. (1913 [1953]). “Marxism and the national question”, in Works, vol. ii. Moscow: Foreign Languages Publishing House, 300–81. Stites, R. (1999). “Writing cultural boundaries: national minority language policy, literacy planning, and bilingual education”, in G. A. Postiglione (ed.): 95–129. Sun, H. (1992). “On nationality and the recognition of Tibeto-Burman languages”, Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area, 15/2: 1–19. —— (1999a). “Zhongguo kongbai yuyan diaocha [Fieldwork on China’s endangered languages]”, in Zhongguo yuyanxue de xin tuozhan [New Developments in Chinese Linguistics]. Hong Kong: City University of Hong Kong Press, 3–17. —— (1999b). “Ji Anong yu?—dui yi ge ji jiang xiaowang yuyande genzong diaocha [Recording Anong: the investigation and follow up of a dying language]”, Zhongguo Yuwen, 1999/5: 352–7. —— (2001). “Guanyu binwei yuyan [On endangered languages]”, Yuyan jiaoxue yu yanjiu [Language Teaching and Language Research], 1: 1–17. —— (2002). “A discussion of Qiang bilingualism—with concurrent comments on the influence of Chinese on the Qiang language”, Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area, 25/2: 1–25. Thurgood, G., and Li F. (2003). Book notice on Sun H. (ed.), New Found Minority Languages in China Series, Language, 79/4: 843. Tsung, L. (2003). “Loanwords and language endangerment: analysis of loanwords in Xiandao”, paper presented to the Workshop on Endangered Languages of China
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at the 36th International Conference on Sino-Tibetan Languages and Linguistics, 25–8 Nov. La Trobe University, Melbourne. Upton, J. L. (1999). “The development of modern school-based Tibetan language education in the PRC”, in G. A. Postiglione (ed.): 281–339. Wang J. (1981). “Minzu yuwen gongzuo zhong ruogan renshi wenti [Several problems involved in research on national minority languages]”, Minzu Yuwen, 1981/1: 1–7. Wang Y. (2000). “Lun woguo minzu zajuqu de yuyan shiyong tedian [On the characteristics of the language use in the districts of China with mixed ethnic groups]”, Minzu Yuwen, 2002/2: 1–7. Xu S. (2001). Binwei yuyan yanjiu [Study on Language Endangerment]. Beijing: Central University of Nationalties Press. —— (2003). “Lun yuyan de jiechuxing shuaibian [On the decline of language resulting from language contact]”, Yuyan Kexue, 2003/5: 97–110. Yuan Y. (2001). Yuyan jiechu yu yuyan yanbian [Language Contact and Language Change]. Beijing: Minzu Chubanshe. Zhang T., and Huang R. (1996). Zhongguo shaoshu minzu renkou diaocha yanjiu [Studies on the Minority Population Census of China]. Beijing: Gaodeng Jiaoyu Chubanshe. Zhang W. (1988). “Lun shuangyu ren de yuyan taidu ji qi yingxiang [On the attidudes of bilinguals and their influence]”, Minzu Yuwen, 1988/1: 56–61, 67. Zhou Q. (2002). “Zhong-Su jianguo chuqi shaoshu minzu wenzi chuangzhi bijiao [A comparison between the creations of minority writings in the Soviet Union and China]”, Minzu Yuwen, 2002/6: 47–57. Zhou Y. (1995). Zhongguo shaoshu minzu yuwen shiyong yanjiu [Studies on the Use of China’s Minority Nationality Languages]. Beijing: Zhongguo Shehui Kexue Chubanshe.
18
Japanese Dialects and Ryukyuan Shinji Sanada and Yukio Uemura
18.1. Introduction 18.2. Dialect divisions 18.3. Geographical distributions of traditional dialect forms 18.4. Can Japanese and Ryukyuan dialects survive? 18.5. Documenting endangered dialects 18.5.1. Japanese dialects 18.5.2. Ryukyuan dialects 18.6. Conclusion
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18.1. Introduction Located between multilingual/multiethnic areas—South-East Asia (Chs. 15–17) in the south and the Asian North Pacific Rim (Chs. 19–20) in the northeast—the Japanese islands, by contrast, tend to be regarded as having little linguistic diversity, although there are a few non-Japanese languages such as Ainu (§ 19.2) and immigrants’ languages like Korean. Japanese is considered to be one language with a variety of dialects. Ryukyuan or Ryukyu-go (-go meaning “language”) is usually treated as a Japanese dialect but actually should be considered a separate language from Japanese or a considerably divergent branch of the “Japanese-Ryukyuan” family. This chapter concerns Japanese dialects, together with Ryukyuan dialects, and the endangerment of the languages. In Japan, nearly all people speak Japanese as their first language. Whilst no official language has been designated in the nation, Japanese is the only imaginable choice. It is also still in use in the former Japanese colonies in the Pacific (Shibuya 2002; Chien and Shibuya 2003) where Japanese was mostly learned as a second language and has been in several generations of Japanese immigrant communities in such areas as Hawaii, North America, and Central and South America. The geographical distribution of mainland Japanese would roughly cover the expanse from the Scandinavian peninsula in the north to the Iberian peninsula in the south, as shown in Figure 18.1 where a map of Japan is overlaid upon that of Europe to give some idea about the geographical expanse of dialects. Europe is one unified cultural community with differences among regions and nations. The history of Japan up to the Edo era (1603–1867)
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Figure 18.1. Map of Japan as overlaid upon that of Europe
may possibly be compared to that of modern Europe. Under the rule of the Tokugawa Shogun (general), who governed all of Japan all through the Edo era, the Daimyo (feudal lords) in each region of the country had their own local autonomy; in fact, each region has its own characteristic pan-regional language, which, in the course of history, developed into modern dialects. Ryukyuan is distributed only in the islands known as the Ryukyu archipelago, the southernmost part of the Japanese archipelago. The Ryukyuan language area, in terms of geographical area both and population, makes up about 1 per cent of Japan’s total land area (approx. 370,000 km2) and population (approx. 125 million), but the geographical spread of the Ryukyu archipelago, once the ocean area is included, is vast (Tasato et al. 1981).
18.2. Dialect Divisions There are different proposals concerning the dialect division, setting up, as the general practice, large dialect areas and subdividing them successively
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into smaller areas. Figure 18.2 shows the dialect division proposed by Misao Tojo with full recognition of the difficulty of drawing dialect boundaries and with the understanding that dialect divisions may differ greatly depending upon which linguistic features are chosen (Tojo 1954). His division is based upon a composite of pitch accent, phonology, grammar, and lexical features. Similar attempts have also been made to draw dialect divisions: Haruhiko Kindaichi’s classification on accent (Kindaichi 1964), and Fumio Inoue’s categorization on grammatical features by means of mathematical methods (Inoue 2001). Apart from linguistic divisions in dialectology, actual distinctions between languages and dialects are, as is commonly the case, dependent upon political and social factors. This has to be fully kept in mind particularly in the Japanese context. If the Ryukyu kingdom (1429–1879) had remained in existence until today, Ryukyuan would have been established as a different language: The difference between mainland Japanese and Ryukyuan is very likely larger than that between English and German. And, likewise, if
Figure 18.2. Dialect divisions of Japanese
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such nations as the republics of Tohoku (northern mainland Japan) or of Hokkaido (northern island) had been formed, Tohoku-go or Hokkaido-go would receive official recognition as languages today, and if the standard language with the orthography based on, say the Kyushu (western Japan) dialect had been formulated, the linguistic situation in Japan would have been completely different. Ryukyuan is made up of a large number of subdialects, with major dialectal differences between large islands, but dialects also differing from community to community (Nakasone et al. 1981; Uemura et al. 1992, 1993). The dialectological variety within the Ryukyuan language rivals the variety observed in the entire spectrum of mainland Japanese dialects, to the extent that the Ryukyuan archipelago is comparable to a dialectological museum.1
18.3. Geographical Distributions of Traditional Dialect Forms Since the Meiji era (1868–1912), Japanese has gone through homogenization by way of national language education and standard Japanese pervasion, accelerating dialect obsolescence, and standardization of the language has rapidly advanced since the Second World War in Okinawa prefecture in particular. Japan’s linguistic policy imposed a penalty on dialect-speaking pupils at school by having an exemplary tag hung round their necks. As mass media like radio and TV became widespread, the language variety based on Tokyo Japanese has diffused rapidly throughout the country, functioning as a common language in formal situations and resulting in the disappearance of traditional dialect forms or features in most areas under the growing dominance of the prestigious standard Japanese. There are still notable regional differences, however, in the way in which Tokyo Japanese has infiltrated local dialects. The National Language Research Institute conducted a large-scale survey from the late 1950s to the early 1960s, whose results, the Linguistic Atlas of Japan (1966–74), show the regional differences in the way of infiltration. In the survey a total of 2,400 men aged around 70 were interviewed, and an average of 63 per cent of the total number of those surveyed turned out to use traditional dialect forms. In view of the use of standard forms, the Kanto dialect, which includes
1 Some linguists think that Ryukyuan probably has greater internal diversity than Japanese (Krauss 2001).
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Tokyo, has naturally the highest average of standard Japanese, reflecting the fact that it is based on Tokyo Japanese. The general tendency is that the use of standard Japanese decreases in proportion to distance from the Kanto region except for Hokkaido which has a high average score, presumably because Hokkaido, home to the Ainu people, was settled by Japanese speakers as recently as the late nineteenth century (cf. § 19.2).
18.4. Can Japanese and Ryukyuan Dialects Survive? During the 1990s, that is, about thirty years after the Atlas, Inoue conducted a survey with the same items from the Atlas to see whether students at 102 junior high schools all over Japan used a standard Japanese form or a traditional dialect form, with the results that 23 per cent of the students surveyed used traditional dialect forms (Inoue 2000). His comparison of the results with those of the Atlas shows that, during the ninety years between the ages of the informants in the two surveys, the use of standard Japanese forms has increased at the national level by an average of 40 per cent. Amongst the younger generation, this “Tokyo Japanization” has proceeded to the extent that regional differences are now small. Even in middle and high age groups, Tokyo Japanese has caused the erosion of traditional dialects in some regions and speakers with a full command of the traditional dialect are rare. In other words, dialect systems have been rapidly replaced by Tokyo Japanese and thus are faced with extinction.2 The dialect homogenization was almost complete during the “TV media maturity period” in the 1980s. Against this dialect obsolescence or homogenization, however, there has emerged a new trend in which attempts are being made to upgrade the status of dialects. The younger generations have begun to assert themselves by means of using their dialects, while the snobbish standard Japanese is not fashionable to them. Dialect retrieval movements are under way in different parts of Japan.3 The current situation in Japan with dialect retrieval and the
2 Locally speaking, in Toyama prefecture in the Hokuriku region, for instance, it is rare to hear traditional phonetic features in those born later than the Meiji era (Sanada 2001b). The situation becomes more severe in the dialects of Hachijo Island, located in the Pacific Ocean. The islanders of middle age or above have a passive knowledge, but not productive use, of traditional Hachijo dialect features both lexical and grammatical: They cannot even express themselves in the dialect when asked questions. 3 In this trend of the “back to local value”, so-called “dialect art” availing itself of dialect features (such as musicals, folklore, and dialect poems) has recently been produced in different parts of Japan.
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upgrading of dialect status is certainly in conformity with the growing trend on a global level towards preserving linguistic diversity. As for the Ryukyuan islands, the Amami islands (now part of Kagoshima prefecture) reverted to Japan in 1953, and with the success of an intense patriotic reversion movement, the rest of the Ryukyu archipelago was returned to Japan in 1972, becoming Okinawa prefecture, albeit with the proviso that the American military bases remain. This patriotic reversion movement was a spontaneous grass-roots movement on the part of the inhabitants of the Ryukyu islands, distinct from the circumstances surrounding the settlement of the Ryukyu question in 1879,4 and because it followed the transition from the period of Japan’s military imperialism to democracy, the movement led to the people’s recognition of themselves as a minority, followed by a rise in patriotism and respect for their language and culture. Ryukyuan became used even less, its function becoming limited to everyday communication among friends and family and as the language of songs. As it became incomprehensible to the younger generation on the one hand, it gradually changed status from being looked down on as the object of eradication to being regarded with fondness and respect. However, it must be noted that this trend to respect “dialect” and restore it to its former status did not develop into a movement to replace the standard Japanese language which had been spreading since the settlement of the Ryukyu question. This is intimately intertwined with the fact that, although the movement for the reversion of the Ryukyus to Japan was aimed at liberating the people from American military administration, it was not an independence movement of their own. Thus, both under the American occupation and also after reversion to Japan, standard Japanese continued to spread, and the Ryukyuan language which came to be called a “dialect” continued to weaken, to the extent that most young people today cannot speak the “dialect”. Okinawan theatres, traditionally performed in Ryukyuan, have undergone a sharp decline in audience numbers with the spread of movies and television, but in the midst of this Ryukyuan has started to appear in radio and TV programmes. However, the language used in these programmes is either structurally simple and easy to understand, or is aimed at elderly listeners, or is the lyrics of songs.
Gospels are being tentatively translated into some dialects and speech contests in local dialects are held in many parts of Japan as well. In Kanazawa in the Hokuriku region the local government conducts systematic training programmes designed for tourist volunteer guides in the local dialect. 4 The Meiji government in mainland Japan developed their policy to annex the kingdom of the Ryukyus between 1872 and 1879. In the course of this policy, this kingdom disappeared.
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It is virtually impossible to give the numbers of Ryukyuan speakers, or those with a passive understanding, as a total or by region. This is because there is a cline of abilities, from those in their eighties or nineties who acquired Ryukyuan as their first language and speak it fluently, through most of the younger generation who know only a few words or set expressions, down to children. Excluding recent immigrants to the region and temporary residents who have no knowledge of the language, the level of Ryukyuan ability differs depending on the individual’s situation, home circumstances, and region, as does ability in standard Japanese. It is mainly the elderly who grew up using both Ryukyuan and Japanese. The younger generation mainly acquired Japanese as their first language and were not exposed to Ryukyuan in the home. What can be said for certain is that the number of fluent speakers of the old traditional dialects will continue to decline steadily, but on the other hand the interest in and knowledge about Ryukyuan as a cultural asset will continue to increase, this being supported by the long-term work of researchers. Whether the Ryukyuan dialects will eventually survive or not as their language of daily communication is in the hands of the inhabitants of the islands concerned. In their attitudes and decisions, researchers from outside should not interfere (Uemura 2001, 2003). As it is in almost everywhere in the world, English has been influential in Japan and it is becoming a second common language by default, though not accepted as an official national language. This trend is now leading to the creation of a linguistic endangerment environment for Japanese essentially of the same kind as similar languages in the world. It may sound sensible for Japanese to become bilingual speakers of Japanese and English. But given the fact that attempts of introducing English teaching in primary schools have already started, there are already some warnings among linguists that this may eventually produce another English monolingual country (Miyajima 2001).
18.5. Documenting Endangered Dialects 18.5.1. Japanese Dialects So far, many attempts have been made to produce short notes and survey reports on the Japanese dialects of various divisions. An example of a largescale survey is the nine-volume Dictionary of Japanese Dialects (Hirayama et al. 1992–4) which summarizes basic lexical items (2,300 items) from seventy-two survey points from all over Japan. The first volume outlines dialect features of each prefecture (including Okinawa (Ryukyu Islands) with four
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survey points) concerning accentual pattern, phonology, grammar, and lexicon. This dictionary is very important in that it adopts the unified system of dialect description and gives an overview of the dialects concerned, although it has much to be desired in the regard of accurate and detailed description and leaves a number of phenomena to be pursued further. In Japanese dialectology such research is in fact still insufficient, but mention should be given at least to a detailed description of the Kesen dialect of South Iwate in the Tohoku region: the two-volume Kesen-go (Kesenese) Dictionary (with more than 2,800 pages) and the Kesen-go New Testament by Yamaura (2000, 2002–4). The former in particular would be an exemplary work of dialect description, being one of the biggest dialect dictionaries focused upon a single regional dialect. The author, being a physician, collected his data through interactions with patients at his clinic and completed the work after twenty-five years. The dictionary not only contains about 34,000 words (naturally including many shared with Japanese), ample examples, lists of regional place and family names, and a Japanese–Kesenese index, but also contains a grammatical sketch which describes the Kesenese orthography (developed by Yamaura himself), phonology (including pitch analysis), and grammar. The author regards Kesenese not as a Japanese dialect but as an independent language on an equal status with Japanese, and interestingly claims that it is a language with an Ainu substratum overlaid by the Japanese language of the intruders over a period of only about ten centuries. Being too controversial, the claim is far from being proved. Dictionaries of this kind need to be published for the various dialects of Japan. This Kesenese work could be a model to be followed by the other dialects. An organized emergency fieldwork on Japanese and Ryukyuan dialects was recently conducted by more than forty participants as a part of the ELPR project (see Preface, this volume). Its fruit is twenty-five volumes of descriptive works which include, among others, comprehensive documentation of accent (Uwano 2001, 2002a, 2002b), grammar (Sanada 2001a, 2002a, 2002b), and lexicon (Kobayashi and Shinozaki 2003) of the vanishing dialects of Japanese in addition to works on specific dialects.
18.5.2. Ryukyuan Dialects It can be said that dialect studies in Japan reached their high standard only after researchers started studying the Ryukyuan dialects. After the Meiji restoration (1868), the Japanization of the Ryukyus progressed, but until the end of the Second World War it was rare for the unique
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culture and language of the Ryukyus to capture the attention of mainland Japanese scholars. After the Englishman Basil Hall Chamberlain (1850– 1935) studied the dialect of Shuri, the former capital of the kingdom of the Ryukyus (Chamberlain 1895), it was mainly scholars from the Ryukyus who went to Tokyo, such as Iha Fuyu (1886–1947; 1929) and Miyanaga Masamori (Miyara Toso) (1893–1964; 1930), who studied the language, while struggling with poverty. The always supportive folklorist, the great ethnologist Yanagita Kunio (1875–1962), and the linguist Hattori Shiro (1908–1995), whose legacy includes important work in both Ryukyuan as well as Ainu linguistics (§ 19.2), recognized the academic importance of the traditional culture of the Ryukyus. The first person to study the Miyako dialects was the Russian linguist Nikolay Nevskiy (1892–1937) who was executed in Russia after the revolution. His contribution lies mainly in vocabulary and folklore with accurate phonetic understandings. Realization of the academic importance of the Ryukyuan language yielded the publication of the Dictionary of the Okinawan Language (National Language Research Institute 1963) in which Uemura was involved. The more important dialect dictionaries include Osada et al. (1977, 1980), Nakamoto (1981), Hokama et al. (1995), Nakasone (1983), Miyagi et al. (2002), Miyagi (2003), and Kiku and Takahashi (2005). In the second half of the twentieth century, research into the Ryukyuan language became popular both in Okinawa and in Tokyo, but at this time the variety of traditional dialects from Amami to Yonaguni was disappearing as the last speakers died, necessitating joint research including organized allencompassing recording. The Ryukyuan dialects, however, were the subject of uncoordinated research for the purpose of merely increasing the number of publications of narrow-visioned individual researchers guided by the fads of the field, giving rise to a decrease in the quality of research due to the competitive and non-cooperative mindsets of the different research bodies, factions, and research fields, and also causing damage at the local level. Out of consideration of the situation described above, Uemura with other like-minded researchers established the Okinawa Centre for Language Studies (OCLS), a private research organization, in 1978 and started joint research in the race against time before traditional dialects die out. A number of research projects have since been developed, in conjunction with local inhabitants, providing necessary assistance to amateur researchers and individual scholars, training the next generation of researchers on the spot, ensuring that the research is all-encompassing and continuous, and taking care to delineate the individual researcher’s achievements and responsibility
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within the joint projects. In addition to linguistic-geographical surveys (“all community survey”; 200 items, already completed) of all communities (approx. 800) which have been in existence from before the settlement of the Ryukyu question, and a “basic survey” (over 1,000 items, in progress) of the main communities, OCLS is also involved in producing dialect dictionaries, and recording in tape and print folktales, proverbs, natural conversation, songs, etc. These as well as the ELPR project are being carried out with the cooperation and mutual trust of researchers, local body authorities, informants, and amateur scholars. Despite the voluminous material recorded and preserved by researchers, the traditional dialects of the islands and communities of the Ryukyus cannot escape oblivion. However, there remains the possibility that at least the Ryukyuan dialect of the central-southern Okinawan area where the bulk of the population is concentrated will survive alongside the Okinawaninfluenced local variety of standard Japanese. The central-southern dialects include the previously powerful dialects of Shuri and Naha, and are supported by an adequate quantity of recorded material in the form of plays (Iha 1929) and song lyrics (Hokama et al. 1978–80). Also, the various forms of oral literature, such as the omoro (Hokama and Saigo 1972), passed down from generation to generation in various parts of the archipelago, will continue to survive as a cultural heritage of not only the inhabitants of the Ryukyus but the Japanese and the whole world. Grammatical descriptions (including phonology) of Ryukyuan dialects are found in Uemura et al. (1992, 1993), Uemura (2003), and Izuyama (2003).
18.6. Conclusion As mentioned above, Japanese itself is not on the verge of extinction, since, in most cases, linguistic crises in Japan have occurred amongst language varieties, not between Japanese itself and other languages. However, surveys must be conducted urgently in the coming years to describe as many traditional dialects as possible, because only those who were born in the Meiji era can provide a good amount of information regarding traditional dialects. Things differ greatly when it comes to those born in the Taisho era (1912–26). Sanada is reminded of what the late Japanese sociolinguist Munemasa Tokugawa (1930–99) emphasized in a lecture at one time: “It is possible to study the history of Chuo-go (dialects of central Japan) through writ-
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ten materials, which can wait for a while. What is urgently required of all dialectologists is to stop working with old written materials and to work with traditional (spoken) Japanese dialects.” With this in mind, young linguists are strongly encouraged to treat this situation as an “endangerment” of Japanese, while the older scholars have started planning to construct a system to give them intensive training.
References japanese dialects: Chien, Y., and Shibuya, K. [簡月眞・渋谷勝己] (eds.) (2003). The Remnants of Japanese in the Pacific Rim (2) [環太平洋地域に残存する日本語の諸相(2)]. ELPR A4020. Hirayama, T. et al. [平山輝男他] (eds.) (1992-4). Dictionary of Japanese Dialects [現代 日本語方言大辞典], 9 vols. Tokyo: Meiji-Shoin. Inoue, F. [井上史雄] (2000). “Standard Japanese, dialects, and a century of the new– dialect [標準語・方言・新方言の一世紀]”, in Kokubungaku Kaishaku to Kansho 651 [国文学解釈と鑑賞65-1] . Tokyo: Shibundo, 10–18. —— (2001). Quantitative Dialect Classification [計量的方言区画]. Tokyo: MeijiShoin. Kindaichi, H. [金田一春彦] (1964). “Dialect divisions based on accents [私の方言 区画]”, in Dialect Divisions of Japan [日本の方言区画]. Tokyo: Tokyodo-Shuppan, 71-94. Kobayashi, T., and Shinozaki, K. [小林隆・篠崎晃一] (eds.) (2003). Lexicon of Endangered Dialects in Japan [消滅の危機に瀕する全国方言語彙資料]. ELPR A4-021. Miyajima, T. [宮島達夫] (2001). “‘Endangered’ Japanese”, in Lectures on Endangered Languages: 3 [危機に瀕した言語について 講演集:3]. ELPR C-003, 35-54. National Language Research Institute [国立国語研究所] (ed.) (1966-74). Linguistic Atlas of Japan [日本言語地図], 6 vols. Tokyo: NLRI. Sanada, S. [真田信治] (ed.) (2001a). Endangered Dialects of Japan [日本語の消滅に 瀕した方言に関する調査研究]. ELPR A4-001. —— (ed.) (2001b). Ecchu Dialect of 100 Years Ago [百年前の越中方言]. Toyama: Katsura-Shobo. —— (ed.) (2002a). Grammatical Aspects of Endangered Dialects in Japan [消滅に瀕し た方言語法の緊急調査研究], vol. i. ELPR A4-004. —— (ed.) (2002b). Grammatical Aspects of Endangered Dialects in Japan [消滅に瀕し た方言語法の緊急調査研究], vol. ii. ELPR A4-012. Shibuya, K. [渋谷勝己] (ed.) (2002). The Remnants of Japanese in the Pacific Rim [環 太平洋地域に残存する日本語の諸相], vol. i. ELPR A4-005. Tojo, M. [東条操] (1954). “Dialect divisions of Japanese [国語の方言区画]”, in M. Tojo (ed.), Japanese Dialectology [日本方言学]. Tokyo: Yoshikawa-Kobunkan, 18-33. Uwano, Z. [上野善道] (ed.) (2001). Prosodic Aspects of Endangered Dialects in Japan [消滅に瀕した方言アクセントの緊急調査研究], vol. i. ELPR A4-002. —— (ed.) (2002a). Prosodic Aspects of Endangered Dialects in Japan [消滅の危機に瀕 したアクセントの緊急調査], vol. ii. ELPR A4-006.
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Uwano, Z. (ed.) (2002b). Prosodic Aspects of Endangered Dialects in Japan [消滅に瀕し た方言アクセントの緊急調査研究], vol. iii. ELPR A4-013. Yamaura, H. [山浦玄嗣] (2000). Kesenese Dictionary [ケセン語大辞典], 2 vols. Akita: Mumyosha-Shuppan. —— (2002-4). Novum Testamentum Kesenicum [ケセン語訳新約聖書], 4 vols. Ofunato: E・PIX.
ryukyuan dialects Chamberlain, B. H. (1895). Essay in Aid of a Grammar and Dictionary of the Luchuan Language. Yokohama: Kelly & Walsh. Hokama, S., and Saigo, N. [外間守善・西郷信綱] (1972). Omorososhi [おもろさうし], Outline of Japanese Thought [日本思想大系] 18. Tokyo: Iwanami-Shoten. —— et al. [外間守善他] (eds.) (1978-80). A Compilation of Songs from the Southern Islands [南島歌謡大成], 5 vols. Tokyo: Kadokawa-Shoten. —— et al. (1995). Classical Okinawan Dictionary [沖縄古語辞典]. Tokyo: KadokawaShoten. Iha, F. [伊波普猷] (1929). Anthology of Ryukyuan Plays (Annotated variorum) [校注 琉球戯曲集]. Tokyo: Shun’yodo. (Reprinted in The Complete Works of Iha Fuyu[伊 波普猷全集], vol. iii, 1974: Heibonsha, Tokyo.) Izuyama, A. [伊豆山敦子] (2003). Studies on Luchuan Grammar. ELPR A4-024. Kiku, T., and Takahashi, T. [菊千代・高橋俊三] (2005). Yoron Dialect Dictionary [与論 方言辞典]. Tokyo: Musashino-Shoin. Krauss, M. (2001). “Linguistic arrogance and endangered languages: Japanese and Ryukyuan comments to Uemura’s paper”, ELPR C-002, 203-5. Miyagi, S. [宮城信勇] (2003). Ishigaki Dialect Dictionary [石垣方言辞典], 2 vols. Naha: The Okinawa Times. —— Kajiku, S., Hateruma, E., and Nishioka, S. [宮城信勇・加治工真市・波照間永吉 ・西岡敏] (eds.) (2002). The Lexical List of Ishigaki Dialect [石垣方言語彙一覧]. ELPR A4-017. Miyara, T. [宮良当壮] (1930). Yaeyama Vocabulary [八重山語彙]. Tokyo: Toyo Bunko. (Reprinted in The Complete Works of Miyara Toso [宮良当壮全集], vol. viii a and b, 1980, 1981. Tokyo: Dai’ichi Shobo.) Nakamoto, M. [中本正智] (1981). Illustrated Dictionary of Ryukyuan Dialects [図説琉 球語辞典]. Tokyo: Rikitomi Shobo. Nakasone, S. [仲宗根政善] (1983). Okinawa Nakijin Dialect Dictionary [沖縄今帰仁 方言辞典]. Tokyo: Kadokawa-Shoten. —— Uemura, Y., Hokama, S., and Nakamoto, M. (1981). “Ryukyuan dialects”, in S. A. Wurm and S. Hattori (eds.), Language Atlas of the Pacific Area. Canberra: The Australian Academy of Humanities in Collaboration with the Japan Academy. National Language Research Institute [国立国語研究所] (ed.) (1963; ninth printing 2001). Dictionary of the Okinawan Language [沖縄語辞典]. NLRI Materials 5. Tokyo: Ministry of Finance Printers. Osada, S., Suyama, N., and Fuji’i, M. [長田須磨・須山名保子・藤井美佐子] (1977, 1980). Amami Dialect Classified Dictionary [奄美方言分類辞典], 2 vols. Tokyo: Kasama-Shoin. Tasato, Y., Uemura, Y., and Nakasone, S. (eds.) (1981). “Okinawan Island (Hamlets, Villages and Settlements)”, in S. A. Wurm and S. Hattori (eds.), Language Atlas of
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the Pacific Area. Canberra: The Australian Academy of Humanities in Collaboration with the Japan Academy. Uemura, Y. [上村幸雄] (2001). “Endangered languages in Japan, and related linguistic problems”, in O. Sakiyama and F. Endo (eds.), Lectures on Endangered Languages, ii: From Kyoto Conference 2000. ELPR C-002, 187-202. —— (2003). The Ryukyuan Language. ELPR A4-018. —— Tsuhako, T., Shimabukuro, Y., Karimata, S., Takahashi, T., and Suyama, N. [上村幸雄・津波古敏子・島袋幸子・狩俣繁久・高橋俊三・須山名保子] (1992, 1993). “The language of the Ryukyu Archipelago [琉球列島の言語]”, in T. Kamei, R. Kono, and E. Chino [亀井孝・河野六郎・千野栄一] (eds.), Sanseido Encyclopedia of Linguistics [三省堂言語学大辞典]. Tokyo: Sanseido, iv. 771–814; v. 390–418.
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The Northern Pacific Rim
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19
Nivkh and Ainu Hiroshi Nakagawa and Osami Okuda
19.1. Nivkh 19.1.1. Genetic relations and typological characteristics 19.1.2. Current state of Nivkh 19.1.3. Research and documentation 19.2. Ainu 19.2.1. Genetic relations and typological characteristics 19.2.2. Current state of Ainu 19.2.3. Research and documentation
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Nivkh and Ainu, together with Korean and Japanese (Ch. 18), are geographically adjacent to one another in the Far East, but they are probably genetically unrelated to each other. None of the four languages, for that matter, is known to be related to any other language of the world, and they continue to be regarded each as an isolate. As a matter of fact Nivkh has been classified in linguistic literature as one of the Palaeoasiatic or Palaeosiberian languages together with Chukchi-Kamchatkan, Yukaghir, Ket (Ch. 20), etc., which do not constitute a genetic family but are simply a geographical group of those languages in Siberia assumed to have been spoken long before the dominant language groups such as Uralic, Mongolic, Tungusic (Ch. 20), and Turkic advanced into the area.
19.1. Nivkh 19.1.1. Genetic Relations and Typological Characteristics Nivkh is a language distributed mainly around the lower region of the Amur river and the northern part of the island of Sakhalin. Nowadays all of its speakers live in the Republic of Russia. With the end of the Second World War, some of the speakers of the Poronaisk dialect, spoken in southern Sakhalin (which until then was a Japanese territory), moved to Japan, but information after that is scarce and at present there is no confirmation whatsoever of Nivkh speakers in Japan.
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Figure 19.1. Nivkh and Ainu languages (inc. ref to researchers)
Nivkh has been called Gilyak, too, which is a word of Tungus origin. Nivkh is now the official naming in Russia, which comes from the Amur dialect of the language, while in the East Sakhalin dialect they call themselves Niεvŋ, both of which mean ‘‘human being’’. As for the genetic relationship between Nivkh and other languages, several hypotheses have been hitherto proposed, i.e. between Uralic, Mongol, Tungus, Chukchi, Korean, etc. L. Shternberg and V. Jochelson insisted that Nivkh has a close relationship with some Native American languages as well as Chukchi, Koryak, Itelmen (Kamchatkan), and Yukaghir. But most Nivkh specialists think that this issue is still unresolved and requires further study (cf. Krejnovich 1979 and Hattori 1988). On the other hand, since Nivkh has been situated for a long time adjacent to the Tungusic languages, especially Nanai, Uilta, and Evenki, we find many loan words from them. A morphological analysis of Nivkh shows that, unlike languages such as Chukchi, Koryak, or Ainu, which have an abundance of prefixes and a high degree of synthesis (i.e. polysynthesis), Nivkh bears
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some resemblance to the Altaic type of languages like Japanese, Korean, or Tungusic, characterized by predominant suffixation.1 The most distinct morphological characteristic of Nivkh is the alternation of word-initial consonants in cases where transitive verbs or nouns, etc. are syntactically bound with the preceding word. In the 1950s–1960s, E. A. Krejnovich and V. Z. Panfilov hotly disputed whether this alternation can be regarded as the marker of word incorporation (Krejnovich) or merely the ‘sandhi’ between direct objects and transitive verbs (Panfilov), i.e. whether Nivkh has incorporation or not. Recently Kaneko (1999) revisited this problem in favour of Panfilov, while Mattissen (2003) argued on it in detail typologically and analysed the alternation as a marker of the dependent-head synthesis, i.e. as a marker of a word in favour of Krejnovich. Her definition of Nivkh’s wordhood, however, still needs further examination and the dispute on this problem will be continued.
19.1.2. Current State of Nivkh During the twentieth century, the number of ethnic Nivkh population has neither diminished nor grown. E. Gruzdeva wrote, ‘‘Before 1945, the total number of the Nivkhs was about 4,000, of whom about 2,300 lived on the continent, 1,600 on Sakhalin north, and 100 on Sakhalin south in the Japanese part’’ (Gruzdeva 1998: 6). According to the national census of the Soviet Union the total number of the Nivkhs was 4,420 in 1979 and 4,631 in 1989. The number of the speakers of the language, however, has diminished drastically. According to de Graaf (1993), who analysed the language situation of Nivkh on the Sakhalin Island using Russian and USSR national censuses, the number of the speakers on the Sakhalin has changed as shown in Table 19.1. The latest census in 2002 is not available yet (at the time of this article), but it is reasonable to guess the speaker number has become even less. Gruzdeva and Ju. Leonova conducted research in 1989 at Nogliki (a city on the eastern coast of the Sakhalin Island) and reported that 23.8 per cent of the people of Nivkh origin knew or used the language, the youngest of whom was 40 years of age (Gruzdeva and Leonova 1990). At present probably most people below
1 Nivkh also has prefixes but far fewer than suffixes, unlike Ainu. ‘‘Only object, reflexive, and reciprocal markers cliticize on the verb as prefixes. Most commonly, the suffixes follow the root’’ (Gruzdeva 1998: 28–9).
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Table 19.1. The number of the Nivkh speakers in Sakhalin Year
Total number
Number of speakers
Percentage
1897 1926 1959 1970 1979 1989
1,969 1,700 1,789 2,118 2,053 2,008
1,969 1,691 1,387 1,021 597 447
100.0 99.5 77.1 48.2 29.1 22.0
Source: de Graaf 1993: 22; the number of the speakers in 1989 including the Amur region was 1,079.
50 can speak only Russian, and even the generation which knows Nivkh usually uses Russian in their everyday life. Vysokov (1985) analysed several reasons for the decline especially after 1960. One of the most important factors is the large-scale exploitation of the natural resources, oil, gas, coal, etc., in the area where the Nivkhs have traditionally lived: As a result of this exploitation a mass of non-ethnic Nivkh people migrated there for jobs. The other reason is the compulsory concentration, enforced during the 1960s, of the Nivkh residents to suburban areas such as Nogliki, Nekrasovka (a village in the western coast of Sakhalin), or Poronaisk from their traditional small villages. As a result the Nivkhs had to live in communities where Russians were in a majority, losing their traditional lifestyle, culture, and language. On the other hand, the efforts for maintenance and recovery of their language especially after 1980 should not be ignored. Teaching Nivkh officially to children who were losing their mother tongue was initiated in 1981 in Nekrasovka and Nogliki. It was also taught in elementary schools in other regions mainly by the individual initiative of the teachers. Although it is hard to say whether or not the teaching has had a big effect because the Russian language dominates everyday life, efforts are currently being made and activities of various kinds are being undertaken for the sake of preserving the language. A group based at Nekrasovka called Itta, for instance, has been publishing a monthly bulletin in Nivkh, called Nivx Dif [Nivkh Language], since January1990 and has made every effort to popularize the language. Compared to Sakhalin, the information of such a movement in the Amur region is scarce. The main reason is that the Amur Nivkhs are scattered in relatively small numbers in relatively wide area which has no cultural centres like Nogliki or Nekrasovka. In 1998 Tohru Kaneko conducted a survey regarding the situation in the region and found that, while in some villages the language has been completely lost, in Kal’ma village, for instance, the
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language has been taught for fifty years in the primary school. He felt that there was a possibility of future revitalization, although it will not be so easy a matter under the present catastrophic economic conditions (Kaneko 2000). The writing system of Nivkh has been once proposed, in 1932, on the basis of the Latin alphabet. Although the Nivkh-language textbooks for the elementary schools as well as arithmetic textbooks were written in this alphabet, the system seems to have failed to become popular among people. The Soviet government abolished it in 1937 and replaced it with the Cyrillic one in 1953. This latter system was revised again in 1979, when the Nivkh textbooks were written anew in both Amur and East Sakhalin dialects (Eremin et al. 1988), and other materials were also published in this writing system.
19.1.3. Research and Documentation Researches on the Nivkh language have been done in two groups, i.e. in Russia and in Japan. On the Russian side, the first fundamental study was made by Leopol’d I. Schrenk (1826–94) in the 1854–5 expedition in the Amur region. The result of his work was summarized by Wilhelm Grube (1892). More important studies, however, were made by Lev J. Shternberg (1861–1927) and Bronisłav Piłsudski (1866–1918) during their exile in Sakhalin. While Shternberg’s works (1900, 1908) have been regarded as very valuable for their linguistic data, the numerous Nivkh texts collected by Piłsudski were preserved in the St. Petersburg Archive of the Russian Academy of Science beyond public access for a long period of time, but in 1996 a photo collection was published by Koichi Inoue and Alfred Majewicz, with part of it being analysed by Gruzdeva (2001). The first linguistic research on Nivkh was conducted by Erukhim A. Krejnovich (1906–85). His first genuine grammatical summary of Nivkh (Krejnovich 1934) and the phonetic analysis (Krejnovich 1937) had a big influence on the study of the language. Then Vladimir Z. Panfilov published the biggest grammar books of the language (Panfilov 1962, 1965). In the 1960s Valentina N. Savel’eva and Chuner M. Taksami created the dictionaries with the greatest number of entries to date: the Russian–Nivkh Dictionary (1965) and the Nivkh–Russian Dictionary (1970). Taksami, Vladimir M. Sangi, and Galina A. Otaina (1931–95) were among the pioneer researchers of Nivkh ethnic origin. Nivkh textbooks for elementary school education, published from the 1980s on, were written mainly
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by them and also by Liudmila B. Gashilova, Marina N. Pukhta, Tamara I. Paklina, and Svetlana F. Polet’eva, etc., all of whom are native speakers of Nivkh. Taksami, the ethnologist who was once the director of Peter the Great’s Museum of Anthropology and Ethnology in St. Petersburg, had a keen interest in language education and published an elementary dictionary for children in 1983. Sangi is a well-known writer and author of poems and novels on the Nivkh people and culture, and is also famous for translating the poems of Pushkin into Nivkh in 1983. Otaina, the only linguist of Nivkh ethnic origin, left a great amount of research materials, mainly related to the verbs (Otaina 1978), and wrote papers on the typology of the Nivkh language together with Vladimir P. Nedjalkov (e.g. Nedjalkov and Otaina 1988). After Otaina passed away, a young Russian linguist, Ekaterina Gruzdeva, appeared on the research stage and has continued her fieldwork on location conducting fruitful research activities. On the Japanese side, Kansuke Okamoto (1839–1904) was the first to collect Nivkh words, published in his Kita Ezo Shinshi [New Document on Sakhalin] in 1867. Akira Nakanome (1874–1959), however, was the first Japanese to carry out a full-scale study of Nivkh in 1912 (Nakanome 1917). The German translation of that, Grammatik der Nikbun Sprache (des Giljakischen), was published in 1927. After Nakanome, Moritaka Takahashi conducted field research in Poronaisk in 1928 (Takahashi 1942). His work is more complete than Nakanome’s and contains many tales with Nivkh texts. The first thorough linguistic research in Japan was done by Takeshi Hattori (1909–91). He visited Sakhalin first in 1937 and continued his research with the speakers who moved to Hokkaido after the Second World War. One of his most important works is Hattori (1962a, 1962b). Focused upon the mechanism of initial consonant alternation, it is an attempt of systematic and exhaustive elucidation of this most interesting phenomenon of the Nivkh morphology. Most of his important works were posthumously published in Hattori (2000), and his fieldnotes are archived in Hokkaido Museum of Northern Peoples in Abashiri, Hokkaido (see Yamaguchi and Izutsu 2004). Robert Austerlitz (1923–94), though American, is conveniently included in the Japanese group as he mainly conducted his research at Abashiri (Hokkaido), Japan, working with the help of Chiyo Nakamura, born in Poronaisk. The phonemic transcription of Austerlitz (1956) became a basis for the further study of the South-East Sakhalin dialects in Japan. His works afterwards concentrated mainly on the historical side of Nivkh linguistics. He
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left a variety of recordings of Nivkh folklore but passed away before publishing them. Their whereabouts are known and an eventual publication is expected. Ever since Nakanome’s survey in 1912 the Japanese research on Nivkh until the 1980s was obstructed by Japanese–Russian diplomatic relations and was limited entirely to the Poronaisk dialect (South-East Sakhalin dialect) on the former Japanese territory. This stagnation changed, thanks to the international research mission carried out in 1990 and 1991 under the leadership of Kyoko Murasaki. On the mission, Tjeerd de Graaf did research on the sociolinguistic conditions of Nivkh in Poronaisk, Nogliki, and Nekrasovka (de Graaf 1993) and Hiroshi Nakagawa and others carried out a study on the basic vocabulary of dialects in North Sakhalin (Nakagawa et al. 1993), which turned out to be the first descriptive research on dialects north of Poronaisk conducted by Japanese linguists. Since then the Chiba University Eurasian Society has continued the research activity on the Nivkh language under the leadership of Nakagawa and Kaneko in collaboration with native researchers, mainly C. M. Taksami and Galina D. Lok. As a result of this collaboration, Hidetoshi Shiraishi and G. D. Lok have published serial issues of Nivkh folklore texts with CD-ROM (Shiraishi and Lok 2002-4).
19.2. Ainu 19.2.1. Genetic Relations and Typological Characteristics Ainu was once spoken widely in the northern part of the Japanese archipelago, mainly in Hokkaido and the southern part of Sakhalin. In the northernmost prefectures of the main island of Japan (i.e. Aomori, Iwate, and Akita prefectures), there still remain many place names of Ainu origin (Yamada 1982–3), although no written record of the language in this area is known. Ainu people who had lived in the northern Kuril Islands were forced by the Japanese government to move to the island of Shikotan in the southern Kuril in 1884. Only a few written records of Northern Kuril Ainu exist. Between the dialects of Hokkaido and of Sakhalin, significant differences are observed not only in the lexicon but also in the phonology and morphosyntax. Two large subgroups can be established within the Hokkaido dialects, i.e. south-western and north-eastern, with mostly lexical differences. The genetic affiliation of Ainu remains unidentified. There have been various proposals on this issue, but some of them depend upon unreliable
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materials and others have been developed using inappropriate methods of historical linguistics. Morphology of Ainu is agglutinative. Applicative or noun-like prefixes as well as noun incorporation are common in verb morphology. Incorporated nouns are in most cases the syntactic objects of transitive verb stems, but are to be analysed, in some cases, as the subjects of intransitive verb stems and even those of transitive ones (Tamura 1973). Person marking on the verb is obligatory2 when the subject and/or the object are the first, second, or fourth person.3 The predicate comes at the sentencefinal position, the modifier precedes the noun, and case markers or verb auxiliaries are postpositional. Ainu was once regarded as having the distinction of two registers, i.e. colloquial vs. classical (e.g. Kindaichi 1931 and Shibatani 1990), but it is misleading to describe the grammar of Ainu as resting upon this distinction, because the behaviour and distribution of so-called ‘‘classical’’ features are actually independent from each other. There is no sound evidence to support the claim that the ‘‘classical’’ features are really older than the ‘‘colloquial’’ ones in the history of this language.
19.2.2. Current State of Ainu Although the Ainu people gradually lost their social freedom and were controlled by Japanese rulers during the Tokugawa era (1603–1868), the number of Japanese who came to live in the territory of the Ainu was still relatively small, so that the people chiefly used their own language. In the Meiji era (1868–1912), however, an overwhelming number of Japanese settlers came to Hokkaido (and later to Sakhalin), making it difficult for the people to live without speaking Japanese. The education programme established by the government was assimilationist, forcing Ainu children to use Japanese in the classrooms. It is very difficult to give a reliable number of the native speakers of Ainu. Nowadays researchers are able to collaborate with only a few dozens of speakers with various linguistic abilities, while speakers still unknown to the public are supposed to exist. Most of the fluent speakers are over 80 years old and the distribution of them is concentrated in south-western Hokkaido. 2 Most of the person markers are affixes but some, especially those which follow the verbs, are less bound and can be analysed as clitics. Some scholars (e.g. Kirikae 2003) call them ‘‘personal clitics’’. 3 The fourth person functions variously, e.g. as indefinite person, inclusive first person plural, second person polite form, or person for leading character in narratives, etc. Some studies (e.g. Refsing 1986 and Tamura 2000) call it as ‘‘indefinite person’’.
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It is not, however, that the Ainu people have been unaware of the ‘‘endangered’’ (or even ‘‘moribund’’) situation of their language. Documentation of epics, folktales, or prayers has been undertaken by the ethnic Ainu themselves (§19.2.3) for the purpose not only of preservation but also of transmission of the language. In 1984 the Ainu Association of Hokkaido, the largest ethnic Ainu organization, decided to request the enactment of a new law for their ethnic rights. The maintenance and transmission of the language and culture was included in the proposal for the new law, in addition to protection against racial discrimination, establishment of seats for their delegates in the Diet and regional assemblies, and promotion of their socioeconomic status in mainstream society. The Japanese government responded, enacting the Ainu Culture Promotion Act in 1997. The political and socioeconomic aspects of the proposal were, however, excluded from the new law and the domain of the ethnic activities to be legally supported was confined to the language and stereotypically defined ‘‘traditional’’ culture. While activities for the language, folklore, music, or handicrafts have indeed been promoted since the legislation, the energy of the Ainu people for the wider claims seems to have been pre-empted and deflected. In 1987 two regional branches of the Ainu Association started Ainu language classes for the people themselves. So far fourteen branches have started such classes, sometimes cooperating with researchers. In 1994 the Association released an introductory text for Ainu (Ainu Association of Hokkaido 1994) that was compiled through cooperation between leaders of the regional Ainu classes and researchers.
19.2.3. Research and Documentation The history of the documentation of the Ainu dates back at least to the first half of the seventeenth century. Earliest are the word list of Angelis (1624), the report of a Jesuit missionary, and an anonymous Japanese manuscript Matsumae no Kotoba [The Language of Matsumae (a city in Southern Hokkaido)] with a list of over one hundred words and short phrases. The amount of lexical documentation gradually increased during the Tokugawa era. In addition to the word lists, some conversational expressions and a considerable amount of texts were recorded (e.g. Uehara 1792). There was an interval after the change of the regime before the Japanese practice of Ainu studies resumed. During that period, John Batchelor (1854–1944), an Anglican priest, started his long career in the study of Ainu
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in Hokkaido. In 1889 he published the first version of the Ainu–English– Japanese Dictionary and Grammar, of which the expansion and revision continued until the fourth version in 1938. Even though the phonological analysis is immature4 and the definitions are sometimes misleading, his dictionary has more entries than recent ones and remains useful for advanced students of Ainu. His collection of texts (Batchelor 1888-93) is another important contribution for the study of the Ainu. Russian surgeon Mikhail Mikhailovich Dobrotvorskij (1836-74), after his stay in Sakhalin from 1867 to 1872, compiled the largest dictionary of the Sakhalin Ainu, with more than 10,000 entries (Dobrotvorskij 1875). Bronisław Piłsudski (1866-1918), who was banished to Sakhalin in 1887, published Ainu folklore texts in 1912 with a brief phonological description. Now most of the western works before the Second World War have been reprinted in the Ainu Library Collections series (Refsing 1996–2000). Research by Japanese linguists became active from the beginning of the twentieth century. Jinbo and Kanazawa (1898) is a useful source for the study of conversational expressions, despite its immature transcription. The contribution of Kyosuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) to the study of Ainu language and culture is one of the most important. The observation and description in his comprehensive grammatical work (Kindaichi 1931) formed the basis for research that followed in most aspects of the phonology, morphology, and syntax. He also collected numerous texts of epics and folktales in both Hokkaido and Sakhalin, though only a few of them were published before his death. Among the students of Kindaichi, Mashiho Chiri (1909–61), an ethnic Ainu born in Horobetsu, Hokkaido, also made many important contributions to this field. He reorganized Kindaichi’s somewhat disordered classification of the parts of speech, elaborated the description of the postpositions, and proposed a more transparent analysis of the syllable structure (Chiri 1942). Chiri (1953, 1954, 1962) are an incomparable series of folk taxonomical dictionaries in which the meanings or usages of the entry words are described with detailed ethnographic contexts. Itsuhiko Kubodera (1902–71), another student of Kindaichi, also collected a huge number of epics. Since his death, part of his epic collection and a manuscript of a dictionary have been published (Kubodera 1977, 1991).
4 For example, he did not notice that there was no phonological distinction between voiced and voiceless consonants in Ainu, so that in his dictionary a single word often appears multiply with different sounds.
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Besides these scholarly works, not a few Ainu have undertaken the effort to document their own language. The earliest among them was Yukie Chiri (1903–22), the elder sister of Mashiho Chiri, whose collection of epics was published in 1923 after her early death (Chiri 1923). According to Kindaichi’s statement, some important advances on his description were made with the help of her introspection. Matsu Kannari (1875–1961), the aunt of Yukie and Mashiho, followed with a large number of manuscripts of the epics and folktales in her own repertoire (Kannari 1959–66). The publication of her manuscripts is still continuing. Motozo Nabesawa (1866–1967) in Monbetsu, Hokkaido, and Tatsujiro Kuzuno (1910–2002) in Shizunai, Hokkaido, also contributed to the documentation of their native language. In addition to epics and folktales, both of them published several texts of prayers (Nabesawa 1965–9, Kuzuno 1978–91). Importance of description of individual dialects has been stressed since the 1950s under the influence of Shiro Hattori (1908–95), who published in 1964 the Ainugo Hogen Jiten [Ainu Dialect Dictionary]. Under his influence, Kyoko Murasaki, concentrating on the dialect of the north-western coast of Sakhalin, has published many texts with audio materials (e.g. Murasaki 1979) and Toru Asai approached the dialects of north-eastern Hokkaido to supplement the scarcity of the documentation and description in this area (cf. Asai 1969). Suzuko Tamura has concentrated mainly on the Saru dialect of south-western Hokkaido. Her precise description, compiled in a single volume as late as 1988 (Tamura 1988, 2000 (English version)), has advanced research of the Ainu language in many aspects. The valency alternation mechanism of verbs, for instance, was reorganized so as to give a unified description of verbal prefixation, verb compounding of N+V>V type, and affiliative (possessive) morphology of nouns in compound verbs.5 The expansion of the person-marking system with more than a three-way distinction made the somewhat complicated opposition of classical/colloquial registers unnecessary. In her dictionary (Tamura 1996) about 9,400 entries are listed with detailed description. She has also collected a large number of texts and conversational expressions, the publication of which is under way. The younger generation of researchers have also been producing documentation and description of various dialects. Refsing (1986) is a comprehensive description of the Shizunai dialect, which was so far almost
5 Tamura does not use the term ‘‘noun incorporation’’, although her description of the compound verbs which appeared first in 1973, presents essential information for the study of noun incorporation in this language.
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unknown. A concordance dictionary of the same dialect was published (Okuda 1998). Kirikae (2003) is the result of the lexical and morphological analysis of Yukie Chiri’s monumental texts. The sequential publication of Ainu dictionaries including Kayano (1996) was led by the dictionary of the Chitose dialect (Nakagawa 1995). A description of the predicate structure of this dialect was recently published with fifteen folklore texts (Bugaeva 2004). Sato (1995) is a monograph analysing the Ainu lexicon of the pre-modern period. Such a study of the previous documentation will be another important direction of further research of this language, including that of modern scholars like Batchelor or Kindaichi. Along with the spread of audio devices, many researchers and several broadcasting stations have recorded sound materials of Ainu, especially after the 1950s. The Ainu themselves also started publishing texts with recorded materials. In 1974 Shigeru Kayano (1926–2006) in Biratori, Hokkaido, first published folktale texts told by the older generation together with a cassette tape. One of the greatest achievements of his activity in this field is Kayano (1998), a collection of Ainu epic poetry. Another early example of such activity is Nukishio (1978). Now the accumulation of such audio materials is estimated to be rather big but a considerable amount of this seems to be unanalyzed linguistically. The importance of analysis of these materials as well as written material, which will lead us to new discoveries in the future, could not fail to grow all the more as fieldwork on Ainu becomes more and more difficult (cf. Ch. 5).
References Ainu Association of Hokkaido [北海道ウタリ協会](ed.) (1994). Akor Itak (Our Language)[アコロイタク アイヌ語テキスト] 1. Sapporo. Angelis, J. (1624). Relazione del Regno di Iezo, Relazione di alcvne cose Cauate dalle lettere scritte negli anni 1619. 1620 & 1621. dal Giappone. Al molto Reu. in Christo P. Mvtio Vitelleschi Preposito Generale della Compagnia di Giesv. Rome. Asai, T. [浅井亨] (1969). “Ainu grammar: an outline of Ishikari dialect [アイヌ語の文 法―アイヌ語石狩方言の概略]”, in Ainu Bunka Hozon Taisaku Kyogikai [アイヌ文 化保存対策協議会] (ed.), Ainu Ethnography [アイヌ民族誌]. Tokyo: Daiichi Hoki Shuppan, 771–800. Austerlitz, R. (1956). “Gilyak Nursery words”, Word, 12/2: 260-79. Batchelor, J. (1888–93). “Specimens of Ainu Folk-Lore” (I–VII, VIII–IX, X–XII), Transactions of the Asiatic Society of Japan, 16: 111–50, 18: 25–86, 20: 216–27. (Reprinted in 1964: Tokyo: Yushodo.) —— (1938). An Ainu–English–Japanese Dictionary, 4th edn. (3rd printing in 1995). Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten. Bugaeva, A. (2004). Grammar and Folklore Texts of the Chitose Dialect of Ainu (Idiolect of Ito Oda). ELPR A2-045.
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Chiri, M. [知里真志保] (1942). “Study of Ainu grammar: mainly on the Sakhalin dialect” [アイヌ語法研究―樺太方言を中心として]”, Bulletin of the Karafuto Government Museum [樺太庁博物館報告], 4. (Reprinted in 1973 in Collected Works of Mashiho Chiri, vol. iii: Tokyo: Heibonsha.) —— (1953, 1954, 1962). Classified Ainu Dictionary, i: Plants, ii: Animals, iii: Human [分類アイヌ語辞典 第1巻植物篇、第2巻動物篇、第3巻人間篇]. Nihon Jomin Bunka Kenkyujo. (Reprinted in 1976 in Collected Works of Mashiho Chiri, appendices 1–2: Tokyo: Heibonsha.) Chiri, Y. [知里幸恵] (1923). Collection of Ainu Holy Songs [アイヌ神謡集]. Tokyo: Kyodo Kenkyusha. (Reprinted in 1978: Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten.) de Graaf, T. (1993). “The ethnolinguistic situation on the island of Sakhalin”, in K. Murasaki (ed.), Ethnic Minorities in Sakhalin. Sapporo: Hokkaido University Press, 13–33. Dobrotvorskij, M. M. (1875). An Ainu–Russian Dictionary [Ajnsko-Russkij slovar’]. Kazan. (Reprinted in Refsing 1996–2000.) Eremin, S. N., Taksami, C. M., and Zolototrubov, V. C. (1988). Sakhalin Nivx: Contemporary Social-Economic Process [Nivkhi Sakhalina: Sovremennoe social’noekonomicheskoe razvitie]. Nobosibirsk: Nauka. Grube, W. (1892). “Giljakisches Wörterverzeichniss nebst grammatischen Bemerkungen”, in L. Schrenck, Reisen und Forschungen im Amur-Lande in den Jahren 1854–56, vol. iii. 1. Lieferung, supplement: Linguistische Ergebnisse. St. Petersburg: Eggers. Gruzdeva, E. J. (1998). Nivkh. Languages of the World/Materials 111. Munich: Lincom Europa. —— (2001). “B. Piłsudski’s collection of Nivkh folklore texts in St. Petersburg”, in K. Murasaki (ed.), Recording and Restoration of Materials of Minority Languages: Sakhalin Ainu and Nivkh Languages, ELPR A2-009, 47-68. —— and Leonova, J. V. (1990). “On the study of Nivkh–Russian bilingualism in a sociolinguistic aspect [K izucheniju nivkhsko-russkogo dvujazychija v sociolingvicheskom aspekte]”, in N. D. Andreev (ed.), Lingvisticheskie issledovanija 1990. Sistemnye otnoshenija v sinkhronii i diakhronii. Moscow: Institut Jazykoznanija AN USSR, 48–55. Hattori, S. [服部四郎] (ed.). (1964). Ainu Dialect Dictionary [アイヌ語方言辞典]. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten. Hattori, T. [服部健] (1962a). “Versuch einer Phonologie des Südostgiljakischen I—Phonembestand und -verteilung”, Journal of Hokkaido Gakugei University, Section I-A, 13/1: 67–130. —— (1962b). “Versuch einer Phonologie des Südostgiljakischen II—Alternation”, Journal of Hokkaido Gakugei University, Section I-A, l3/2: 29–96. —— (1988). “Gilyak” [ギリヤーク語], in T. Kamei, R. Kono, and E. Chino (eds.), The Sanseido Encyclopedia of Linguistics [言語学大辞典], vol. i. Tokyo: Sanseido, 1408–14. —— (2000). Writings of Takeshi Hattori: The Collection of Nivkh Studies [服部健著作 集-ギリヤーク研究論集]. Sapporo: Hokkaido Shuppan Kikaku Center. Jinbo, K., and Kanazawa, S. [神保小虎、金沢庄三郎] (1898). Ainu Conversational Dictionary [アイヌ語会話辞典]. Tokyo: Kinkodo. (Reprinted in 1973 and 1986: Sapporo: Hokkaido Shuppan Kikaku Center.) Kaneko, T. [金子亨] (1999). “To the dispute on Nivkh incorporation” [ニヴフ語抱 合論争]”, Journal of Chiba University Eurasian Society, 2: 1–50. —— (2000). “The outline of the process and result of 1998 expedition [平成 10 年度の研究経過と成果の概要]”, in H. Nakagawa (ed.), The Research and
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Documentation of “Endangered” Languages and Cultures in the Amur and Sakhalin Regions. Chiba: Chiba University, 6–27. Kannari, M. [金成マツ] (1959–66). Ainu Epic Poetry: Yukar [アイヌ叙事詩 ユーカラ集], vols. i-vii, trans. and annotated by K. Kindaichi. Tokyo: Sanseido. Kayano, S. [萱野茂] (1974). Collection of Uwepeker [ウエペケレ集大成], vol. i. Tokyo: Arudoo. (Reprinted in 2005: Tokyo: Nihon Dento Bunka Shinko Zaidan.) —— (1996). An Ainu Dictionary by Shigeru Kayano [萱野茂のアイヌ語辞典]. Tokyo: Sanseido. —— (1998). Collection of Ainu Epic Poetry by Shigeru Kayano [萱野茂のアイヌ神話集 成]. Tokyo: Victor Entertainment. Kindaichi, K. [金田一京助] (1931). Ainu Epic Poetry: Research on Yukar [アイヌ叙 事詩ユーカラの研究], 2 vols. Tokyo: Toyo Bunko. (Partially reprinted in 1993 in Complete Works of Kyosuke Kindaichi, vol. ix. Tokyo: Sanseido.) Kirikae, H. [切替英雄] (2003). Lexicon to Yukiye Chiri’s Ainu Shin-yo syu with Text and Grammatical Notes [アイヌ神謡集辞典]. Tokyo: Daigakushorin. (Originally published in 1989, as Hokkaido University Publications in Linguistics [北大言語学 研究報告] 2. Sapporo: Hokkaido University.) Krejnovich, E. A. (1934). “The Nivkh (Gilyak) language [Nivkhskij (giljackij) jazyk]”, in J. P. Alkor (ed.), Jazyki i pis’mennost’ narodov Severa. Leningrad: Instituta Narodov Severa (= Trudy po Lingvistike 3), iii. 181–222. —— (1937). Phonetics of the Nivkh [Fonetika nivkhskogo jazyka]. Moscow: Institut Narodov Severa (= Trudy po Lingvistike 5). —— (1979). “Nivkh language” [Nivkhskij jazyk], in Jazyki Azii i Afriki, vol. iii. Moscow: Nauka, 295–329. Kubodera, I. [久保寺逸彦] (1977). Ainu Epic Poetry: Research on Holy Songs and Sacred Traditions [アイヌ叙事詩神謡・聖伝の研究]. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten. —— (1991). Manuscript of an Ainu–Japanese Dictionary [アイヌ語・日本語辞典稿]. Sapporo: Educational Board of Hokkaido. Kuzuno, T. [葛野辰次郎] (1978–91). Kimusupo [キムスポ], 1-5. Private edn. Mattissen, J. (2003). Dependent-Head Synthesis in Nivkh: A Contribution to a Typology of Polysynthesis. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. Murasaki, K. [村崎恭子] (1979). Sakhalin Ainu [カラフトアイヌ語]. Tokyo: Kokusho Kanko Kai. Nabesawa, M. [鍋沢元蔵] (1965–9). Ainu Epic Poetry: Kutunesirka [アイヌ叙事詩 ク ト゜ ネシリカ], Ainu Prayers [アイヌの祈詞], Ainu Epic Poetry [アイヌの叙事詩], annotated by M. Ogiya. Monbetsu Cultural Property Research Series [門別町文化財調 査シリーズ] 1, 3, 4. Monbetsu: Monbetsucho Kyodoshi Kenkyukai. Nakagawa, H. [中川裕] (1995). The Ainu–Japanese Dictionary: Chitose Dialect [アイヌ 語千歳方言辞典]. Tokyo: Sofukan. —— Sato, T., and Saito, K. [中川裕・佐藤知己・斎藤君子] (1993). “Regional differences in the basic vocabulary of the Nivkh language in Sakhalin [サハリンにおける ニヴフ語基礎語彙の地域差]”, in K. Murasaki (ed.), Ethnic Minorities in Sakhalin. Sapporo: Hokkaido University, 209–54. Nakanome, A. [中目覺] (1917). Nivkh Grammar [ニクブン文典]. Tokyo: Sanseido. Nedjalkov, V. P., and Otaina, G. A. (1988). “Resultative and continuative in Nivkh”, in V. P. Nedjalkov and B. Comrie (eds.), Typology of Resultative Constructions. Amsterdam: Benjamins, 135–51. Nukishio, Y. [貫塩喜蔵] (1978). Ainu Epic Poetry: Sakorope [アイヌ叙事詩 サコロ ペ]. Shiranuka: Shiranuka Town.
nivkh and ainu
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Okamoto, K. [岡本監輔] (1867). New Document on Sakhalin [北蝦夷新誌]. Hokumonsha. Okuda, O. [奥田統己] (1998). A Concordance Dictionary of the Shizunai Dialect of Ainu, with CD-ROM [アイヌ語静内方言文脈つき語彙集 (CD-ROMつき)]. Sapporo: Sapporo Gakuin University. Otaina, G. A. (1978). Nivkh Verbs Denoting Quality and Property [Kachestvennye glagoly v nivkhskom jazyke]. Moscow: Nauka. Panfilov, V. Z. (1962, 1965). Nivkh Grammar [Grammatika nivkhskogo jazyka], 2 vols. Moscow: Nauka. Piłsudski, B. (1912). Materials for the Study of the Ainu Language and Folklore. Cracow: Imperial Academy of Sciences. (Reprinted in Refsing 1996–2000.) —— (1996). Materials for the Study of Nivhgu (Gilyak) Language and Folklore. Manuscript facsimile. Sapporo-Steszew. Refsing, K. (1986). The Ainu Language. Aarhus: Aarhus University Press. —— (ed.) (1996–2000). The Ainu Library Collection 1: Early European Writings on the Ainu Language, 10 vols. The Ainu Library Collection 2: Origins of the Ainu Language: The Indo-European Controversy, 5 vols. Richmond: Curzon Press. Sato, T. [佐藤知己] (1995). A Study of Ezo Kotoba Irohabiki with an Introduction and Indexes [蝦夷言いろは引の研究 解説と索引]. Hokkaido University Publications in Linguistics [北大言語学研究報告] 8. Sapporo: Hokkaido University. Savel’eva, V. N., and Taksami, C. M. (1965). Russian–Nivkh Dictionary [Russko-nivkhskij slovar’]. Moscow: Soveckaja Enciklopedija. —— (1970). Nivkh–Russian Dictionary [Nivkhsko-russkij slovar’]. Moscow: Soveckaja Enciklopedija. Shibatani, M. (1990). The Languages of Japan. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Shiraishi, H., and Lok, G. D. (eds.) (2002–4). Sound Materials of the Nivkh Language [Zvukovye materialy dlja issledovanija Nivkhskogo jazyka], 1 (2002): ELPR A2-015: 2(2003): ELPR A2-036; 3(2004): Publication of University of Groningen. Shternberg, L. J. (1900). “Samples of the materials for the study of the Nivkh language and folklore collected on the Sakhalin Island [Obrazcy materialov po izucheniju giljackogo jazyka i fol’klora sobrannykh na o. Sakhaline i v nizov’jakh Amura], Izvestija Imper. Akademii Nauk, 13/4 (St Petersburg), 387–434. —— (1908). Materials for the Study of the Nivkh Language and Folklore [Materialy po izucheniju giljackogo jazyka i fol’klora], Obrazcy narodnoj slovesnosti 1, Part 1. St. Petersburg: Imper. Akademii Nauk. Takahashi, M. [高橋盛孝] (1942). The Nivkh Language of Sakhalin [樺太ギリヤク語]. Osaka: Asahi Shinbunsha. Tamura, S. [田村すゞ子] (1973). “Structures of compound verbs in the Saru dialect of Ainu [アイヌ語沙流方言の合成動詞の構造]”, Asian and African Linguistics, 2: 73–94. —— (1988). “Ainu [アイヌ語]”, in T., Kamei, R. Kono, and E. Chino (eds.), The Sanseido Encyclopedia of Linguistics [言語学大辞典], vol. i. Tokyo: Sanseido, 6–94. —— (1996). The Ainu–Japanese Dictionary: Saru Dialect [アイヌ語沙流方言辞典]. Tokyo: Sofukan. —— (2000). The Ainu Language. Tokyo: Sanseido. Uehara, K. [上原熊次郎] (1792). Moshihogusa: The Ainu Language [蝦夷方言藻塩草]. (Reprinted in 1972: Tokyo: Kokusho Kankokai.)
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Vysokov, M. S. (1985). “Contemporary language situation in the areas where the Sakhalin Nivkhs live [Sovremennaja jazykovaja situacija v rajonakh prozhivanija sakhalinskogo nivkhov]”, in Etnograficheskogo issledovanija Sakhalinskogo oblastnogo krajevedcheskogo muzeja. Juzhno-sakhalinsk: Sakhalinskij oblastnoj krajevedcheskij muzej, 71–6. Yamada, H. [山田秀三] (1982-3). Collected Works of Hidezo Yamada: Research on Ainu Place Names [アイヌ語地名の研究 山田秀三著作集], 4 vols. Tokyo: Sofukan. Yamaguchi, K., and Izutsu, K. (eds.). [山口和彦、井筒勝信] (2004). “Publication series of Hattori Bunko 1: basic vocabulary of the Nivkh language (Poronaisk dialect) [服部文庫公開シリーズ1 ニブフ語(ポロナイスク方言)基礎語彙]”: “Publication series of Hattori Bunko 2: Nivkh–English lexical materials (Poronaisk dialect) [同 2 ニブフ語(ポロナイスク方言)英語語彙資料]”, Bulletin of the Hokkaido Museum of Northern Peoples (Abashiri), 13: 23–35, 36–58.
20
Siberia: Tungusic and Palaeosiberian Toshiro Tsumagari, Megumi Kurebito, and Fubito Endo
20.1. Introduction 20.2. Tungusic 20.2.1. Classification and distribution 20.2.2. Population and degree of endangerment 20.2.3. History of literacy and recent studies 20.3. Palaeosiberian 20.3.1. Classification and distribution 20.3.2. Chukchi-Kamchatkan 20.3.2.1. Population and degree of endangerment 20.3.2.2. Current linguistic situation and documentation 20.3.3. Yukaghir 20.3.3.1. Classification and distribution 20.3.3.2. Population and degree of endangerment 20.3.3.3. Revitalization and documentation
387 389 389 390 391 393 393 393 393 394 397 397 398 399
20.1. Introduction By the term “Siberia” we refer to east Siberia and the Russian Far East, an area which has long been inhabited by both the Tungusic and the Palaeosiberian people. In order to cover the whole range of the Tungusic, a part of north China is also included in the following discussion. See Figure 20.1 for the geographical distribution of the languages concerned. Tungusic is a language family consisting of some ten genetically related tongues. Typologically, it is characterized by the general Altaic type with an almost exclusively suffixing agglutinative morphology. Compared with the other members of Altaic (Turkic and Mongolic), Tungusic has its own peculiarities such as explicit marking for alienable possession (Sunik 1947, Boldyrev 1976, Kazama 2001). On the other hand, as can be seen below (§ 20.3.1), Palaeosiberian is a generic term for languages that are rather different in both origin and type. Among them, we will concentrate below on Chukchi-Kamchatkan and Yukaghir, which are basically characterized by agglutination including both suffixes and prefixes.1 In Chukchi-Kamchatkan
1
See Endo (1997a) for Yukaghir “prefixes”.
388 100°E
t. t s u m a g a r i , m . k u r e b i t o , a n d f. e n d o
120°E
140°E
160°E
180°
0
80 80°N
70°N
60 60°N
1000 km
4 Potentially endangered 3 Chukchi
3 Endangered Kerek 1
Tundra 2 Yukaghir
2 Seriously endangered 180°
2 Koryak
3 Even
1 Moribund 0 Extinct
70 70°N
Kolyma 1 Yukaghir
3 Evenki
Alutor 2
R U S S I A N
Itelmen 1
F E D E R A T I O N
3 Even 50°N
60 60°N
3 Evenki
Ulcha 2 Negidal 2
Oluguya-Evenki 2 Khamnigan-Evenki 3
3 3 Orochen-Evenki
Nanai
2 Uilta 2 Orochi
3 Solon
50 50°N
Manchu 1
1 HezheNanai
MONGOLIA
2 Udehe
40°N
CHINA 120 120°E
JAPAN 140 140°E
Figure 20.1. Tungusic and Palaeosiberian languages
we also find circumfixes and other morphological processes such as incorporation (T. Kurebito 1998; M. Kurebito 2001c) and reduplication. Notably, Yukaghir has a complex system of focus marking (Krejnovic 1955). All the minority languages in Siberia (as defined above) are more or less endangered. The following are some of the most influential factors in the decline of languages in Siberia (cf. Janhunen 1991; cf. also § 4.1.1, this volume): 1. Severe economic and physical conditions, which often lead to poverty, the spread of diseases, alcoholism, and a loss of identity. 2. Poor official support and the Russian-oriented education system, including boarding school. 3. The spread of television since around the 1980s, which has produced a powerful effect in decreasing language diversity.
As a result, Russian has gained general acceptance with little resistance among Siberian people. They seem to have chosen Russian as their daily language instead of persisting in their own vernaculars. At present, as far as
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Tungusic and Palaeosiberian are concerned, almost all these languages are no longer transmitted to the next generation. One of the possible exceptions is Sibe-Manchu, which is still spoken by children in rural areas. From the end of the nineteenth century until recently, Russian scholars of the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union made the main contribution to the description and documentation of Siberian languages (see Jakobson et al. 1957). Their materials are still valuable and in fact are the only source available for some languages and dialects. It was not until the 1990s, after the end of the long closed-door policy in both Russia and China, that foreign linguists were able to carry out fieldwork more or less freely. By that time, however, most languages had already seriously declined. Here we will concentrate on recent studies, including some attempts to contribute to the local programme of language revitalization.
20.2. Tungusic 20.2.1. Classification and Distribution The Tungusic family is usually divided into the following ten languages: (1) Evenki (Evenk, Ewenki, aka Tungus), (2) Even (Ewen, aka Lamut), (3) Solon (Ewenke in China), (4) Negidal (Neghidal), (5) Udehe (Udihe, Udege, Udeghe), (6) Orochi (Oroch), (7) Nanai (Nanay, aka Gold, Goldi), (8) Ulcha (Ulchi, Olcha), (9) Uilta (aka Orok), and (10) Manchu. These are genetically classified into four groups (Ikegami 1989): I. Evenki, Even, Solon, Negidal; II. Udehe, Orochi; III. Nanai, Ulcha, Uilta; IV. Manchu. Of these ten languages, six (Even, Negidal, Udehe, Orochi, Ulcha, and Uilta) are distributed exclusively in Russia, apart from a few Uilta speakers who emigrated to Japan. Two languages (Solon and Manchu) are spoken only in China. The remaining two, Evenki and Nanai, are spoken on both sides of the Sino-Russian border. However, the Chinese official taxonomy recognizes five Tungusic minorities in China: (1) Ewenke (Ewenke in Chinese pinyin transcription), (2) Orochen (Elunchun), (3) Hezhe (Hezhe), (4) Manchu (Man), and (5) Sibe (Xibo). There are some problems with this classification. Ewenke here is comprised of two or three linguistically different groups: the major Solon group (Solon-Evenki) plus those groups who speak dialects of Evenki proper (Khamnigan-Evenki and Oluguya-Evenki). Orochen is linguistically another dialect of Evenki proper (Orochen-Evenki). Hezhe, here referred to as Hezhe-Nanai, is generally recognized as a dialect
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of Nanai proper, though it may possibly include a group genetically related to Udehe (cf. Kazama 1998). Finally, Sibe can be identified as a dialect of Manchu (Sibe-Manchu).
20.2.2. Population and Degree of Endangerment Table 20.1 shows an estimated number of Tungusic speakers, the total population of each ethnic group (an approximation based on the census of 1989 for the Russian Tungus and 1990 for the Chinese side), and a tentative evaluation for the category of language endangerment. The number of speakers is calculated from the percentage given in the 1989 census for Russian Tungusic, while for Chinese Tungusic it is based on Hu and Li (1988), except for Khamnigan-Evenki and Oluguya-Evenki.2 It should be noted, however, that the percentage of native speakers given in the Russian 1989 census tends to be too high even at that time. The figures should, therefore, be discounted drastically. For example, the number of Uilta speakers is currently reported as no more than twentyfive (Ozolinja 2001), though the total population has shown some increase (300–400 individuals). Speakers of Udehe are roughly estimated at 100 by Table 20.1. The Tungusic languages Speakers Evenki Orochen-Evenki Khamnigan-Evenki Oluguya-Evenki Even Solon Negidal Udehe Orochi Nanai Hezhe-Nanai Ulcha Uilta Manchu Sibe-Manchu
9,000 2,000 1,000 100 7,400 15,000 150 500 150 5,300 40 1,000 80 70 26,000
Total population 30,000 7,000 1,600 400 17,000 25,000 600 2,000 900 12,000 4,200 3,200 200 9,800,000 172,000
Category Endangered Endangered Endangered Seriously endangered Endangered Endangered Seriously endangered Seriously endangered Seriously endangered Endangered Moribund Seriously endangered Seriously endangered Moribund Endangered
2 The data for Khamnigan-Evenki are derived from the web pages described by J. Janhunen in 1993 for the Unesco Red Book Report: (www.helsinki.fi/~tasalmin/nasia_index.html/). The estimation for Oluguya-Evenki is made by T. Tsumagari.
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Nikolaeva and Tolskaya (2001), of whom the fluent speakers do not exceed fifty persons according to Girfanova (2004). It is much more difficult to get realistic figures for those languages distributed over a wide range, such as Evenki, Even, and, though to a lesser degree, Nanai. On the Chinese side, two moribund languages (Hezhe-Nanai and Manchu) are now reported to have only twenty or fewer speakers each. The current situation is, anyway, far worse than the table shows. See also Krauss (1997: 15–17, 33; 2003: 217).
20.2.3. History of Literacy and Recent Studies Without adequate official support, most of the Tungusic people have had no choice but to employ the dominant national language together with or instead of their traditional ethnic language. Today almost all Tungusic speakers are bilingual, using either Russian or Chinese. In the 1930s some of the Tungusic languages in Russia (Evenki, Even, Nanai, and Udehe) were officially classed as literary languages. Though the writing system hardly enjoyed steady use among the Udehe, it has been maintained among the other three groups for the purposes of language education and, although limited, publication. Under the strong influence of Russian, however, it is quite natural that people prefer Russian for practical literary use. In China, Manchu has a long tradition of being a literary language, a tradition now maintained by the Sibe people. In fact their literary language is more similar to the classic written Manchu of the Ching dynasty than their actual spoken form. Therefore it contributes little to extending their speaking opportunities. Other Tungusic languages in China have no literary tradition. Scientific study on the Tungusic languages has been mainly promoted by Russian linguists. The names of four outstanding pioneers should be mentioned: G. M. Vasilevic who contributed most importantly to the description of Evenki (Vasilevic 1940, 1958), V. I. Cincius who completed a comparative study both in phonology (Cincius 1949) and in lexicon (Cincius 1975–7), V. A. Avrorin who compiled a comprehensive grammar of Nanai (Avrorin 1959–61), and O. P. Sunik who wrote two important books on comparative morphology (Sunik 1962, 1982). Besides these linguistic works, they also contributed to Soviet native language education by creating a writing system and providing teaching materials. Some Japanese linguists have worked on the Tungusic languages, at first based on published materials and then with their own fieldwork. Among them, Jiro Ikegami, the doyen of Tungusic linguistics, has made an important
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contribution to the study of written Manchu, as well as to the historical-comparative study of Tungusic (collected in Ikegami 1999, 2001), but most importantly and uniquely he has dedicated himself to a descriptive study of Uilta (Orok). Beginning his fieldwork in the 1950s with Uilta speakers who had moved from Sakhalin to Hokkaido after the Second World War, he compiled a dictionary (Ikegami 1997) and a collection of texts (Ikegami 2002), in addition to a phonological and grammatical analysis (included in Ikegami 2001). He has been playing a leading part in the Russian project to create a writing system and a school primer for the Uilta people in Sakhalin (Ikegami 1994). Toshiro Tsumagari began his fieldwork on Uilta in Hokkaido and, since 1988, he has also worked in north China and the Russian Far East. In addition to the typological areal comparison between Chinese Tungusic and the Russian (Tsumagari 1990, 1993, 1997), he has worked as the editor on several vocabularies collected by a native Ewenke linguist (Chaoke and Tsumagari 1995, 1997). He also cooperated with an Udehe speaker and writer in publishing an autobiographical text (Kanchuga and Tsumagari 2002), now revised to be used as a reader for local communities and schools (Kanchuga and Tsumagari 2003). Shinjiro Kazama is the author of many revealing papers on grammatical issues (e.g. Kazama 1994, 2001), as well as on comparative studies (Kazama 1998). He has been an active fieldworker and has collected many folkloristic materials in Nanai and other Tungusic languages, most of which have been published as a volume in Publications on Tungus Languages and Cultures. Kazama and Tsumagari are the main contributors to the series, which now contains over thirty volumes (see the latest list of publications in Kazama 2006). Some other recent important works on seriously endangered or moribund languages should also be mentioned. Nikolaeva and Tolskaya (2001) is a comprehensive grammar of Udehe. They have also published collections of Udehe folklore, in collaboration with E. Perekhvalskaya, one of which is issued in the ELPR publication series (Nikolaeva et al. 2003). E. Xasanova and A. Pevnov have long been engaged with Negidal, another seriously endangered language, and published a collection of folkloristic materials (Xasanova and Pevnov 2003) also as an ELPR publication. Last but not least, studies on Chinese Tungusic including two moribund languages (spoken Manchu and Hezhe-Nanai) are mainly conducted by the Heilongjiang Manchu Research Institute in Harbin. The institute has published semiannually the journal Manchu Studies (forty volumes up to 2005), which contains papers and materials relating to Manchu and other Tungusic languages in China.
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20.3. Palaeosiberian 20.3.1. Classification and Distribution The other main language group is Palaeosiberian (or Palaeoasiatic as it is traditionally called by Russian scholars in particular), which is distributed across a rather wide area in Siberia, although mostly concentrated along the Pacific shore in the Far East, i.e. the Old World side of the North Pacific Rim. This group is neither a genetic family in the sense of Indo-European and Uralic, nor does it consist of typologically similar languages such as Altaic. In fact, Palaeosiberian is a collective and geographical term for those languages in Siberia which are thought to have been spoken long before the dominant language groups such as Uralic, Tungusic, and Turkic advanced into the area. It covers two genetic families, Eskimo-Aleut and Chukchi-Kamchatkan, and three smaller language families sometimes mentioned as language isolates, namely, Yukaghir (now only two languages), Ket (formerly family of five languages, now only one), and Nivkh (Gilyak; two languages). The Eskimo-Aleut family has two branches, Eskimo and Aleut, which are dealt with in Chapter 21 (by Krauss) owing to their geographic distribution. Ket lies out of the scope of this book as its distribution is along the river Yenisei in central Siberia, away from the Pacific. Nivkh, distributed along the lower reaches of the Amur river and on Sakhalin island, is dealt with in Chapter 19 (by Nakagawa) together with Ainu (by Okuda). The Chukchi-Kamchatkan family consists of five genetically related languages, namely, Chukchi, Kerek, Alutor, Koryak, and, problematically, Itelmen, distributed across the peninsulas of Chukotka and Kamchatka in the Far East. The Yukaghir languages are spoken in the tundra area between the lower Alazeya and the lower Kolyma (Tundra Yukaghir), and also in the taiga area along the upper reaches of the river Kolyma (Kolyma Yukaghir). Thus the following sections deal only with Chukchi-Kamchatkan and Yukaghir.
20.3.2. Chukchi-Kamchatkan
20.3.2.1. Population and Degree of Endangerment Table 20.2 shows the number of Chukchi-Kamchatkan speakers and the total population of the ethnic group as estimated by Krauss (2003: 217). Each category is defined by the author of this section on the basis of each language’s viability status as evaluated by Krauss (2003: 217).
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Table 20.2. The Chukchi-Kamchatkan languages Speakers Chukchi Kerek Alutor Koryak Itelmen
10,000 2 200 2,500 70
Total population 15,000 400 2,000 7,000 1,500
Category Endangered Moribund Seriously endangered Seriously endangered Moribunda
a Although the viability status of Itelmen (in this case Western Itelmen, the only surviving language of the family) is evaluated as “extinct” in Krauss 2003: 217, this is probably a misunderstanding because the number of Western Itelmen speakers is actually estimated to be 70.
It should be remembered, however, that there are also other various estimations concerning the number of speakers. In fact it is quite difficult to obtain exact statistical data, probably due to the difficult economic and geographical conditions in this area and also due to the discrepancy between the subjective and objective criteria of fluency. For example, Burykin (2002: 100) points out that of the Koryaks who regarded Koryak as their mother tongue (52.4 per cent of the total population of the Koryaks) in 1989 actually only 5.4 per cent could speak Koryak fluently. However, estimations made by those scholars who have continuously conducted fieldwork in this area and are quite familiar with the present situation of each language seems to support Krauss’s above estimation on the whole, if not making an issue of the slight errors in calculation. Chikako Ono (2003a: 70), who has been working on Itelmen in the villages of the Kamchatka since 1997, estimates the number of Itelmen speakers to be less than fifty, which further supports the assignment of Itelmen to the moribund category. Kibrik et al. (2000: 9) propose that the approximate number of Alutor speakers is 100–200. Although Yukari Nagayama who has conducted fieldwork on Alutor since 1999 proposes much higher figure of about 470 (Nagayama 2003a: p. xiv), her information that adults in their thirties and forties do not speak Alutor any more also supports the above evaluation.
20.3.2.2. Current Linguistic Situation and Documentation In spite of efforts to maintain the languages, including the establishment of orthographies and the compilation of dictionaries and textbooks for education, assimilation to Russian is rapidly advancing and the domain of use and the speakers’ age range in each language is getting more and more limited. In general, nomads who are occupied with reindeer herding in the remote
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tundra are much more likely to keep higher competence in their native languages than settled groups in the villages. For instance, although Chukchi has some 10,000 speakers (the largest number in the Russian northern minority languages around this area; cf. Janhunen 1991: 122), fluent Chukchi speakers who have no good command of Russian are all nomads in the tundra aged over 60. The younger and further from the tundra people are, the more fluent in Russian as opposed to Chukchi they become. According to T. Kurebito (1999: 15) almost all the Chukchi under the age of 20 have already been assimilated to Russian. Koryak is mainly distributed in the Koryak autonomous region in the northern part of Kamchatka. In Palana, the center of the region, where over 1,000 Koryaks live, Koryak is taught in schools and there are even radio programmes in Koryak about three times a week (Ono 2003a: 77–8). However, satisfactory results have not been obtained, partly because of the great dialectal diversity which accelerates assimilation to Russian (Ono 2003a: 84). The situation of the language spoken in the Severo-Evensk district, part of Magadan region, on which Megumi Kurebito has conducted fieldwork since 1994, is probably much worse than that in the Koryak autonomous region. In 2002 the municipal residential school in the district where Koryak had been taught was merged into the ordinary school for Russian pupils. Also one of the primary schools with Koryak classes in the district was closed in the same year. Koryak is rather well preserved mainly by elderly people in brigades involved in reindeer herding and other occupations like fishing and hunting, although there is now almost nobody who exclusively speaks Koryak. On the other hand young nomads under 30 years old cannot speak Koryak at all. The number of reindeer has decreased sharply and they have ceased being identified by Koryak words denoting the colour and condition of their fur and the cuts in their ears. Instead, Russian nicknames like Myshonok “little mouse”, Bojng “Boeing”, Kaban “wild boar” are used. This symbolically shows the decline of traditional reindeer herding, parallel to that of their native language. Alutor, which was long regarded as a dialect of Koryak, is reported by Nagayama (p.c.) to be taught in a few native villages using handmade textbooks with Cyrillic letters based on the Latin transcription by Kibrik et al. (2000). As for Itelmen, there were once three languages: Western, Southern, and Northern Itelmen, of which only the Western— further subdivided into two dialects, the Southern and the Northern—has survived at all. Itelmen based
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on the Southern dialect is still taught in schools in the villages of Palana, Kovran, and Tigil’, while the Northern dialect is almost extinct, with fewer than ten aged speakers left (Ono 2003a: 70–1). However, attempts to preserve and revive the languages have not been totally abandoned. Full-scale scientific documentation of the ChukchiKamchatkan family was first made by the Russian ethnographer and linguist V. G. Bogoras at the beginning of the twentieth century (Bogoras 1922). Since then, and especially during the Soviet period, a number of descriptive studies have been made and dictionaries compiled by Russian linguists. The most notable accomplishments are Stebnickij (1934, 1937), Skorik (1941, 1961, 1977), Vdovin (1954), Moll (1960), Moll and Inenlikej (1957), Žukova (1967, 1972, 1980), Nedjalkov (1979), Polinskaja and Nedjalkov (1987, 1988), and Volodin (1976). Descriptive studies by Russian linguists have decreased since the fall of the Soviet Union due to economic difficulties in conducting fieldwork. However, efforts to document the languages are still continuing. One of the most outstanding achievements of these efforts is the detailed documentation of the Alutor language (Kibrik et al. 2000) based on materials collected during three Kamchatkan expeditions in the 1970s, with English translation now available as an ELPR publication (Kibrik et al. 2003). While several noteworthy studies on this language family have been done by foreign scholars, even during the Soviet period (Comrie 1979a, 1979b, 1980; Jakobson et al. 1957; Kenstowicz 1976, 1986; Spencer 1995; Worth 1962), studies by Japanese linguists have recently appeared. At present, four Japanese linguists are working on all the languages in the ChukchiKamchatkan family except for Kerek, which is on the verge of disappearing: Tokusu Kurebito (1995, 1998, 2001) for Chukchi, Yukari Nagayama (2002, 2003a) for Alutor, Megumi Kurebito (2000, 2001c, 2004) for Koryak, and Chikako Ono (1998, 2004) for Itelmen. For the last decade they have been engaged in documenting each language (phonological and grammatical descriptions), editing basic vocabulary (M. Kurebito 2001b; Ono 2003b; Žukova and T. Kurebito 2004) and recording folklore texts (M. Kurebito 1996; T. Kurebito 2004; T. Kurebito and Oda 2004). At the same time they have also been working towards the preservation and revitalization of the languages in partnership with local communities. The publication of picture books in the native languages has been an initial attempt to revive the folktales which would otherwise be forgotten or might only become a subject for linguistic analysis (M. Kurebito 2001a, 2002; Nagayama 2003b).
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20.3.3. Yukaghir
20.3.3.1. Classification and Distribution Yukaghir consists of two closely related languages, Tundra Yukaghir and Kolyma Yukaghir, spoken by an indigenous group of people living in northeastern Siberia, now reduced to two geographically distant pockets in the Sakha Republic (Yakutia). Tundra Yukaghir is spoken in the northern tundra area encompassed by the Arctic Ocean in the north, by the lower Alazeya in the west, and the lower Kolyma in the east. It has been confirmed, however, that in the seventeenth century, the Yukaghir languages including both the now extinct Omok and Chuvan (or Chuwan) formed a vast linguistic complex in north-eastern Siberia (see Tailleur 1959 and 1962 for some linguistic materials of Omok and Chuvan respectively).3 The Tundra Yukaghirs call themselves wadul, with their current centre of inhabitancy at Andryushkino, a mixed village of approximately 900 people on the river Alazeya. Kolyma Yukaghir is spoken in the Taiga area along the upper reaches of the river Kolyma, in particular in the Yasachnaya valley. The Kolyma Yukaghirs call themselves odul, with their current centre at Nelemnoe, a village of approximately 300 people on the river Yasachnaya. Although their genetic affinity is indisputable (as shown in the correspondence w ¦ ø, e.g. wadul ¦ odul “the Yukaghir”), it is still disputed whether these two languages are in fact two dialects or two closely related languages. The consideration of the sociolinguistic fact that there is no entity like “common” Yukaghir equally used by the two groups suggests their status as two independent languages, a possibility which may be strengthened by Krejnovic’s observation that the two are almost mutually unintelligible (Krejnovic 1968: 451). It is also worth noting that there are considerable differences in lexicon as well as in grammar between the two, although some of them can be ascribed to the linguistic contact each of them has had with its neighbouring languages such as Yakut, Even, and Russian. The problem of the genetic affinity of Yukaghir to other language families remains unsolved. Considering the current state of research, it is safe to say that Yukaghir is better considered as a language isolate. Comparative linguists such as Karl Bouda, Björn Collinder, and Olivier Guy Tailleur vigorously tried to establish its genetic relationship with the Uralic languages between the 1940s and 1960s (see e.g. Collinder 1940). Their conclusions, however, have not yet been widely accepted, especially in the field of comparative Uralic linguistics. 3 Krauss (2003: 214, 217) presumes that both Omok and Chuvan were approaching a state of extinction, replaced by Russian or Chukchi, around 1900.
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As Krejnovic noted in his last book on Yukaghir (Krejnovic 1982: 36), solving this problem has to be referred to future research.
20.3.3.2. Population and Degree of Endangerment The number of people speaking Yukaghir has declined constantly since the late nineteenth century, according to government censuses. In the 1897 census, the population of the Yukaghir amounted to 754, among whom 331 (43.9 per cent) people spoke Yukaghir. About half a century later, the 1959 census shows that the Yukaghir had a population of 442, with 232 (52.5 per cent) people speaking Yukaghir. A sharp decline in the ratio of Yukaghir speakers was seen in the second half of the twentieth century: in 1979, 300 (37.5 per cent) out of 800 Yukaghirs spoke the language, while 360 (32.8 per cent) people out of 1,100 Yukaghirs spoke it in 1989. Although one may observe the steady absolute increase of the Yukaghir speakers in the censuses taken during the second half of the twentieth century, Krauss (1997: 18) is doubtful about it as he remarks: “As children have generally not been learning the language for some 40 years, these figures can hardly be taken as realistic.” If we consider the sociolinguistic survey by Vakhtin discussed just below, it seems reasonable to suppose that Krauss’s remark is valid. Krauss (1997: 33, 2003: 217), estimates the number of Tundra speakers to be about fifty with about twenty Kolyma speakers. In the post-Soviet era, the survey carried out by the Institute of the Problems of the Minority Peoples in the North (in Yakutsk) in 1993 gives the following data (Tomskij 1996): of the 304 Tundra Yukaghirs answering the questionnaire, 75 people (24.7 per cent of the total) were fluent native speakers, whereas, of the 233 Kolyma Yukaghirs answering the questionnaire, 36 people (15.4 per cent of the total) were fluent speakers.4 The detailed sociolinguistic survey conducted by Nikolai Vakhtin in 1987 provides us with information about the situation of endangerment which Yukaghir currently faces (Vakhtin 1992). It clearly shows that the Yukaghir speech communities, in particular in the younger generations, have been eroded by more influential languages such as Yakut and Russian. He observes that in Andryushkino the average age of people speaking Tundra Yukaghir as their first language is 58, whilst the average age of Yakut and Russian speakers is 28 and 24 respectively. In Nelemnoe the average age of people
4 Note that these figures are closer to what Krauss (1997, 2003) estimates than to what the 1989 census shows. This leads us to assume that both Krauss’s estimation and this survey reflect some reality, although the problem of how to assess the language competency of speakers still remains.
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speaking Kolyma Yukaghir as their first language is as old as 64, whilst that of Yakut and Russian speakers is 59 and 28 respectively. Moreover, Vakhtin’s assessed degree of language competence reveals that the younger generations, younger than 30 in Andryushkino and under 50 in Nelemnoe, show lower language competency in Yukaghir than the older generations. It also discloses the fact that in Nelemnoe the youngest generation (aged 11–20) of the Kolyma Yukaghirs shows little, if any, language competency in Yukaghir. It is no exaggeration to say that Kolyma Yukaghir already is a moribund language, whereas Tundra Yukaghir is a seriously endangered language.
20.3.3.3. Revitalization and Documentation Local governments working with educators, linguists, and ethnologists have made various efforts to revive the language since the 1980s. The most important of these was the establishment of a Yukaghir orthography based on the Cyrillic alphabet. This orthography was then employed to publish Yukaghir textbooks for primary schools in both Yukaghir languages: the first Tundra Yukaghir primer (Kurilov and Vyrdylina 1989) and the first Kolyma Yukaghir primer (Spiridonov and Nikolaeva 1993). Since then, Yukaghir has been taught in the village schools from the first to eleventh year in Andryushkino and from the first to eighth year in Nelemnoe. The language classes are supplemented with classes on the ethnic cultures of indigenous people in Siberia (Tomskij 1996). Documentation of Yukaghir has been occasionally done since the publication of Jochelson (1900), the first collection of texts in Kolyma (partly Tundra) Yukaghir. Early contributions include some chapters in Jochelson (1926), the most comprehensive ethnography of the Yukaghirs so far. A twovolume collection of folklore texts, Nikolaeva (1989), is another contribution to the documentation of Kolyma Yukaghir. Nikolaeva has brought out her second folktale collection of Kolyma Yukaghir (Nikolaeva 1997). Maslova (2001) also contains five Kolyma Yukaghir texts collected and grammatically analysed by the editor. For Tundra Yukaghir, G. N. Kurilov, a Yukaghir linguist specializing in Tundra Yukaghir, has collected many folklore texts, several of which were published as Maslova (2001) along with Maslova’s grammatical analysis. Descriptive grammars of Yukaghir include Krejnovic (1958) for Tundra Yukaghir and Maslova (2003) for Kolyma Yukaghir. It is noteworthy that a Tundra Yukaghir dictionary was compiled by Kurilov (1990). Only recently, two school dictionaries of Kolyma Yukaghir were published (Kurilova 2001; Nikolaeva and Šalugin 2002). Writings by native speakers of Yuakghir include Uluro Ado (1980) in Tundra Yukaghir and Šalugin (1995) in Kolyma Yukaghir.
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Recently, in the 1990s, the Japanese contribution to the documentation of Yukaghir was also launched. Fubito Endo began conducting fieldwork on Kolyma Yukaghir in Nelemnoe in 1995, while Iku Nagasaki began fieldwork on Tundra Yukaghir in Andryshkino in 1993 and on Kolyma Yukaghir in 1997. Their publications include the following: two collections of the basic vocabulary of Kolyma Yukaghir (Endo 1997b, 2001), several Kolyma Yukaghir folktale texts with grammatical analysis (Endo 1997c, Nagasaki 1998), and several papers on various grammatical aspects of Yukaghir (Endo 1997a; Nagasaki 2003). The two published a monograph of Kolyma Yukaghir vocabulary with illustrative sentences and grammatical information based on the corpus they had built (Nagasaki and Endo 2004), focusing their future contribution on a basic grammar and dictionary of Kolyma Yukaghir for pedagogical use.
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Russia [ロシア北東部における先住少数民族の言語使用]”, Language and Society [ことばと社会] 7. Tokyo: Sangensha, 63–87. Ono, Ch. (2003b). Tematiceskij Slovar’ i Razgovornik Severnogo (Sedanskogo) Dialekta Itel’mensokogo Jazyka. ELPR A2-029. —— (2004). “Itelmen verb stem: morphological features and syntactic structure of intransitive and transitive”, in O. Miyaoka and F. Endo (eds.), 169–77. Ozolinja, L. V. (2001). Oroksko-Russkij Slovar’. Novosibirsk: Izdatel’stvo SO RAN. Plank, F. (ed.) (1979). Ergativity: Towards a Theory of Grammatical Relations. London: Academic Press. Polinskaja, M. S., and Nedjalkov, V. P. (1987). “Contrasting the absolutive in Chukchee: syntax, semantics and pragmatics”, Lingua, 71: 239–69. —— (1988). “Antipassive in Chukchee: oblique object, object incorporation, zero object”, in M. Shibatani (ed.), Passive and Voice. Typological Studies in Language 16. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 651–706. Šalugin, V. G. (1995). N’ed’iipelek Uörpeŋin (Rasskazy dlja Detej). Jakutsk: Jakutskij Gosudarstvennyj Universitet. Shoji, H., and Janhunen, J. (eds.) (1997). Northern Minority Languages: Problems of Survival. Senri Ethnological Studies 44. Suita: National Museum of Ethnology. Skorik, P. Ja. (1941). Russko-Cukotskij Slovar’. Leningrad: Ucpedgiz. —— (1961). Grammatika Cukotskogo Jazyka 1. Leningrad: Izdatel’stvo AN SSSR. —— (1977). Grammatika Cukotskogo Jazyka 2. Leningrad: Izdatel’stvo Nauk. Spencer, A. (1995). “Incorporation in Chukchi”, Language, 71/2: 439–89. Spiridonov, V. K., and Nikolaeva, I. A. (1993). Bukvar’ dlja Pervogo Klassa Jukagirskix Škol (Verxnekolymskij Dialekt). St. Petersburg: Prosvešcenie. Stebnickij, S. N. (1934). “Nymylanskij (Korjakskij) jazyk”, Jazyki i Pis’mennost’ Narodov Severa, 3. Leningrad, 47–84. —— (1937). “Osnovnye foneticeskie razlicija dialektov Nymylanskogo (Korjakskogo) jazyka”, in Pamjati V. G. Bogoraza (1865–1936). Leningrad: Izdatel’stvo AN SSSR, 285–306. Sunik, O. P. (1947). “O kategorii otcuždaemoj i neotcuždaemoj prinadležnosti v tunguso-man’cžurskix jazykax”, Izv. AN SSSR, OliJA, 4/5: 437–51. —— (1962). Glagol v Tunguso-Man’cžurskix Jazykax. Leningrad: Nauka. —— (1982). Sušcestvitel’noe v Tunguso-Man’cžurskix Jazykax. Leningrad: Nauka. Tailleur, O. G. (1959). “Les uniques données sur l’omok langue éteinte de la famille youkaghire”, Orbis (Louvain), 8: 78–108. —— (1962). “La dialecte Tchouvane du youkaghir”, Ural-Altaische Jahrbücher, 34: 55–99. Tomskij, I. E. (ed.) (1996). Problemy Vezroždenija Iscezajušcix Jukagirov. Jakutsk: Severoved. Tsumagari, T. [津曲敏郎] (1990). “Typological differences in the Tungusic languages [ツングース語の類型と相違]”, in Y. Kotani (ed.), Comparative Studies of Northern Cultures [北方諸文化に関する比較研究]. Nagoya: Nagoya University, 137–47. —— (1993). “Morphological peculiarities of Hezhen and Manchu influence [ヘジェン 語の形態的特徴と満州語の影響]”, in H. Okada (ed.), Comparative Study of Arctic and Sub-arctic Cultures [環極北文化の比較研究]. Sapporo: Faculty of Letters, Hokkaido University, 81–92. —— (1997). “Linguistic diversity and national borders of Tungusic”, in H. Shoji and J. Janhunen (eds.), 175–86.
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—— (ed.) (2001). Languages of the North Pacific Rim [環北太平洋の言語] 7. ELPR A2-002. —— (ed.) (2002). Languages of the North Pacific Rim [環北太平洋の言語] 8. ELPR A2-012. —— (ed.) (2003). Languages of the North Pacific Rim [環北太平洋の言語] 10. ELPR A2-033. Uluro Ado (1980). Juko N’ied’ilpe (Rasskazy Juko). Jakutsk: Jakutskoe Knižnoe Izdatel’stvo. Vakhtin, N. (1992). “The Yukagir language in sociolinguistic perspecitve”, in J. Bańczerowski, A. F. Majewicz, and W. Stefańcski (eds.), Linguistic and Oriental Studies from Poznań 1. Poznań: Adam Mickiewicz University, 47–82. Vasilevic, G. M. (1940). Ocerki Grammatiki Evenkijskogo (Tungusskogo) Jazyka. Leningrad: Nauka. —— (1958). Evenkiisko-Russkij Slovar’. Moscow: Nauka. Vdovin, I. S. (1954). Istorija Izucenija Paleoaziatskix Jazykov. Leningrad: Izdatel’stvo akademii nauk SSSR. Volodin, A. P. (1976). Itel’menskij Jazyk. Leningrad: Nauka. Worth, D. S. (1962). “La place du Kamtchadal parmi les langues soi-disant paléosibériennes”, Orbis, 6/2: 579–99. Wurm, S. A. (ed.) (1996). Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger of Disappearing. Paris: UNESCO Publishing. Xasanova, M., and Pevnov, A. (2003). Mify i Skazki Negidal’cev. Publications on Tungus Languages and Cultures 21. ELPR A2-024. Žukova, A. N. (1967). Russko-Korjakskij Slovar’. Moscow: Izdatel’stvo Sovetskaja Enciklopedija. —— (1972). Grammatika Korjakskogo Jazyka. Leningrad: Nauka. —— (1980). Jazyk Palanskix Korjakov. Leningrad: Nauka. —— and Kurebito, T. [呉人徳司] (eds.) (2004). Bazovyj Tematiceskij Slovar’ KorjakskoCukotskix Jazykov. Asian and African Lexicon Series 46. Tokyo: Research Institute for Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies.
21
Native Languages of Alaska Michael E. Krauss
21.1. Linguistic families in Native Alaska 21.2. Statistics with historical background 21.3. Current status 21.3.1. Languages of south-eastern Alaska 21.3.2. Eyak 21.3.3. Athabaskan languages 21.3.4. Eskimo-Aleut 21.4. Conclusion
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21.1. Linguistic Families in Native Alaska Alaska is the original American homeland of two great language families, Eskimo-Aleut and Athabaskan-Eyak-Tlingit, both of which have spread dramatically beyond Alaska. Conversely, two minor families have recently also spread into extreme south-eastern Alaska. One is Haida, one or two languages, the northern variety of which spread from the Queen Charlotte Islands to southern Prince of Wales Island during the eighteenth century, and the other is Tsimshianic, three or four languages, the Coastal variety of which spread to Annette Island in 1887. Eskimo-Aleut spread from Alaska far east over the Canadian Arctic to reach Greenland 1,000 years ago, but all the deeper diversity of the family is still in Alaska (and neighbouring Russia: Chukotka and the Commander Islands). Part of the Athabaskan branch of Athabaskan-Eyak-Tlingit has spread far south and east of Alaska to Hudson’s Bay, and from southern British Columbia to Oregon and California, and from Alberta to the US south-west as Apache and Navajo. The great depth of diversity in the family, including Tlingit and Eyak as well as Athabaskan, still remains in Alaska. The parts of both these families (Iñupiaq and Athabaskan) that have spread so extensively now have by far the largest number of speakers at the extremes, Inuit in east Arctic Canada and Greenland, and Navajo-Apachean in the south-west. The present chapter, however, concentrates strictly on the situation in their Alaskan homelands.
Figure 21.1. Native Languages of Alaska
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Table 21.1. Population and speaker statistics Language family
Language name
Eskimo-Aleut
Aleut (Russia) Sugpiaq (Alutiiq) Central Yup’ik Siberian Yupik (Russia) Iñupiaq (Inuit) (Canada) (Greenland) Coast Tsimshian (Canada) Nisga (Canada) Northern Haida (Canada) Tlingit (Canada) Eyak Ahtna Tanaina Deg Xinag (Ingalik) Holikachuk Koyukon Upper Kuskokwim (Lower)Tanana Tanacross Upper Tanana Han (Canada) Kutchin (Canada)
Tsimshianic
Haida AthabaskanEyak-Tlingit
Population
Speakers
2,300 200 3,500 25,000 1,400 900 15,700 30,500 47,000 1,400 3,200 <100 5,400 650 1,100 10,000 1,000
150 5 200 10,400 1,000 300 2,144 24,500 47,000 30 <400 <0? <1,000 10 30 300 75 1 25 50 14 5 150 25 15 50 55 12 7 150 400
650 1,000 250 180 2,300 100 400 200 300 60 250 1,000 1,900
Source (Shaded lines): Krauss 1997.
21.2. Statistics with Historical Background In Alaska, indigenous languages have not fared well. This author has published statistics on the size of the indigenous populations and the number of speakers of the languages in Alaska for each decade since his first map defining these languages (Krauss 1974, based on the census of 1970, then in Krauss 1982, based on the census of 1980, then in Krauss 1995 and 1997, based on the census of 1990, and now here, based on the census of 2000). The present chapter thus gives an updated statistical account of the status of these languages, with some historic background showing the statistical trends 1970–2000.
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Arriving at statistics of number of speakers of indigenous languages out of total relevant population is complicated by two types of major factors. The first type is of course in the determination of who is a speaker, and the second is in counting who is a member of the indigenous community. In counting who is a speaker, there are in turn two complicating factors: degree of ability, and method of determining that. The only surely accurate method would be to observe and/or test all individuals carefully, possible for a few individual small communities, given enough time, but obviously impossible for all of Alaska. Asking or surveying individuals instead, e.g. “do you speak the language?,” even if practical, would be inaccurate about as often as not, since many, especially of younger generations, might wishfully say they speak more than they actually do, while many of the fluent older generation, taught to be ashamed of their language, might deny that they speak their language, or minimize their ability as not up to the standards of their ancestors. The facts are that in most communities, especially the smaller more homogeneous ones, history has it that especially after the institution of the American school, the first bilingual generation ceased to speak the language to their children, using English instead, as instructed, so that within a period of five to ten years, the mother tongue of all the children born in a given village shifted from Native to English. This happened even within families. Thus the eldest child learned Native while the youngest learned only English, such that everyone born before 1935, say, knows Native and no one born after 1940 does (One can almost bet that school opened there c.1917!). There may of course be individual exceptions, e.g. a child born 1950, but raised by grandparents, or conversely a child born 1930 sent away e.g. for tuberculosis, but such exceptions are hardly statistically significant for the present purposes. In fact, given these circumstances, and given US census statistics that count people by race and age groups (mostly ten-year groups) in each community, this writer has found a method of counting not only relevant base populations, but also speakers of the language, by knowing the “cut-off ” age above which generally all are speakers and below which none are. That “cut-off ” age is both easily observable and common knowledge in any village. Where that is, say, 40–50 years of age, then all above 50 are counted as speakers, none below 40, and about half those in the 40–49 group. In a larger more complex community such as Dillingham, which lists 1,296 “American Indian and Alaska Native”, almost all Central Yup’ik, the speaker calculation is more difficult. On the one hand, the cut-off age for this major centre is rather higher than in the surrounding smaller villages. Many have in
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fact moved from those villages, yet those too are much less likely to be speaking Yupik to their children there than if they had stayed in the village, so the estimate of number of speakers is 226, only 17 per cent. Counting base populations is still more difficult, the single most important complicating factor being urbanization, i.e. displacement to the larger cities outside the traditional territory, especially Anchorage and Fairbanks, dissociation from ancestral community, and significantly higher rate of intermarriage. This survey thus enumerates only those persons who have stayed within their traditional language territory, which are all relatively well defined. The total Alaska Native population so counted in 2000 is 66,360, but that number is now only about two-thirds of the total Native population in Alaska, at least 100,000, hardly counting those of mixed race in the larger cities. Anchorage alone lists 18,941 “American Indian and Alaska Native”, not to mention 13,086 of “two races”, Fairbanks North Star Borough 5,714 and 3,822. Tanaina Athabaskan in Anchorage and Tanana in Fairbanks are of course only a tiny proportion of those. In Juneau those figures are 3,496 and 1,936, but Tlingit is a much larger population, which can only be guessed at, as information on the specific composition by language area in those urban populations is hardly available at all. In spite of the size, over one-third, of the urbanized Alaska Native population, its importance for the future of the languages is far less, it would seem, since though some number of speakers is to be extrapolated somewhat proportionately from this urbanized sector, the number of those likely to perpetuate the language in this urban setting is statistically of little significance. (On the other hand, those individuals who have made enormous contributions to academic and educational work in their languages, exiled in such urban settings, are outstanding indeed. In the case of Eyak, the only surviving speaker has lived in Anchorage for many years.)
21.3. Current Status We now take up the status of each of Alaska’s twenty Native languages, individually, in four subgroups: (1) Tsimshian, Haida, and Tlingit of south-east Alaska; (2) Eyak; (3) the eleven Athabaskan languages in Alaska; and (4) Aleut and the four Eskimo languages in Alaska. For parts of groups (1) and (3) in Canada and of (4) in Russia, see Krauss (1997). For each, statistics will be listed as follows: first the 2000 census base population, with number of speakers following, separated by dash. Then in parentheses follow similar
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figure pairs for 1970, 1980, and 1990 in that order, followed by semicolon and then speaker percentages thereof, four figures separated by hyphen, in the order 1970–1980–1990–2000. This may be followed by a variety of comments, especially on differing levels of maintenance, e.g. villages where the language was spoken to children the most recently, or dialects that are nearest to extinction. At the end, a very brief evaluation is made of the level of documentation extant in the form of grammar, dictionary, and texts, respectively, by the following symbolization: in upper case that published or widely available, in lower case that unpublished, much of which is at the Alaska Native Language Center archive. The unpublished is noted only where it is significantly better than that published. The evaluation is strictly the author’s, and does not take account of early documentation, missionary or otherwise, though that may be very significant (most especially in the case of Aleut and Kutchin). It takes account only of modern observationally adequate work, including e.g. notation of tones where present, not of theoretically motivated or specialized academic articles, though such may exist in refereed journals, nor of elementary pedagogical materials. The gradations are A/a “comprehensive, excellent, fairly exhaustive of living memory”, B/b “extensive, good, though significantly more could be done”, C/c “partial, fair”, D/d “fragmentary, poor”. In some cases a minus sign may follow, e.g. especially a-, evaluation between a and b. Merely added to this notation, in most cases, are the names of those individuals who have made most outstanding contributions to this documentation, without beginning to present a bibliography or history of work, which would be another task altogether. This way, however, the present report may also be useful for prioritization of further documentation of Alaska languages by summarizing degree of documentation along with status of language.
21.3.1. Languages of South-eastern Alaska Coast Tsimshian 1400–30 (1000–200, 1000–150, 1300–70; 20–15–5–2 per cent). Part of Coast Tsimshian moved to Metlakatla on Annette Island in 1887 from Canada; many more recently spread from there to Ketchikan. A few dozen speakers of Nisga Tsimshianic, some at Tombstone Bay to the 1930s, are also spread in Alaska, perhaps no speakers. Sapir’s opinion that Tsimshianic is genetically related to Penutian is increasingly confirmed by Marie-Lucie Tarpent. Cb, Cb, Cb, by Marie-Lucie Tarpent. Haida 650–10 (500–100, 500–100, 600–15; 20–20–2.5 per cent). Speaker number for 1980 too high. Northern variety only. A, A, a (for all Haida), by
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John Enrico, though this superb work is least detailed for the Alaska subdialect. Tlingit 10,000–300 (9000–2000, 9000–1600, 10,000–500; 22–18–5–3 per cent). Population growth perhaps concealed in urbanization. Ba, Ca, A, by Jeff Leer, Richard and Nora Dauenhauer. The three south-eastern Alaska languages are not genetically related to each other, but are culturally similar also in having suffered long and intense assimilation pressure. Adding the figures together, the maintenance percentage is significantly the lowest in Alaska over the last four decades: 22– 18–5–3.
21.3.2. Eyak Eyak −1 (−3, −2, −1). Eyak is in a class by itself. Genetically not a part of Athabaskan but related to Athabaskan as a coordinate branch of the Athabaskan-Eyak group, in turn a related to Tlingit [[[Athabaskan]-Eyak]Tlingit]. Eyak now has one surviving speaker, Marie Smith-Jones now of Anchorage. No base population can be given, nor of course a percentage, the group being largely assimilated in Tlingit over the last three centuries, the last group eliminated by the development of Cordova. Ca, A, B, by Michael Krauss.
21.3.3. Athabaskan Languages There are eleven Athabaskan languages as defined since 1974 in Alaska. Three of these are also spoken or remembered in Canada: Kutchin, Han, and Upper Tanana, for which see Krauss (1997). The Alaskan Athabaskan languages were maintained a bit longer than the languages of the south-east. The Alaska Athabaskan population taken together is 6,440 in the villages (including those urbanized, perhaps 10,000), and the number of speakers now is about 561, or about 9 per cent. The youngest speakers are at Arctic Village (Kutchin) and Lime Village (Tanaina), now in their thirties. The past totals are 6,380–2,605, 6,110–2,060, 6,385–1,129, percentage maintenance profile 41–34–18–9 per cent. Ahtna Athabaskan 650–25 (600–200, 500–150, 500–80; 33–30–16–4 per cent). The 1980 and 1990 total is probably low, hence the percentage of speakers probably high. Cb, A, B, by James Kari.
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Tanaina (or Dena’ina) 1,000–50 (900–250, 800–150, 900–75, 1,000–50; 28– 19–8–5 per cent). Most speakers are at Nondalton, youngest speakers at Lime Village, both Inland dialect. Other dialects nearly extinct. b, Ca, Ba, by James Kari. Deg Xinag (or Ingalik, Deg Hit’an) 250–14 (300–100, 300–80, 275–40; 33–26–15–6 per cent). Most speakers at Shageluk. Kuskokwim dialect very nearly extinct or extinct. Dc, Dc, B, by James Kari and Sharon Hargus. Holikachuk 180–5 (160–25, 150–20, 200–12; 16–13–12–3 per cent). Moved from Holikachuk on Innoko river to Grayling on Yukon river 1963. Recognized as separate language by Krauss in 1974 but less distinct from neighbours, especially Koyukon, than other Alaska Athabaskan. d, Dc, D, by James Kari. Koyukon 2300–150 (2200–700, 2300–650, 2300–300; 32–28–13–7 per cent). The most populous of Alaska Athabaskan languages. Ba, A, A, by Eliza Jones – except for tones in lower and southern Upper dialects. Upper Kuskokwim 100–25 (150–140, 150–120, 160–40; 93–80–25–25 per cent). Language spoken to children to 1960s. Percentage of speakers high in 2000 because of population loss at main village of Nikolai. d, D, D, by Ray Collins, Betty Petruska, Andrei Kibrik. Tanana (“Lower Tanana”, Smithsonian usage, but not spoken on lower Tanana river) 400–15 (350–100, 350–70, 380–30; 29–20–8–6 per cent). Spoken mainly at Minto, few speakers left at Nenana; Chena and SalchaGoodpaster dialects extinct. c, Dc, Dc, by Michael Krauss, James Kari, Siri Tuttle. Tanacross 200–50 (160–120, 200–100, 220–65; 75–70–30–25 per cent). Spoken to children perhaps to 1960. c, d, d, by Gary Holton, Irene Solomon, John Ritter. Upper Tanana 300–55 (350–250, 300–200, 300–105; 83–66–35–18 per cent). Northway dialect fully tonal, Tetlin losing tone. Spoken to children at Tetlin perhaps to 1960. d, d, d. Han 60–12 (60–20, 60–20, 50–12; 33–33–24–20 per cent). Spoken at Eagle. Canadian population at Dawson much larger, but fewer speakers. Alaskan speaker figure includes urbanized individuals. d, D, D, by Ruth Ridley, John Ritter. Kutchin (or Gwich’in) 1,000–150 (1,000–700, 1,000–500, 1,100–300; 58–50– 27–15 per cent). Spoken to children to early 1970s at Arctic Village and Venetie.
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Extensive missionary literature 1874—in Canadian dialect, including whole Bible, 1899, not counted here. Larger population and dialect diversity in Canada but poorer maintenance. c, Db, B, by Katherine Peter, Jeff Leer, John Ritter. This sums up the Athabaskan languages in Alaska, better maintained than the languages of south-eastern Alaska. Together, the Indian (or non-EskimoAleut) languages of Alaska have a maintenance profile of 29–24–9–5 per cent over the last forty years, far poorer, we shall see, than that for the EskimoAleut languages.
21.3.4. Eskimo-Aleut Aleut 2,300–150 (2,000–700, 2,100–600, 2,200–300; 35–29–14–7 per cent). The Western dialect of Atka was spoken to children to about 1970, far longer than the Eastern, but the Western dialect is only a small population (at most 5 per cent) of the Aleut population. Attuan Western dialect is virtually extinct as such, with perhaps one rememberer. A, A, B (not counting printed missionary literature 1834–1902), by Knut Bergsland, Moses Dirks. Sugpiaq (or Alutiiq, also “Aleut” in English) 3,500–200 (2,000–700, 2,100– 600, 2,200–300; 35–29–14–7 per cent). Spoken to children to about 1970 at Nanwalek (English Bay), to 1960s at Port Graham, but elsewhere abandoned perhaps by 1930s. Ca, Ca, Cb, by Jeff Leer. Excellent dictionary close to publication. Central (Alaskan) Yupik (or Yup’ik) 25,000–10,400 (17,000–15,000, 18,000– 13,000, 21,000–10,000; 88–72–48–42 per cent). Alaska’s most populous language, by far, and the only one to have gained in number of speakers since 1990, though not in percentage. Yet the 1990–2000 drop in percentage may be less than the preceding decade because of some stabilization, real deceleration of loss. Ba, Ba, A, by Irene Reed, Steven Jacobson, Osahito Miyaoka, Anthony Woodbury, and Elsie Mather and several other Native writers. (Central) Siberian Yupik 1,400–1,000 (1,000–1,000, 1,100–1,050, 1,400– 1,000; 100–95–91–71 per cent). Total for 2000 including 200 urbanized especially to Nome. Spoken to nearly all children at Gambell and Savoonga on St Lawrence Island until about 1990. Precipitous drop in progress. Ba, Ba, B, by Steven Jacobson, Willem de Reuse, Christopher Koonooka and other Native writers. Not counting extensive Soviet and Russian work for same language in Chukotka. Iñupiaq 15,700–2,144 (11,000–6,000, 12,500–5,000, 13,500–3,100; 55–40–23– 19 per cent). Malimiut dialect spoken to children at Ambler, Shungnak, and
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Kobuk to about 1970, North Slope dialect perhaps to 1960 at Wainwright, but Qawiaraq and Bering Strait dialects of Seward Peninsula abandoned earlier, except for King Island, spoken to children perhaps to 1960. Documentation by dialect: North Slope B, Ca, A, by Edna MacLean, other Native writers, and Lawrence Kaplan; Malimiut B, A, B, by Wolf Seiler and several Native writers; Qawiaraq d, d, d, and Bering Strait c, b, C, by Lawrence Kaplan.
21.4. Conclusion The total figures for the five Eskimo-Aleut languages in Alaska, non-urbanized, are 1970: 34,000–23,700; 1980: 36,800–20,550; 1990: 40,800–14,800: 47,900–13,894. The maintenance percentage profile is 70–56–36–29 per cent, far better than that for the Indian languages in Alaska. The reason for the difference is probably less inherently cultural than the chronology of American demographic penetration and the establishment of American schools. It is also clear that the difference is due almost entirely to Eskimo and not “Aleut”, i.e. neither Aleutian Aleut nor Sugpiaq, the retention rate for which is not significantly better than that of the Indian languages. Of the “Eskimo” languages, Inupiaq has a significantly better retention rate than the Indian languages, no doubt for the reasons mentioned above, and sheer numbers which in themselves constitute inherent relative power to some degree. For St Lawrence Island, relative isolation—island insulation and definition— more than made up for the lack of numbers, until recently. In spite of the recent decline, that language has by far the highest percentage of speakers, but the sheer numerical size is not large enough to contribute to the higher overall Eskimo language maintenance rate. That relatively high rate is due obviously and overwhelmingly to Central (Alaskan) Yupik. That one language consists of 38 per cent of the base population, and fully 93 per cent of those who speak an Alaskan Native language. In fact, not counting 200-odd St Lawrence Island children who might be considered speakers of Siberian Yupik, virtually all the children who speak an Alaska Native language were Yup’ik, up to 2,000 in number. Nearly all of these live in sixteen villages, which are those shown in the 1995 map (Krauss 1995) as where the language is spoken by all or most children. I am deeply indebted here to Beverly Williams of the Yukon-Kuskokwim School District, who has given estimates from her familiarity with fourteen of these sixteen villages which are in that district; in terms of percentages of children (present in high school) who could be called speakers of
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Yup’ik, she classes Atmauthluak, Chefornak, Eek, Kasigluk, Nightmute, and Toksook Bay as having up to 85 per cent children speakers, Newtok 85–90 per cent, Nunapitchuk 95 per cent —thus in no village do literally all the children speak Yup’ik—in Kongiganak and Kwigillingok 80 per cent, Tununak 70 per cent, Quinhagak 50 per cent, and Kipnuk 40 per cent. Anywhere else, including those villages where it was considered on the 1995 map that “some of the children speak the language”, the number of children Yup’ik speakers is now very small or nil. Still, if we plot the statistical course of Alaska Native language loss quite generally over the forty years, relative percentage profile 56–45–28–22 per cent, the first drop being 9 per cent, the next 17 per cent, the latest “only” 6 per cent, it could be seen that the general loss is at least decelerating. If we take all languages except Yup’ik, the total is 11 per cent maintained, fortyyear profile of 40 per cent—32 per cent—17 per cent—11 per cent, showing at least the expected levelling off toward the asymptote of zero, perhaps better, whereas the Yup’ik levelling is similar, though significantly further from the asymptote. It is possible in the case of all the other languages (except St Lawrence Island) that the relative lessening of the suppressive or “downgrading” function of the schools, still always English-dominant, especially now the likely lethal effect of the “No Child Left Behind”, requiring proof of proficiency in English but not Native language, could be contributing to the deceleration of loss, along with the effects of the general attitude shift nationwide somewhat now in favour of diversity and minority culture maintenance—all this in spite of increasing white demographic intrusion and especially the omnipresence of television (English only). Finally, we must now look at the opposite side of this picture of the decline of Alaska Native languages, insofar as such a side exists. The documentation or archival preservation of these languages, both in the form of sound/video recordings and in the form of adequate grammars, dictionaries, and written texts, all duly archived, could be considered another side, with a bright future, provided adequate continuing support for such work is assured. From such documentation one could argue also that revival of these languages, as e.g. in the cases of Hebrew or Cornish, to become again spoken languages after their extinction as such, is at least hypothetically possible. On the other hand, there is understandably much concern that the decline of these languages be reversed before their extinction. Both because awareness of the loss becomes quite inescapable as the people realize the youngest speakers of their languages are in their seventies, and because attitudes to cultural diversity and minorities have been changing very favourably at many levels of American
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society, people want increasingly to see these languages survive, spoken by their children and grandchildren. They also more recently are realizing that this cannot come from desultory or inconsistent efforts, but by long-term commitment, to total immersion school programmes, for example. Such developments are only in their infancy now, in Bethel (Yup’ik) and Barrow (Iñupiaq), for example, but it is still too soon to attempt to evaluate or predict their role in the future of Alaska Native languages.
References Krauss, M. E. (1974). Native Peoples and Language of Alaska. Fairbanks: Alaska Native Language Center and Center for Northern Educational Research, University of Alaska. —— (1982). Native Peoples and Languages of Alaska (Map). Fairbanks: Alaska Native Language Center, University of Alaska. —— (1995). Inuit, Nunait, Nunangit, Yuget, Unangan Tanangin (Map). Fairbanks: Alaska Native Language Center, University of Alaska Fairbanks. —— (1997). “The indigenous languages of the north: a report on their present state”, in Shoji H., and J. Janhunen (eds.), Northern Minority Languages: Problems of Survival. Seinri Ethnological Studies 44. Osaka: National Museum of Ethnology, 1–34.
22
Languages of the Northwest Coast Honoré Watanabe and Fumiko Sasama
22.1. Introduction 22.2. Genetic classification and areal features 22.3. Language endangerment in the Northwest Coast 22.4. Reasons for the decline of the Native languages 22.5. Efforts on documentation and revitalization 22.6. Final remarks
418 420 425 426 428 434
22.1. Introduction The narrow strip of area on the North American continent, along some 1,600 km of coastline from the southernmost part of the state of Alaska to the southern state border of Oregon, within which languages of an astonishing number and varied types are embraced, and with which we deal in the present chapter, matches fairly closely (though not exactly: see immediately below) one of the so-called “culture areas” of Native North America (cf. Kroeber 1939): the “Northwest Coast”. Much the same as in all other parts of the North American continent (and beyond), the Northwest Coast has also seen the devastating effect of the arrival of the Europeans on the languages and cultures of the indigenous peoples. As a result, the number of speakers and the use of the Native languages in this region have declined significantly, and many languages have already lost all speakers. More precisely, the area (and the languages contained therein) with which we deal in the present chapter is demarcated in the following manner: in the north, those south of and including Tsimshianic, but excluding Tlingit and Haida; in the south, the state border between Oregon and California in the United States is adopted. There are some that lie across this border, and among them Klamath is treated in the present chapter (and also in Ch. 23), but Shastan and Tolowa are treated in Chapter 23. We include some languages that are not included when these languages are grouped according to “culture area” of Native North America; that is, the Interior branch of Salishan, Sahaptian, Cayuse, Molala, and Klamath belong to the Plateau area1 but are included here for the purpose of this chapter. 1
The Wasco-Wishram dialect of Kiksht was also spoken in the Plateau area.
Figure 22.1. The Northwest Coast languages
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There are surprisingly many languages in the Northwest Coast (§ 22.2). All are seriously endangered, if not already extinct (§ 22.3). The reasons for the decline are multiple (§ 22.4) and the loss of the ancestral language has had destructive effects on the Native peoples. Also, since the languages of this region show many typologically intriguing linguistic features (§ 22.2), their loss is a serious loss in understanding not only the languages of and the history of this area and the peoples who inhabited it but also human language and cognitive ability in general.
22.2. Genetic Classification and Areal Features Perhaps the most astounding areal feature of the Northwest Coast is the number of languages it embraces: within just the stretch of 1,600 km along the coast and about 900 km inland, there exist fifty-eight languages that we treat in the present chapter (see Table 22.1). Although the mere density of languages is probably not unmatched elsewhere in the world, definitely astonishing is the fact that these languages belong to fourteen different language families, of which four are comprised of just one language, i.e. language isolates. While there is no doubt that each and every language or even dialect is equally important as any other, both culturally and scientifically, in terms of our scientific understanding of language (and human cognitive ability embodied therein), research on genetically different and typologically varied languages is vital. Then, the importance of the Northwest Coast is quite evident. Linguistically, the languages of the Northwest Coast show intriguing features that are not widely attested elsewhere in the world. Most of the languages have an elaborate consonant inventory, with glottalized obstruents and resonants: glottalized obstruents are found in all of the fourteen language families,2 and glottalized resonants (sonorants) are found in Tsimshianic, Wakashan, Salishan, and Sahaptian languages. Also found are a series of laterals (resonant l, fricative ɬ, affricates⌒ tɬ and⌒ tɬ’, and a contrast between velar and uvular positions (and also a contrast between rounded and unrounded at these two positions). Also interesting is the abundance of consonant clusters: consonant clusters of more than four consonants are
2 Cayuse may have had glottalized stops and affricates like other languages of this area (see Kinkade et al. 1998: 64–5), but the details of its phonetic system are unclear due to insufficient and unreliable data (Rigsby 1969).
Table 22.1. The Northwest Coast languages and number of speakers Language family, branch, and language name I 1 2 3 4 II 5 6 7 8 9 10 III 11 12 IV 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
Tsimshianic Interior Nisgha Gitksan Maritime Coast Tsimshian Southern Tsimshian Wakashan Northern Haisla Heiltsuk-Oowekyala Kwak’wala Southern Nootka Ditidaht Makah Chimakuan Chemakum Quileute Salishand Bella Coola Central Salish Comox Pentlatch Sechelt Squamish Halkomelem Nooksack
Number of speakers and source
Other names
1,500 (D. Nyce p.c. 2005)a 400 (Gordon 2005 (J. Powell 1999))
Nass, Nisga’a –
500b (MK) 2 (MK)
Sm’algyax Sgüüxs
<200. 25 good speakers (DK) 300 (DK) [Oowekyala 7 (Howe 2000); Oowekyala and Heiltsuk, a few each (Mithun 1999)] <250 good speakers (DK)
Kwakiutl
<600 good speakers (DK) c.30 (DK) 0c
Nitinaht
0 3 (MK) <200 Island Comox 0; Sliammon-Homalco-Klahoose 40e (Blake 2000) 0 c.40 c.20 500 0 (continued)
Table 22.1. (Continued) Language family, branch, and language name 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 V 36 37 38 39 VI 40 41
Northern Straits Clallam Lushootseed Twana Tsamosan Quinault Lower Chehalis Upper Chehalis Cowlitz Tillamook Interior Salish Lillooet Shuswap Thompson Columbian Colville-Okanagan Spokane-Kalispel-Flathead Coeur d’Alene Chinookan Lower Chinook Upper Chinook Cathlamet Multnomah Kiksht Takelman Takelma Kalapuyan Tualatin-Yamhill
Number of speakers and source
Other names
Sooke 0, Songhees 0, Saanich <20, Samish 1?, Lummi 0, Samiahmoo 0 5 <10 0
Klallam
<6 <3 <2? 1? 0 <400 500? <500 40 500? (500–1,000 N. Mattina 1996) Spokane 50, Kalispel 15, Flathead c.100 2 0 0 0? <50 by 1990 (Kinkade et al. 1998) 0 0
42 43 VII 44 45 VIII 46 IX 47 48 X 49 50 XI 51 XII 52 XIII 53 XIV 54 55 56 57 58 a
Santiam Yoncalla Alsean Alsea Yaquina Siuslaw Coos Hanis Miluk Sahaptian Sahaptin Nez Perce Cayuse Molala Klamath Athabaskan Nicola Kwalhioqua-Clatskanie Upper Umpqua Tututni Galice-Applegate
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 c. 100 by 1990 (Kinkade et al. 1998) <100 by 1990 (ibid.) 0 0 0f
Klamath-Modoc
0 0 0 0 0
Krauss (2003) estimates the total number of speakers of Nisgha and Gitksan to be 1,000. The symbol < indicates that the number of speakers is less than the number right to the symbol. c Makah became extinct in 2002 (Gordon 2005). d Unless otherwise indicated, data on the Salishan languages are from Czaykowska-Higgins and Kinkade (1998), which are the best estimate as of 1995. e This number of speakers given in Blake (2000) refers to the (elderly fluent) speakers residing on the Sliammon reservation where the majority of fluent speakers, including those originally from two other bands, live. f The last fluent speaker, Mabie “Neva” Eggsman, died on 14 Sept. 2003 (Herald and News, 16 Sept. 2003). Notes: The classification of languages in this chapter follows Thompson and Kindade (1990) and Kindade et al.(1998) except for Tsimshianic and Salishan. Four languages are listed here for Tsimshianic instread of two. See Rigsby (1989) for the reasons for considering Nisgha and Gitksan as distinct languages and Dunn (1979a) for the “discovery” of Southern Tsimshian. The classification of Salishan follows Czykowska-Higgins and Kinkade (1998). Main sources are Kinkade (1991a) and Krauss (2003); they are indicated as (DK) and (MK) respectively. b
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found in most of the languages, but Salishan and Wakashan are especially notable in showing long consonant clusters. A well-known extreme example comes from Bella Coola: xɬp’cWɬtɬpɬhs =kW ⌒ ts’,“Then he had had in his possession a bunchberry plant” (Nater 1984). Also found in Bella Coola and Heiltsuk-Oowekyala are vowelless words: t’kW “to bleed” (Bella Coola: ibid.), ⌒ tsk’Wct “short (said of a person)” (Oowekyala: Howe 2000).3 These languages also generally show quite complex morphology. One of the shared features is the high degree of synthesis: the languages in this area are predominantly polysynthetic. A word in these languages may incorporate a number of morphemes, including various kinds of affixes expressing pronominal elements, number, tense, aspect, transitivity, applicative, location, etc. Even very concrete concepts may be expressed in the form of affixes: the “lexical affixes” of Salishan, Wakashan, and Chimakuan include most body part terms and those that refer to natural and man-made objects (e.g. “water”, “berry”, “canoe”, “blanket”), as well as concepts of traditional ritual (e.g. “to give a potlatch for” in Nootka (Sapir 1911a)). (Such affixation process is not to be confounded with that of noun incorporation (cf. Sapir 1911b).4) Reduplication of various types is widely found with different functions such as plural, distributive, intensive, iterative, diminutive, augmentative, tense, change of word class, etc. There have been claims that some of these languages totally lack distinctions between different word classes (most notably between nouns and verbs): the issue has been a topic of heated debate, especially among those studying the Salishan languages (e.g. Kuipers 1968, Kinkade 1984, van Eijk and Hess 1986, Matthewson and Demirdache 1995; also see Jacobsen 1979 and Nakayama 2001 on Wakashan).5 These phonetic, phonological, and morphosyntactical characteristics of the Northwest Coast languages offer challenging issues not only for descriptive linguists to document these languages but also for more theory-oriented linguists to account for these features. Taken together with the fact that the area contains many languages that belong to different language families, the loss of these languages is not only a cultural loss to the
3 We have converted the symbols used in the original works to those of IPA. = indicates clitic boundary. 4 Noun incorporation, on the other hand, is not a very common process in this area: it is used productively in the Tsimshianic languages. It is also employed with limited productivity in Spokane (Carlson 1990). 5 For further survey of linguistic features of languages of this area, see Thompson and Kinkade (1990) and Kinkade et al. (1998).
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indigenous peoples but an immense and irretrievable loss to the linguistics community as well.
22.3. Language Endangerment in the Northwest Coast Table 22.1 lists the best estimated number of speakers for each of the Northwest Coast languages. While the numbers speak for themselves as regards the degrees of endangerment of each language, the most important factor for the survival of a language is in fact not the sheer number of speakers but the distributional spread of speakers among different generations. The ideal situation (i.e. language at its most vital stage) would be that all generations speak the language in all domains of language use, and that it is learnt as the first language of children. In contrast, if children are not learning their ancestral language as their mother tongue, and the language is spoken only by the eldest generation, the survival of that language is seriously endangered. This means that, hypothetically speaking, a language with only fifty speakers, but whose speakers belong to three different generations, including the children, is likely to outlive a language with 500 speakers (or 5,000 speakers for that matter) who are all above 70 years of age. The languages of the Northwest Coast are all “seriously endangered” or “moribund”, if not already extinct. Even the most fluent speakers of these languages are generally bilingual in the Native language and the predominant language of the area, i.e. English. Pervasive bilingualism does not necessarily entail endangerment of a language. In fact, multilingualism was commonplace in the Northwest Coast: the Native peoples of this area often spoke several languages other than their mother tongue. However, the current situation is that one language (i.e. English) is dominant over the others, the minority languages (i.e. the Native languages), which are no longer spoken by a large body of people. This kind of asymmetrical bilingualism accelerates the loss of the latter. For example, a survey shows that of the indigenous languages of Canada, the rate that the languages are spoken at home is significantly low for the three language families treated in the present chapter, i.e. Salishan, Tsimshianic, and Wakashan (RCAP 1996, vol. ii). The study shows the ratio of “home language” (the language actually spoken at home) to “mother tongue”: it indicates what percentage of the speakers of the indigenous languages in fact speak them at home—the most common place where languages are taught to younger generations in normal intergenerational
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transmission. The ratio for Algonquian and Athabaskan language families is over 70 per cent, and for Inuktitut (Canadian Inuit) fairly high 88 per cent. In a sharp contrast, the study lists Wakashan at 32 per cent, Salishan at 30 per cent, and Tsimshianic at 17 per cent (RCAP 1996, vol. ii: 606). Granted that such statistics, drawn from a general census, can never be exact and should be used with caution, the figures show a rather drastic language shift between the older (often the eldest) generation and the younger generations in the Northwest Coast languages.
22.4. Reasons for the Decline of the Native Languages The reasons for the decline of the Native languages are manifold and complex. We briefly discuss four of them in turn in this section. First of all, after the arrival of Europeans in the late eighteenth century, the general population of the Natives declined quite rapidly. This was caused especially by diseases that were brought by the European traders and settlers, to which the Natives had no immunity (smallpox, malaria, measles, etc.). Boyd (1990: 135) states that “as many as 200,000 Native Americans inhabited the Northwest Coast culture area” before the arrival of Europeans, but “[w]ithin 100 years, the aboriginal population had declined by over 80 percent”. Since the indigenous people at the time were undoubtedly all fluent speakers of their ancestral languages, the decline in the population was equivalent to the decline in the number of speakers of the Native languages, and consequently the deterioration of the vitality of those languages. The second reason was by far the most devastating cause of the decline of these languages, and it was deliberate and systematic: that is, the residential school system institutionalized by government agencies and religious organizations. Native children were taken away from their home and their ancestral environment (land, culture, and language) and placed in residential schools where English was forced upon them. The use of their Native tongues was strictly prohibited in the schools and dormitories, and children were physically, and quite severely, punished when they uttered one word of it. Such punishment included tying young children to a chair and whipping, and washing their mouth with soap because they spoke a “dirty” language. The effect of such punishments was, and still is, quite serious. The Natives were led to believe that their languages were something “less” than English— less important, less worthy, and certainly less holy. As a result, many of the Natives who experienced this school system lost their ancestral language
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completely. The effect was not only direct obliteration of the languages but psychological trauma. Even for those who managed to maintain their ability to understand and/or speak their Native language, so traumatic were their experiences, even decades later, they feel psychological barriers when they try to utter some words in the language. Consequently the residential school system brought about a near complete eradication of Native languages from children who attended it. In Canada, the residential school system started in the late nineteenth century, aiming at “civilizing” the Native children. There were at one time (in 1931) as many as sixteen residential schools in the province of British Columbia alone. Although the number of residential schools and students fell rapidly after the partnership between federal government and church ended in 1969, the system was maintained until the 1980s (RCAP 1996, vol. i). The periods that the residential school system was in effect vary somewhat in different areas; however, roughly speaking, anybody between his or her forties and seventies today has undergone this treatment. While in other parts of the world the decline in the knowledge of the ancestral language among different age groups may be fairly gradual, it appears to be generally quite abrupt in the Northwest Coast (and probably more widely in North America; cf. § 22.3). That is, as regards the knowledge of the Native languages, there is an enormous chasm between the most elderly group of people who were fortunate not to have experienced residential school and those who have experienced it. By this school system, the normal intergenerational transmission of language has been severed. Third, the reason for the decline of the Native languages is also economical and sociocultural. Sometimes when a language and/or a culture is suppressed by invaders or the dominant group of the region, there arise strong interest and desire to retain the ancestral language of the particular ethnic group under suppression in order to preserve ethnic identity. Such was not the case, however, in the Northwest Coast, and in the majority of cases in North America. Even after the termination of deliberate assimilative policies, like the residential school system just discussed, the Natives needed to “assimilate” to the dominant culture and language. This is because “success” in modern-day society meant economic success in the society dominated by the values and the language of the culturally dominant ethnic group, i.e. the white people. The knowledge of or efforts to learn the Native language has most often not been recognized as something of value in the non-Native society. And in fact, many parents in Native communities, who may be fluent speakers themselves, considered knowledge of the ancestral language to be
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a hindrance to learning English and hence to “success” in the (non-Native) society. This reinforces the serious gap in intergenerational transmission of their language. Fourth, the modern living environment does not favour motivation for maintenance and/or revitalization of Native languages. Today, probably the majority of households in this area, Natives and non-Natives alike, possess TVs, radios, VCRs, video games, and perhaps even DVD players. Many of them now also possess personal computers with access to the Internet (if not at home, then at school or at work). Although these electronic devices could be used effectively in documentation and revitalization efforts of the Native languages,6 the language used in these media is almost entirely, if not totally, English. Therefore, the proliferation of these devices meant the spread of English. Moreover, with their obvious mesmerizing power, it is difficult to rouse or maintain children’s interest in their ancestral languages when their favourite pop star sings in English and popular cartoon characters all speak in English, and Hollywood movies are readily available on video or DVD. These and still other reasons for the decline of the Northwest Coast languages make documentation and revitalization efforts especially challenging.
22.5. Efforts on Documentation and Revitalization The earliest records of the languages of this area go back to the late eighteenth century; these were mostly small word lists collected by expedition crews.7 In the nineteenth century, traders, scholars, and missionaries started to collect vocabulary and also some grammatical notes, but their transcriptions were of poor quality, especially for the elaborate consonant systems, and grammatical information was still limited. Much more systematic research in this area began in the mid 1800s with such figures as Horatio Hale (who was the appointed linguist and ethnographer in the United States Exploring Expedition under Charles Wilkes) and George Gibbs (who lived in Oregon and Washington state for many years working for various government and private agencies and finally for the Smithsonian Institution). The most prominent and probably the most productive researcher was Franz Boas, who began work in the Northwest Coast in 1886. He produced several 6 For example, the “talking dictionaries” that are being developed for the Tsimshianic languages are for use on computers: each entry of the dictionary can be searched either by Native or English word, and most entries have sound recordings with illustrative sentences and often pictures as well. 7 For details of the history of research in this area, see Kinkade (1990) and references cited therein.
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grammars and published a large number of texts. Some of the data he collected are the last significant data on several languages that are now extinct (Lower Chinook, Cathlamet, Chemakum, and Pentlatch: Kinkade 1990: 101). He also trained many scholars who carried out linguistic research in this area: such figures include Charles Hill-Tout, John R. Swanton, and James A. Teit. Boas also trained two Native Tsimshians, Henry W. Tate and William Beynon, in linguistics. Among Boas’s students, by far the most prominent and influential was Edward Sapir, who conducted research and published basic documentation on a number of North American languages including some Northwest Coast languages, for example, Takelma, Kiksht, and Nootka. Even though there were important publications of grammars and texts in 1940s and 1950s, documentation of the languages of the Northwest Coast saw a rather stagnating period for these two decades. It was not until around 1960 that the study of these languages regained its vigour, most notably under the leadership of Laurence C. Thompson. Today, the languages of this area are being documented and studied by researchers from various parts of the world including North America, Europe, Australia, and Asia; however, the number of them committed to work on any one language continuously is usually just a few and by no means enough. Even for languages on which there is fairly extensive documentation, there is always much more to unravel in the unusually rich and complex structures of these languages, and as long as there are speakers left, efforts must be made for continued documentation. See Table 22.2 for a list of basic documentation available on each language. Not only the numbers of languages and their linguistic complexities make it challenging for linguists to document them; there are non-linguistic, i.e. language-external, issues, some of which are possibly unique to this region, that make the effort for documentation particularly difficult. For example, the fluent speakers (of languages that are fortunate enough to have them) for any language are usually of the oldest generation and limited in number— sometimes just a handful or even one—and may be too frail to work with researchers. Even where speakers are available, proprietary issues may have to be settled before researchers can begin any sort of research; that is, the right to conduct linguistic (and other) research on a language and the right to the usage of the research results may have to be negotiated through legal channels with the tribal council (see Shaw 2004). Many of the Native communities have developed, often in collaboration with linguists, programmes and materials to teach their ancestral languages in their communities and/or local public schools, in order to revitalize these languages. The coverage of teaching materials that have been developed
Table 22.2. Documentation on the Northwest Coast languages Language
Grammar
Dictionary
Texts
1 2 3
Nisgha Gitksan Coast Tsimshian
Boas (1911a), Tarpent (1989) Rigsby (1986) Boas (1911a), Dunn (1979b), Stebbins (2003)
Tarpent ed. (1986) Hindle and Rigsby (1973) Dunn (1978)
Boas (1902)
4 5 6 7
Southern Tsimshian Haisla Heiltsuk-Oowekyala Kwak’wala
Boas (1911b, 1947)
8
Nootka
Rose (1981), Nakayama (2001)
9
Ditidaht
10 11 12 13
Makah Chemakum Quileute Bella Coola
14 15 16 17
Comox Pentlatch Sechelt Squamish
18
Halkomelem
19
Nooksack
Andrade (1933) Nater (1984), Davis and Saunders (1997) Watanabe (2003) Beaumont (1985) Kuipers (1967, 1969) [gram., dic., texts] Leslie (1979), Gerdts (1988), Galloway (1993), Suttles (2004)
Beynon (1932–9)
Lincoln and Rath (1986) Rath (1981) [dic. and gram. sketch] Grubb (1977)
Lincoln et al. (1990) Boas (1928), Windsor (1982) Boas and Hunt (1902–5, 1906) Sapir and Swadesh (1939) [gram. notes, and lexicon], Nakayama ed. (2003a, 2003b) Swadesh and Swadesh (1932), Touchie (1977)
Powell and Woodruff (1976) Nater (1990)
Andrade (1931) Davis and Saunders (1980)
Galloway (1980), Hukari ed. (1995)
20 Northern Straits 21 Clallam 22 Lushootseed 23 24 25 26 27 28
Twana Quinault Lower Chehalis Upper Chehalis Cowlitz Tillamook
29 Lillooet 30 Shuswap
Efrat (1969), Raffo (1972), Montler (1986) Thompson and Thompson (1971) Hess (1967, 1995, 1998)
Mitchell (1968), Montler (1991) Hess (1976), Bates et al. (1994)
Hess (1995, 1998), Bierwert ed. (1996)
Kinkade (1991b) Kinkade (2004) [dic., gram. sketch] Edel (1939), Egesdal and Thompson (1998) van Eijk (1997) Gibson (1973), Kuipers (1974, 1989) [gram., dic., texts] Thompson and Thompson (1992)
31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39
Thompson Columbian Colville-Okanagan Spokane-Kalispel-Flathead Coeur d’Alene Lower Chinook Cathlamet Multnomah Kiksht
Thompson and Thompson (1996) Kinkade (1981) A. Mattina (1973), N. Mattina (1996) A. Mattina comp. (1987) Vogt (1940), Carlson (1972) Carlson and Flett (1989) Reichard (1938), Doak (1997) Boas (1911c) Hymes (1955)
40 41 42 43 44 45
Takelma Tualatin-Yamhill Santiam Yoncalla Alsea Yaquina
Sapir (1922)
Dyk (1933)
A. Mattina ed. (1985) Boas (1894) Boas (1901) Sapir (1909a), Jacobs (1958, 1959) Sapir (1909b) Jacobs (1945) Jacobs (1945) Frachtenberg (1920) (continued)
Table 22.2. (Continued) Language
Grammar
Dictionary
Texts
Jacobs (1931) Rigsby and Rude (1996), Aoki (1970), Rude (1985)
Jacobs (1931)
Frachtenberg (1914) [texts and vocabulary] Frachtenberg (1913) [texts and vocabulary] Frachtenberg (1913) [texts and vocabulary], Jacobs (1939, 1940) Jacobs (1929, 1934, 1937)
Aoki (1994)
Aoki and Walker (1989)
Barker (1964)
Barker (1963a)
Barker (1963b)
46 Siuslaw
Frachtenberg (1922a)
47 Hanis
Frachtenberg (1922b)
48 Miluk 49 Sahaptin 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57
Nez Perce Cayuse Molala Klamath Nicola Kwalhioqua-Clatskanie Upper Umpqua Tututni
58 Galice-Applegate
Sapir (1914) [with a short text], Golla (1976) Hoijer (1966)
Notes: Table 22.2 lists basic documentation on each of the Northwest Coast languages dealt with in the present chapter. The list is limited to those that are in public domain; there are undoubtedly many more in manuscript form in possession of researchers or tribal councils but these are hard to obtain for anyone not directly involved. Studies (e.g. master’s theses, doctoral dissertations, journal papers, and conference presentations) that treat only phonetics and/or phonology or certain aspects of morphosyntax of a language are excluded from the table, but should number in hundreds or more altogether. Excluded also are texts that are not of substantial length, published in journals or as a part of a volume. The numbers preceding the language names correspond to those in Table 22.1.
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varies considerably: while some communities may have only a sketchy word list, some may have a curriculum well developed in collaboration with professional linguists. There are many challenging issues involved in such revitalization efforts. First, the complexity of the Northwest Coast languages outlined in § 22.2 makes it difficult for learners to gain fluency in these languages. This is especially evident since all of these languages are typologically very different from English, which is the first language of the younger generation in this area. While none of the Northwest Coast languages had written tradition, all of them having strictly oral tradition, developing teaching materials usually requires some means of systematically writing them, i.e. development of orthography: this is often a challenging issue because of the phonological complexities of these languages (§ 22.2). Although many of the languages now have orthography, using the Roman alphabet and/or phonetic symbols, implementing it may also be a complex issue. The Native people may be reluctant or even feel resentment towards adopting an orthography, since it is obviously a drastic change from their linguistic tradition and the traditional intergenerational transmission of their language. It may also be viewed as another foreign practice forced on them by “invading outsiders” (i.e. linguists), however genuine and benevolent the linguists’ intentions may be. Third, the different aspects of endangerment of the Northwest Coast languages and the reasons for their current state discussed in § 22.3 and § 22.4 make the environment for revitalization a challenging one: the difference in the degree of knowledge of the ancestral language between the elderly (often the oldest) generation and younger generation; the psychological barrier caused by the painful experience at residential school; and the allure of modern technologies. Many linguists at local universities offer assistance and programmes to the Native communities; for example, the First Nations Language Program at the University of British Columbia has developed the Musqueam (Salish) Program in collaboration with the Native community; the University of Victoria, Simon Frazer University, and the University of Northern British Columbia also have been offering Native language programmes for language teachers and other adult learners in cooperation with the Native communities and organizations. Among the revitalization efforts of Native languages of this area, a notable case is that reported by Montler (1999: 488) for Lummi (Northern Straits Salish). Lummi, which had been basically extinct, is now often heard at different cultural events and gatherings. From Montler’s (ibid.) description, two factors appear to be the key to the success of revitalization: (i) it was due
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especially to the heroic efforts of a few individuals of the Lummi community, and in particular, of one individual (William A. James); (ii) the focus was on the “emblematic” function of language. The first of the two factors shows that the will and the effort for revitalization must come from within the Native communities themselves to be successful. The second point has rather interesting linguistic consequences: Montler (1999: 489–90) reports that the revitalized Lummi (he also refers to Saanich and Klallam) shows striking difference from its more traditional variety in its phonology. The “new Lummi” has simplified consonant clusters, lost glottalization (completely on resonants, sporadically on obstruents) and most glottal stops, and replaced q by k, χ by h, k, or x, and xW by hw or kw. The “lost” sounds are those characteristic of the Salishan languages. Notwithstanding, since the “new Lummi” is still different enough from the locally dominant English, it functions as an emblem of identity. Montler (1999: 488) states that “[r]evitalization efforts that have focused on this [emblematic] function have been the most successful.” (See § 2.4.)
22.6. Final Remarks Although language endangerment is a global phenomenon found not only in North America, the situation of the Northwest Coast as we have described it in the present chapter is critical—in terms of both the number of speakers and the distribution of their age. It seems unavoidable that the languages in this area will lose all their remaining speakers within the first half of this century unless some drastic measures are taken to revitalize them. Revitalization efforts must come from within the Native communities in order for language programmes to be successful. The role that linguists should play in such endeavours is perhaps arguable (cf. Ladefoged 1992 versus Krauss 1992); however, linguists are best equipped with the knowledge to assist in such endeavours. Those languages where fluent speakers still remain must be recorded and documented as well as possible, and linguists are the ones who are formally trained in such tasks. Effective teaching materials must be based on good and thorough documentation and analysis that are achieved by systematic linguistic research. For Northwest Coast languages that still have fluent speakers, the first few decades of the present century will undoubtedly be the crucial period in documentation and also for revitalization.
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23.1. Status of languages in California 23.1.1. Language families of California 23.1.2. Numbers of speakers 23.2. Reasons for language loss 23.2.1. The Mission Era 23.2.2. The Gold Rush 23.2.3. Boarding schools 23.2.4. The Second World War and beyond 23.3. Language documentation in California 23.3.1. The Kroeber era 23.3.2. The Haas era 23.3.3. Current work 23.4. Language revitalization in California 23.4.1. Bilingual education 23.4.2. Informal language classes 23.4.3. Classroom teaching of California Indian languages 23.4.4. Immersion schools 23.4.5. The master–apprentice model 23.4.6. Revitalizing “extinct” languages 23.5. Conclusion
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23.1. Status of Languages in California California has more indigenous languages than almost any area in the world of comparable size (only New Guinea has more). It is what Johanna Nichols has called a “residual area” (Nichols 1992), where languages tend to accumulate over time rather than replace each other. This is due in large part to the geography and ecology of California—rich and varied food resources, mild climate, and travel barriers (the Sierra Madre mountain range to the east, and the Pacific Ocean to the west, broken up here and there by swamps, rivers, and deserts). These factors all combine to allow people to survive well in relatively small territories, not be able to maintain dominion over large expanses of land, and benefit instead from good trading relations. Thus in the time that California has been populated (12,000–30,000 years, depending on which claim we believe in), 80 to 100 languages settled here and survived until European contact and well beyond.
Figure 23.1. Californian Indian languages
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23.1.1. Language Families of California The actual degree of diversity of indigenous California languages has been the focus of much debate over the last hundred years. The first major classification of Native American languages was John Wesley Powell’s 1891 work, where he posited fifty-eight language families, twenty-two of which (over one-third) were in California (Powell 1891; Campbell and Mithun 1979). Later work by Kroeber and Sapir lumped together many families that Powell had kept separate (Kroeber 1913; Sapir 1929), and it is most common today to posit five major language stocks with some or most of their members in California (Hokan, Penutian, Algic, Athabaskan, and Uto-Aztecan), along with Yukian, which contains just two languages—Wappo and Yuki. However, many linguistic scholars do not accept Hokan and Penutian as valid stocks (nor Wappo-Yuki either). California languages that have been classified as Hokan consist of at least eleven families and isolates, where their relationship to each other is an open question at best, and strongly doubted in many cases. Campbell and Mithun (1979: 43) say that “as yet there has been no sufficient demonstration that any two of the variously proposed branches are actually related genetically”. Similarly, the “Penutian” stock has six branches in California that may not be related to each other at all. Using this conservative approach (also known as the “splitters” approach as opposed to the “lumpers” approach), then, there are as many as twenty-two language families in California—the same number first proposed by Powell. These are the families that have California representatives (with the more doubtful deeper affiliation following in parentheses): Algic (two languages in California, quite distinct from each other and the main branch of Algic, Algonquian) Chimariko isolate (Hokan) Chumashan family (Hokan) Costanoan family (Penutian) Klamath-Modoc isolate (Penutian) Karuk isolate (Hokan) Maiduan family (Penutian) Miwok family (Penutian) Na-Dené, Athabaskan family (See § 21.3.3) Palaihnihan (Hokan) Pomoan family (Hokan) Salinan isolate (Hokan) Shastan (Hokan) Uto-Aztecan family Wappo and Yuki (Yukian)
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Washo isolate (Hokan) Wintuan family (Penutian) Yanan (Hokan) Yokuts family (Penutian) Yuman (Hokan)
23.1.2. Numbers of Speakers Despite this rich diversity, all the California Indian languages are in trouble. Every year we lose several of the last fluent native speakers of several languages; and virtually all surviving native speakers are very elderly. It is not easy to determine the exact number of speakers of a given language. The US Census question about language asks “Does this person speak a language other than English at home?” and follows up with “What language?” and finally, “How well does this person speak English?” (Possible answers: very well, well, not very well, not at all.) There is no question about how well a person speaks any language other than English. A person could honestly answer “yes” to the first question even if they only know a few words of the language. And indeed, the numbers of people reporting using a Native American language at home tend to be considerably higher than all known estimates of how many fluent native speakers there are for a given language. Most of the numbers cited below are from a survey published in Hinton (1994), with additional language information supplemented by Luthin (2002). Further information can be found on the web edition of the Ethnologue (Gordon 2005). When the Ethnologue classifies a language as “nearly extinct”, which means that only a few elderly speakers remain, we note it here. It is also important to note that if a language is “nearly extinct” or even “extinct” it does not mean the people are extinct—merely that they do not know their ancestral language. The numbers given below are vague, because it is not always easy to define who is a speaker of a language. Some people may know words and phrases but not be fluent. Some people may not identify themselves as speakers because there are elders who know the language better than they do. There is frequently a generation of passive speakers, who heard the language regularly as children and at least partly understood it, but never actively spoke it. When necessity arises, these passive speakers can often dredge up a surprisingly large set of words and phrases from their memories. Achumawi Population: 5–10 speakers, all elderly. Alternative name: Pitt River. Palaihnihan language family. Nearly extinct.
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Acjachmem 0–1 living speakers. Alternative name: Juaneño. Uto-Aztecan language family. Nearly extinct. Atsugewi No more than 3 speakers, all elderly. Palaihnihan language family. Nearly extinct. Cahto Athabaskan language family. No native speakers. Cahuilla 7–20 speakers, out of 800 population. Uto-Aztecan language family. Nearly extinct. Chilula Athabaskan language family. No native speakers. Chimariko Isolate (Hokan). No native speakers. Chumash: Barbareño, Isleño, Iniseño, Obispeño, Purisimeño, and Ventureño No native speakers of any of the Chumash languages. Cocopa 150–300 speakers, including 6 monolinguals in the USA (1990 census). The majority live in Baja California, Mexico. Yuman language family. Costanoan See Ohlone (language family) Cupeño 1–5 speakers. Uto-Aztecan language family. Nearly extinct. Diegueño See Kumeyaay, Ipai, Tipai Esselen Isolate (Hokan). No native speakers. Hupa 8 fluent speakers, out of 2,000 population. Athabaskan language family. Nearly extinct. Ipai Up to 25 speakers. Alternative name: Northern Diegueño. Nearly extinct. Juaneño See Acjachmem Karuk Isolate (Hokan). 10–12 speakers. Nearly extinct.
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Kawaiisu 8–10 speakers, out of 150 population. Uto-Aztecan language family. Nearly extinct. Kitanemuk Uto-Aztecan language family. No native speakers. Klamath-Modoc Included here because Modoc was spoken in California before they were removed to Oregon. No native speakers. Konkow 3–6 fluent speakers. Some estimate up to 15. Maiduan language family. Nearly extinct. Konomihu Shastan language family. No known speakers. Kumeyaay Less than 50 speakers. Alternative name: Diegueño. Yuman language family. Nearly extinct. Lassik Athabaskan language family. No native speakers. Luiseño 30–40, out of 1,500 population (1977 SIL). Uto-Aztecan language family. Maidu, Mountain 1–2 speakers, out of 100 or more population. Alternative name: Northeast Maidu. Maiduan language family. Nearly extinct. Mattole Athabaskan language family. No native speakers. Miwok, Central Sierra Up to 20 speakers. Miwokan language family. Nearly extinct. Miwok, Coast Miwokan language family. No native speakers. Miwok, Lake 1–5 speakers. Miwokan language family. Nearly extinct. Miwok, Northern Sierra Up to 8 speakers. Miwokan language family. Nearly extinct. Miwok, Plains 1 known speaker. Alternative name: Valley Miwok. Miwokan language family. Nearly extinct.
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Miwok, Southern Sierra 7 or fewer. Alternative name: Moquelumne. Miwokan language family. Nearly extinct. Mojave 60–90 speakers. Yuman language family. Mono Up to 50 speakers. Uto-Aztecan language family. Nearly extinct. New River Shasta Shastan language family. No known speakers. Nissenan 1–5 speakers. Alternative name: Southern Maidu. Maiduan language family. Nearly extinct. Nomlaki 0–1 speakers. Wintuan language family. Nearly extinct. Ohlone: Chocheño, Huchiun (Juichun), Monterey, Mutsun, Rumsen, San José, San Lorenzo No native speakers of any of the Ohlone languages. Okwanuchu Shastan language family. No known speakers. Paiute, Northern 1,631 speakers out of 6,000 population (1999 SIL). Uto-Aztecan language family. (Almost all speakers are on reservations outside of California.) Spoken on about twenty reservations spread out over 1,600 km. Panamint 20 speakers out of 100 population (1998 John E. McLaughlin). Uto-Aztecan language family. Nearly extinct. Patwin 1–5 speakers. Alternative name: Wintun. Wintuan language family. Nearly extinct. Pomo, Kashaya About 50 speakers. Pomoan language family. More speakers than almost any other northern California Indian language, but still labelled in the Ethnologue as nearly extinct. Pomo, Southern 1–2 speakers. Nearly extinct. Pomo, Central 8–10 speakers. Pomoan language family. Nearly extinct.
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Pomo, Northern 1–2 speakers. Pomoan language family. Nearly extinct. Pomo, Southeastern Less than 5 speakers. Pomoan language family. Nearly extinct. Pomo, Northeastern Pomoan language family. No known speakers. Pomo, Eastern 0–5 speakers. Pomoan language family. Nearly extinct. Quechan 150–500 speakers. Alternative name: Yuma. Yuman language family. Salinan Language isolate. No native speakers. Serrano 1–2 speakers: Uto-Aztecan language family. Nearly extinct. Shasta 0–1 speakers. Shastan family. Nearly extinct. Sinkyone Athabaskan language family. No native speakers. Tataviam Uto-Aztecan language family. No native speakers. Tipai Up to 200 speakers, primarily in Baja California. Alternative name: Southern Diegueño. Tolowa 4–5 speakers. Athabaskan language family. Nearly extinct. Tongva (Gabrielino) Uto-Aztecan language family. No native speakers. Tubatulabal Between 3 and 12 speakers. Alternative name: Pakanil. Uto-Aztecan language. Nearly extinct. Wailaki Athabaskan language family. No native speakers. Wappo 1–5 speakers. Nearly extinct. Washo About 25 speakers. Isolate (Hokan). Nearly extinct.
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Whilkut Athabaskan language family. No native speakers. Wintu About 6 speakers. Wintuan language family. Nearly extinct. Wiyot Algic language family. No native speakers. Yahi See Yanan Yanan: Northern Yana, Central Yana, and Yahi No native speakers of any of the Yanan languages. Yokuts, Choynumni 8–20 speakers. Central Valley. Yokutsan family. Nearly extinct. Yokuts, Chukchansi 12–18 speakers. Yokutsan family. Nearly extinct. Yokuts, Dumna 1 speaker. Yokutsan family. Nearly extinct. Yokuts, Tachi About 3 speakers. Yokutsan family. Nearly extinct. Yokuts, Wukchumne 10 or fewer speakers. Yokutsan family. Nearly extinct. Yokuts, Yowlumni 25–40 speakers. Yokutsan family. Nearly extinct. Yuki 0–2 speakers. Yukian family. Nearly extinct. Yuma See Quechan Yurok 20–30 speakers. Algic language family. Nearly extinct.
To summarize, we can categorize the strength or vitality of a language according to language use among all generations in a given language community. Once a community’s children stop speaking their language, the language is on its way to extinction. For virtually all California languages, the time when children stopped speaking was long ago, and now only a few elderly speakers remain – and although they know the language, most of those have not actually used it for decades. Out of all languages listed above, all but five are either listed as “nearly extinct” by the Ethnologue or else have no native
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speakers left at all. The five languages that are not nearly or completely extinct are Quechan, Northern Paiute, Mojave, Luiseño, and Cocopa. Even those five that are not classified as nearly extinct are not being learned by children, with the possible exceptions of Cocopa (where some children may possibly be learning the language in the Mexican communities) and Northern Paiute (where some children are learning the language in the areas outside California).
23.2. Reasons for Language Loss 23.2.1. The Mission Era California was the site of one of the worst genocides in the bloody history of European-America’s contact with Native Americans. The era of genocide took place during and after the 1849 Gold Rush in California. But before that, Native Californians had already been massively affected by the Mission Era. When California was part of Mexico, missions were set up along the coastal areas in the 1700s, and California Indians were brought to live at the missions from all over, where they were baptized, and made to work in the agricultural fields, construction, and other hard labour. This was actually slave labour, for people who ran away from the missions were caught, brought back, and punished. The missions brought European diseases, and with people crowded together there, the diseases wiped out many communities of indigenous people. In Baja California, for example, it is not even known what languages were spoken in the southern half, for everyone there died. In another tragic case, the entire population was removed from San Nicolas Island (one of the Channel Islands off Santa Barbara) to be taken to a mission. But one young woman was left behind, and stayed alone for eighteen years. When she was finally “rescued”, no trace could be found of any of her people; and she herself died of dysentery just seven weeks later (Heizer 1973). How many other such incidents must have occurred in those times, where an entire people was wiped out without a trace.
23.2.2. The Gold Rush Missions were never established very far north of San Francisco, so there were many California Indians who had not yet been exposed much to Europeans during this era. In 1834, the missions were secularized. By then, those Indians who had been at the missions were acculturated into farm labourers and ranch hands, and many spoke Spanish. Some of the languages had already disappeared by this time, and others were on their way to extinction. Nevertheless, the injury done to Indian populations and culture by the
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missions paled beside what happened next. The US–Mexican War resulted in the annexation of California to the United States. Gold was discovered about the same time, and one of the largest and quickest migrations in human history occurred over the next few years, as gold-hungry Americans and people from all over the world scrambled to California. There resulted an era of flamboyant lawlessness, where people of all races were shot and killed by others seeking wealth. Even when the Gold Rush died down and civil law prevailed in California, it was not illegal to kill an Indian. During the latter half of the nineteenth century, there were terrible massacres where whole villages would be destroyed and their inhabitants murdered. A number of California languages became extinct simply because all their speakers were killed. Most of the communities, even those who did not experience massacres, were scattered through displacement from their land. Only a few reservations were set up, and some of them housed multiple tribes, which meant that there was no common language other than English. Most tribes lost their land completely.
23.2.3. Boarding Schools The dawn of the twentieth century saw a new policy in America toward Native Americans, that of forced assimilation rather than war and mayhem. Children were sent to boarding schools, and language was a major target of education—the plan was to wipe out these “barbarous dialects”, as they were labelled by J. D. C. Atkins (1887), the Indian Commissioner. Children who spoke the same language were separated from each other and placed with children who came from different language backgrounds. They were punished for speaking their language, whether in the classroom, on the playground, or in the dormitories (see also Canadian residential school (§ 22.4)). In many cases, the hatred of their language was internalized by the children, and when they grew up they elected not to use it at home with their own children. Furthermore, there is the simple fact that once children get used to speaking to each other in English, one can predict that English will be the language they use with each other when they marry and found their own homes. Thus many of those boarding school children are today the last generation, now very elderly, that know their language.
23.2.4. The Second World War and Beyond By the 1930s, conscious efforts by the government to suppress Native American languages lessened considerably. But even without language oppression, many factors still worked against the maintenance of indigenous
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languages in California and the rest of the nation. The Second World War was another major benchmark in the history of Native American language shift. Young native men from provincial rural areas had their horizons expanded enormously by military experience, where they received training for many skills, became close friends with people of other races in their platoons, and travelled the world over. When they returned home some years later, they came with ideas for bringing their communities into modern times. Education and economic development became higher priorities. There was a new feeling that America had opportunities available that Native Americans could be part of. This new idea was reinforced by the US government in the 1950s with a “relocation programme”, where Native Americans were promised jobs if they would move to the cities. Thousands of American Indians moved during this time to the major cities of the United States. In California, now, American Indians from out of state living in Los Angeles, Oakland, and San Francisco far outnumber the total population of California Indians. And although many of these families eventually returned to their reservations or go to visit regularly, they have great difficulty maintaining their languages or passing the languages on to their children in their urban environment. Today it is harder than ever for Native Americans to retain their languages, due to many modern factors—jobs which take people away from their communities and where English is spoken at all times; and perhaps worst of all, the omnipresent blare of television, filling the home with the sound of English, and leaving no time or room for traditional storytelling and other activities that would have a chance of keeping the languages alive. This is no different from the situation in which immigrant families find themselves— virtually all minority languages in the United States are in a state of decline within the families that speak them.
23.3. Language Documentation in California 23.3.1. The Kroeber Era California has had over a century of fairly intensive language documentation. Even before this era, there was documentation of some languages by the priests of the Mexican mission era, and by early explorers and scholars. But the period of systematic documentation began in 1900, when Alfred Kroeber joined the faculty of the young University of California and established the Department of Anthropology there. With Native cultures so obviously declining, he took it as his department’s goal to document the languages and cultures of
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indigenous California, working as much as possible with elders born before the Gold Rush, who had the greatest understanding of what life was like in those early days. Challenged by the myriad of different language families proposed by Powell, Kroeber also considered it an important goal to do comparative studies of California languages to reduce the number of language families that had to be posited. Linguistic greats like Edward Sapir were invited and hosted between field sessions, and a staff of hard-working, talented anthropologists such as E. W. Gifford, T. T. Waterman, and S. A. Barrett all devoted much of their careers to ethnographic and linguistic documentation. Much of their work is published as numerous volumes of the Reports of the Bureau of American Ethnology (BAE) and the University of California Publications in Anthropology, Archaeology, and Ethnology (UCPAAE). Also, even richer sets of fieldnotes and materials from this era are preserved on campus in the Bancroft Library and in the Hearst Museum of Anthropology. The most dedicated documentary linguist of all was J. P. Harrington, an American scholar trained in Europe, and hired by the Smithsonian Institution to document the endangered languages of the United States. California was his home and the area where he did the most work: he wrote hundreds of thousands of pages of notes on the California languages, and hired others (his nephew Arthur Harrington and young friend John Marr) to do many hours of aluminum disc recordings. He had a wonderful ear, so his phonetic transcriptions are highly trusted. However, he published relatively little, and so his materials were not widely available until they were microfilmed in the 1980’s (Harrington 1907–1957). Now they are the basis of a great deal of scholarly work and are also used widely by the California native groups whose languages he recorded. His aluminum disc recordings are still in the process of being transferred to current audio media.
23.3.2. The Haas Era As Berkeley grew, the anthropology department became more global in their ambitions, and the focus on California languages and cultures was no longer so intense. But in 1952, research on California languages took an upswing again with the founding of the Linguistics Department and the Survey of California and Other Indian Languages, a research unit housed within the department. Mary Haas ran the Survey, and funds from the state paid for student fieldwork. Her goal was “a grammar, a dictionary and a body of texts” for every language in California. Dozens of dissertations on California languages were written in the 1950s and 1960s, and although linguistics too has become more global, students are still actively producing
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dissertations on California Indian languages. Meanwhile, Haas’s students and her students’ students have populated the other campuses of the UC system as new departments developed, and have also become professors around the nation, often carrying their love of California languages with them. Dissertations on California Indian languages are still coming out from all these institutions.
23.3.3. Current Work As the number of speakers declines, and as tribes develop economically, the relationship between linguists and native communities is changing. Driving much of this change is the development of a strong interest among California Indians in language revitalization. Linguists find that an increasingly large part of their research in their communities involves work that assists in the community goals and processes of language revitalization. Indeed, linguists are often even hired by the tribe as consultants. A new surge of a sense of urgency about documentation of endangered languages, combined with community revitalization efforts, has brought a new vision of what language documentation must include. While “a grammar, a dictionary and a body of texts” is still a critical minimum for documentation of a language, we also see the importance of documenting conversations, genres of speech, and situational communication practices.
23.4. Language Revitalization in California 23.4.1. Bilingual Education The language shift that was occurring in California away from indigenous languages to English was seen as inevitable throughout most of the twentieth century, by people both within and outside indigenous communities. But since the 1960s a change in attitude has begun to develop. I believe that the Civil Rights Movement was an important factor in this change. The Civil Rights Movement, although led by African Americans, nevertheless had a major impact on other minority groups as well. This also became the era of the American Indian Movement (AIM) developed in 1968 (Matthiessen 1983), to reassert the rights of Native Americans. Since AIM was a national movement by Native Americans, there was no focus on language—English was the only common language, and in fact language diversity might have been seen as divisive. However, the idea of the right to political self-determination was not very different from the right to maintain a community’s
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cultural traditions, including language. Thus with the passage of the 1968 Bilingual Education Act and the 1975 Lau Remedies which mandated it, many Native people in California and the rest of the nation happily embraced the opportunity to use their languages in the schools. But although there were many long-lived and effective bilingual education programmes in Native communities around the nation, it was unfortunately short-lived in California. This was because from the government’s point of view, money should only be spent on bilingual education for communities where English was not the first language of the children—and California Indian languages were already long past that point.
23.4.2. Informal Language Classes Throughout the 1970s and into the present, many Native Californian communities have quietly pursued informal efforts to keep their languages alive, most commonly by weekly gatherings where elders teach people words and phrases. Linguists have sometimes been part of these gatherings, and userfriendly dictionaries and grammars have occasionally come out of these meetings. One of the earliest of these was Couro and Langdon’s Let’s talk Iipay ‘Aa, a set of Northern Diegueño language lessons, and an accompanying dictionary (Couro and Langdon 1975; Couro and Hutcheson 1973). In many places these weekly gatherings have been going on for decades, such as among the Hupas of northern California. Some of the most delightful publications to come out of such community efforts have been a set of pocket-sized booklets that tribes in northern California have been producing: I know of three so far—for Karuk (Richardson et al. 1993), Hupa (Hupa Indian Language Classes et al. 1994), and Tolowa (Bommelyn 1995).
23.4.3. Classroom Teaching of California Indian Languages As people think more and more seriously about what it takes to develop new speakers of a language that is not being transmitted naturally at home, it becomes clear that much more must be done than weekly gatherings. Some parts of California have been able to teach indigenous languages in school. Humboldt County, in the northern part of the state, allows the indigenous languages of the county to be taught in schools where there is a high Native American student population, and many schools have developed increasingly successful programmes, and children have been able to learn and love their languages of heritage. However, the short hours allowed for language teaching limit the degree to which children can become proficient.
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23.4.4. Immersion Schools In other parts of the United States and elsewhere, a very effective means of language transmission has developed in language immersion schools, where the endangered language is actually the language of instruction. Truly fluent speakers can come from such schools. However, immersion schools fare best when there are large communities who are able to control their own educational resources. This has not so far been feasible to any great extent in California. The communities here are too small; there are too few speakers, and too old; and few resources available to allow people of professional age (who could therefore teach the language) to learn their language. But this is not to say that immersion schools are non-existent or impossible: the Wukchumnis ran an immersion daycare centre for several years in the 1990s, and the Washos have had a small K-12 immersion school for several years now (in Nevada, but since their traditional territory extended to California, we will count them). The Yuroks are well on the way in their planning of an immersion preschool.
23.4.5. The Master–Apprentice Model In areas where there are large indigenous communities, there are often institutions of higher education that can run programmes to teach the local languages. But in a state as linguistically diverse as California, and where the populations identifying with each language are so small, it is rare indeed that the languages can be learned in a college classroom. Therefore, people need to rely more on their own resources to teach and learn their languages. A group called The Advocates for Indigenous California Language Survival has played an important role in developing and supporting bootstrap methods for language learning. The crown programme of the Advocates is the Master–Apprentice Language Learning Program, where elderly speakers of California languages are paired with young tribal members who are motivated to learn the languages (Hinton et al. 2002). Teams are trained in how to immerse themselves in the language together, leaving English behind and using the language for their daily communication together for ten to twenty hours per week. Over seventy teams have taken part in this programme, and many of the learners have become proficient enough to become language teachers in the classrooms and immersion schools, or to use the language at home with their children. All these programmes benefit greatly from the availability of at least small amounts of funding, available from private foundations and from the government. The Native American Languages Acts of 1990 and 1992 have been very important in providing funds that have stimulated community-based
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revitalization efforts. These acts are not only of financial benefit, but also mark a major shift in government policy toward indigenous languages, expressing the right of communities to maintain them, and also acknowledging the government’s responsibility to assist in these efforts.
23.4.6. Revitalizing “Extinct” Languages Sadly, as pointed out above, many indigenous California languages no longer have any speakers at all. Yet, even for these languages, there is some hope, so long as they have been documented. The Advocates for Indigenous California Language Survival and the University of California at Berkeley have partnered together in a programme to teach Native Californians how to find and use linguistic documentation on their languages for purposes of revitalization. A biennial workshop at Berkeley has been the first step for many Native scholars in learning and using their long-dormant language. In many cases, linguists have developed close partnership with people in this language revitalization process, and great progress has been made in language learning for a number of individuals, who have also passed on their understanding of the language to family and other community members. Two especially active groups are the Mutsun and the Muwekma, two of the Ohlone languages (Costanoan). Quirina Costillas (Mutsun) and linguist Natasha Warner have provided the leadership for that group, and linguist Juliette Blevins has been working in the last year with the Muwekma language committee, and in that short time, great strides have been made. For the Mutsun, Warner has also been developing a comprehensive dictionary and a very useful manual of grammar. Both groups run immersion camps and workshops for their speech communities, and focus their efforts on developing ways to use their languages in daily communication. These are just a few of many pioneering tribal efforts to learn more about their languages and bring them back into use. California Indians are founding local programs at a high rate, as well as travelling to workshops and conferences for new ideas.
23.5. Conclusion Most California languages will cease to be known natively by anyone in the next twenty years. Revitalization programmes in California have extended the lifespan of these languages primarily through second language learning, and it is likely that knowledge of the languages only as a second language will be the long-term future of California Indian languages. Yet, here and there, people are
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making great progress in reviving conversational uses of their languages, and some families are trying to use them at home with their young children, which could even result in some new first language speakers. As we have seen, even languages which have not been spoken for many years are being learned and used once again, however haltingly. With sufficient documentation and sufficient motivation and effort, this process will go on for the foreseeable future.
References Atkins, J. D. C. (1887). “Barbarous dialects should be blotted out…”, in J. Crawford (ed.), 47–51. Bommelyn, L. (1995). Now you’re Speaking—Tolowa. Arcata, Calif.: Printed in cooperation with the Center for Indian Community Development, Humboldt State University. Campbell, L., and Mithun, M. (1979). The Languages of Native America: An Historical and Comparative Assessment. Austin: University of Texas Press. Couro, T., and Hutcheson, C. (1973). Dictionary of Mesa Grande Diegueño. Bannung: Malki Museum Press. —— and Langdon, M. (1975). Let’s Talk Iipay, Aa: An Introduction to the Mesa Grande Diegueño Language. Banning: Malki Museum Press and Ballena Press. Crawford, J. (ed.) (1992). Language Loyalties: A Source Book for the official English Controversy. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Gordon, R. G., Jr. (ed.) (2005). Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 15th edn. Dallas: Summer Institute of Linguistics International. Online version: www.ethnologue. com/. Harringon, J. P., (1907–1957). The Papers of John Peabody Harrington in the Smithsonian Institution, 1907–1957. National Anthropological Archives, Washington, D.C. (Microfilm edition, Millwood, N.Y.: Krass International, 1984.) Heizer, R. (1973). Original Accounts of the Lone Woman of San Nicolas Island. Ramona: Ballena Press. Hinton, L. (1994). Flutes of Fire. Berkeley: Heyday Books. —— with Vera, M., and Steele, N. (2002). Keeping your Language Alive: A CommonSense Approach to Language Learning and Teaching. Berkeley: Heyday Books. Hupa Indian Language Classes and Golla, V. (1994). Now you’re speaking—Hupa: Hupa Words and Phrases: A Pocket Handbook. Hoopa, Calif.: Hoopa Valley Tribal Council. Kroeber, A. L. (1913). “The determination of linguistic relationship”, Anthropos, 8: 389–401. Matthiessen, P. (1983). In the Spirit of Crazy Horse. New York: Viking Press. Nichols, J. (1992). Linguistic Diversity in Space and Time. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Powell, J. W. (1891). “Indian linguistic families of America north of Mexico”, Seventh Annual Report, Bureau of American Ethnology, Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1–142. Richardson, N., Burcell, S., and Lang, J. (1993). Now you’re Talking—Karuk! Arcata, Calif.: Humboldt State University, Center for Indian Community Development. Sapir, E. (1929). “Central and North American languages”, Encyclopaedia Britannica, 14th edn., v. 138–41.
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Languages of the Southwest United States Kumiko Ichihashi-Nakayama, Yukihiro Yumitani, and Akira Y. Yamamoto
24.1. Introduction 24.2. The languages of the Southwest 24.2.1. Classification 24.2.2. Linguistic areal features 24.3. Degree of language endangerment in the Southwest 24.4. Efforts in documentation and revitalization 24.5. Final remark
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24.1. Introduction Diversity is one of the main characteristics of Native American communities and their languages in the Southwest of the United States. Oftentimes linguistically closely related communities show very different sociolinguistic situations and various degrees of language shift, which result in differences in the degree of language endangerment. The Southwest culture area of North America is known as the region with the “oldest continuous record of human habitation on the continent outside of Mesoamerica”, and it is “a land of diversity, both of landscape and of ways of life upon that landscape” (Ortiz 1979a: 1). The area shows extreme variations in its topography, including low deserts only about a hundred metres above sea level, mountain peaks rising more than 2,000 metres, plateaux with deep vertical-walled canyons, and great watercourses such as Colorado river and Rio Grande. On this land, there are Upland Yumans who were traditionally hunters and gatherers, the agricultural River Yumans, Uto-Aztecanspeaking desert peoples, Pueblo peoples who settled in farming villages and towns, and the late-coming Athabaskan-speaking Navajo and Apache peoples who maintained a nomadic lifestyle. In spite of the diversity in geographical characteristics, cultures, and languages of the Southwest area, however, there is “the presence of Mesoamerican influence, in belief systems as well as more tangible realms, that most clearly gives the Southwest an
We wish to thank Tracy Hirata-Edds who read the initial draft of this chapter and provided detailed suggestions.
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underlying continuity beneath its diversities and distinguishes the Southwest from the areas surrounding it” (Ortiz 1979a: 1). In addition to most of Arizona, New Mexico, and portions of a few adjacent states, the generally recognized “Southwest” culture area includes the Mexican states of Sonora and Sinaloa, and the western parts of Chihuahua and Durango (Driver 1969). For the purpose of the present chapter, however, we focus our survey on the languages spoken in the area on the northern side of the US–Mexican border.
24.2. The Languages of the Southwest 24.2.1. Classification The languages spoken in the Southwest region of the United States are classified into at least six distinct and well-established families: Athabaskan, Keresan, Kiowa-Tanoan, Uto-Aztecan, Yuman, and Zuni (Hale and Harris 1979). Athabaskan languages spoken in the Southwest are the Apachean languages. They are Navajo (in Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah), Western Apache (in Arizona), Chiricahua-Mescalero (in southeastern New Mexico), and Jicarilla (in north-western New Mexico). These peoples are “latecomers” to the area: they migrated out of the northern Athabaskans, arrived in northeastern New Mexico in the sixteenth century, and gradually spread to the west and south (Woodbury 1979). Three of the four branches of the Kiowa-Tanoan family (collectively known as Tanoan) are found in the Southwest: Tiwa, Tewa, and Towa. The Tiwa languages (Taos, Picuris, and Southern Tiwa) are spoken in New Mexico. Tewa is spoken in a number of pueblos in New Mexico and in Arizona, and Towa (Jemez) is spoken in New Mexico. The most diverse among the language families in the Southwest is the Uto-Aztecan. Languages in this family are spoken over a wide area on the continent, from the Great Basin to California in the west, to the Plains in the east, and to Mexico in the south. Among them, Hopi is spoken in several pueblos in northeast Arizona, and O’odham is spoken in southern Arizona (and adjacent Mexico) by the Tohono O’odham (Papago) and the Akimel O’odham (Pima) people. There are also speakers of Yaqui who moved from Mexico into Arizona early in the twentieth century (Mithun 1999). There are a few speakers of Chemehuevi along the Colorado River in Arizona. Languages of the Yuman family in the Southwest belong to the Upland branch (Havasupai, Hualapai, and Yavapai), the River group (Mohave,
Figure 24.1. Map of US Southwest. Source: from Allen Bohnert “Three Groundbreaking Confrences: Ancestral Peoples of the Four Corners Region” CRM (Cultural Resource Management, National Park Services )23, 9 (2000):25–32. Reprinted by permission of Ron Winters, Alex Roberts and Virginia Salazar-Halfmoon, who redrew and edited the 1992 Bureau of Indian Affairs Indian Lands Map.
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Maricopa, and Quechan), and the California-Delta group (Cocopa). Yuman is claimed to be included in the “Hokan” stock together with some other Californian languages, but the genetic relationships among “Hokan” languages are not yet solidly validated. Both Keres and Zuni are considered language isolates, although there have been a number of attempts to relate them to other language families, such as the former to the latter, the former to Uto-Aztecan or Caddoan, and the latter to Kiowa-Tanoan or Penutian (Davis 1979). Mutually intelligible dialects of the Keres language are spoken in seven pueblo communities in New Mexico, while Zuni is spoken at Zuni Pueblo in western New Mexico.
24.2.2. Linguistic Areal Features The languages spoken in the Southwest have been in close contact all through historic times and possibly in prehistoric times. As a result, these genetically distinct languages apparently have come to share some linguistic features through diffusion. Thus, the Southwest may constitute not only a culture area but also a linguistic area (Sherzer 1976; Mithun 1999). The linguistic features shared by most or all of the languages of the Southwest include voiceless vowels and sonorants (Uto-Aztecan members Hopi and Tohono O’odham, Keres, and Zuni); glottalized stop series in all except Uto-Aztecan and Yuman languages; and the labio-velar kw in Navajo, all Tanoan languages, Hopi, Yuman languages (Quechan, Yavapai, and Mohave), and Zuni. All languages of the Southwest indicate plural pronominally, and Apachean, Tanoan, Keres, and Zuni have a pronominal dual as well. Prefixation of possessive pronouns is seen in Apachean languages, Taos, Hopi, Tohono O’odham, Quechan, and Keres. Alienable and inalienable possession is distinguished as nominal classes in Tohono O’odham, Keres, Zuni, Apachean, and Yuman languages. Reduplication of the nominal stem is used to signify distribution or plurality in Taos, Hopi, and Tohono O’odham, while that of the verbal stem is used to signify distribution, repetition, and iteration in Hopi, Tohono O’odham, Zuni, Towa, and Yuman languages. Noun incorporation is seen in Taos, Southern Tiwa, Towa, Keres, Hopi, Hualapai, and Zuni. The linguistic convergence mentioned above does not diminish linguistic diversity in the Southwest. Each language or language family conti ues to display its distinct characteristics (such as a complex array of affixes, especially prefixes, and the classificatory verbs in the Athabaskan
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languages, and an auxiliary system to distinguish different classes of verbs in Yuman), reflecting its speakers’ ways of looking at the world around them. Thus, the loss of even one language will result in impoverishing the intellectual capacity of human beings as a species.
24.3. Degree of Language Endangerment in the Southwest Just like its ecological and linguistic diversity, the languages of the Southwest show considerable variation in the degree of language endangerment as well. There is the Navajo language, the speakers of which outnumber those of any other North American indigenous language, and some children in the communities, though fewer each year, are still learning the language. On the other hand, there are languages that can be characterized as “moribund” and are seriously in danger of being lost. The difference in the endangerment situation across languages is due to such factors as the degree of exposure or physical accessibility to the outside world, the “attitude” of the speakers toward their native language, the level of awareness of a language as a key to cultural identity, and the quality and quantity of the revitalization efforts in the community. The Yavapai language, for example, is spoken in the areas either very close to or inside a major city. All three Yavapai communities operate a gaming centre and/or facilities for tourists, and their focus is on economic development rather than cultural. The children in two communities attend public schools outside their communities. Accordingly, only 2 per cent or less of the total population speaks the language, and no Yavapai children are acquiring the language. The tables below summarize the current status of the languages of the Southwest according to their genetic grouping. General sources consulted here include: Davis (1994); Goddard (1996); Grimes (2000); Ortiz (1979b, 1983); Mithun (1999); Voegelin and Voegelin (1965); and Center for Sustainable Environments (2002). Total population figures come from various sources (see notes to each table), and the figures are based mostly on estimates of the 1990s; therefore they should be interpreted as very rough statistics. The percentage of speakers of the total population may be an indicator of language vitality, but other factors such as degree of intergenerational transmission, community people’s attitudes toward their languages, and quality and quantity of documentation must be considered.1 Although we added our judgement on the degree of endangerment (5 “safe” ~ 1 “extinct”)
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for each language, many language communities have been active in their language revitalization projects, and it should be kept in mind that the language situations are changing.2 In order to illustrate the relationship between language vitality and the sociolinguistic situations surrounding a language, detailed observations will be presented for two language groups, Keresan and Yuman. These observations are in terms of the degree of intergenerational transmission, language usage within the community, community support toward the language maintenance, extent of documentation, and community attitude toward the exposure of its language to the outside world. As seen in Tables 24.1 to 24.5, there is no language/community in the Southwest where 100 per cent of the population speaks the language. It is also notable that the ratio of language retention (indicated by the percentage of speakers of the total population) is not uniform throughout communities within the same language group. The situations of language vitality vary from community to community. For example, within Navajo-speaking communities, 95 per cent of the total population speak the language in the Alamo area, while only 57 per cent speak the language in the Navajo Nation (Table 24.1). Also, 50 per cent of the Tohono O’odham population speak the O’odham language, while only 10 per cent of the Akimel O’odham population speak the language (Table 24.3). These differences in degree of language retention seem to be the result of different sociolinguistic situations in otherwise similar language communities. In Tables 24.4 and 24.5, which show more detailed data regarding the language status in Keresan and Yuman communities, the fourth column (“acquired by children”) states whether children in the community are acquiring the language in question. The next column indicates how much the language is actually used in everyday situations in the community. The “attitude” column describes whether or not the people in the community show support for the maintenance of their native language. The “document” column refers to the extent of the documentation of the language including a grammar, a dictionary, and a text collection with grammatical analysis, etc. The column shows the extent of documentation: none—little—some— good—very good. The last column “comments” lists the general attitude of the people in the community toward their native language being exposed (through publication or instruction, for example) to outsiders. 1 See, for a detailed discussion on the crucial factors that impact language vitality, the document “Language vitality and endangerment” by UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Section (www.unesco.org/culture/ich) 2003. 2 Because of the complex situations of the language communities, the degree of endangerment is not indicated on the map.
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Table 24.1. Language vitality in Southwest Athabaskan Language communities
Total population
Estimated % of speakers
Degree of endangerment
Alamo Navajo Navajo Nation Ramah Navajo Tóhajiileehé (Cañoncito Band of Navajo) Navajo communities Western Apache (San Carlos) Western Apache (Tonto) Western Apache (White Mountain) Jicarilla Apache Mescalero Apache Apache communities
2,000 259,556 2,463 2,382
95 57 60 75
5 4 4 4
266,401 7,562 92 12,503
71.75 35 30 50
4 3 2 3
3,100 3,511 26,768
20 20 31
2 2 3
Notes: The population and percentage on the speakers of the Navajo language come from Center for Sustainable Environments 2002: 51. The population figures for the Apache groups are from Cole 1994: 45.
Table 24.2. Language vitality in Tanoan and Zuni Language/community Northern Tiwa (Taos) Northern Tiwa (Picuris) Southern Tiwa (Isleta) Southern Tiwa (Sandia) Tewa (Hano (Hopi-Tewa) ) Tewa (Tesuque) Tewa (Santa Clara) Tewa (San Juan) Tewa (San Ildefonso) Tewa (Pojoaque) Tewa (Nambe) Towa (Jemez) Zuni Pueblo
Total population 1,331 166 2,675 500 600 355 1,329 1,328 528 263 455 1,941 7,426
Estimated % of speakers 75 40 65 15 65 75 50 40 50 20 10 92 80
Degree of endangerment 4 3 3 2 3 4 3 3 3 2 2 54
Notes: The population figures are based primarily on Census 2000, Table DP-1 (Profile of General Demographic Characteristics) and Table DP-2 (Profile of Selected Social Characteristics). We are grateful to Christine Sims for information on some of the language communities.
The cases in both Keres and Yuman show a clear connection between the level of language vitality and the sociolinguistic situations of each community: in both Keres and Yuman, the communities with more children acquiring the language, more everyday usage of the language, and more awareness toward the language maintenance hold higher retention rate (i.e. higher percentage of speakers per total population).
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Table 24.3. Language vitality in Southwest Uto-Aztecan Language/community Hopi Pueblo Kaibab Band of Paiute Indians Chemehuevi Tohono O’odham (Papago) Akimel O’odham (Pima) Yaqui
Total population
Estimated % of speakers
Degree of endangerment
10,916 240
48 2
3 1
600 20,000 13,000 7,900
1 50 10 20
1 4 2 3
Notes: The population figures for Akimel O’odham come from Innis (1994); for Yaqui from Spicer (1994).
Keresan-speaking people reside in seven pueblos (Table 24.4): Santo Domingo, San Felipe, Zia, Santa Ana, Acoma, Cochiti, and Laguna. Among them, the Santo Domingo people “have long been recognized for their ultraconservative stance on almost all issues” (Lange 1994: 515). They are economically productive (farming, arts and crafts), politically stable with the traditional ways of governing themselves without a constitution, and socially congenial and cooperative. They maintain their core values and confidence in language, and pride in their ways of life. They show a high level of language vitality in that 95 per cent of the total population of 3,120 speak the language. Like Santo Domingo people, San Felipe people also maintain a traditional religious life. They continue to practise traditional ways of farming, hunting, piñon-picking, crafts work, and trading. Even though children attend the BIA-run San Felipe school or nearby public school, the community has been able to continue to impart their traditional culture and language to their children. On the other hand, the more people seek employment or higher education outside their community, the more the language vitality tends to decline. In many Keresan Pueblo communities, however, active language and culture programmes have been implemented. Acoma Pueblo and Cochiti Pueblo are known for their immersion programmes. In the Yuman language family, Havasupai, Hualapai, and Yavapai are referred to as the Upland Yuman languages.3 Among them, the Havasupai community is physically the most isolated residing in the depths of the Grand Canyon and only accessible by horse, hiking, or, in emergency cases, by helicopter. Television has not completely taken over their entertainment, 3 Based on the high level of mutual intelligibility among Havasupai, Hualapai, and Yavapai, Mithun (1999) lists them not as the separate languages but as the dialect variations.
Table 24.4. Language vitality in Keres Pueblo Santo Domingo San Felipe Zia Santa Ana Acoma Cochiti Laguna
Total population
Number (%) of speakers
Acquired by children
Language use
Attitude
Document
Comments
3,120
2,965 (95)
Most
Most
Little
2,205 720 640 3,860 1,050 6,865
1,985 (90) 504 (70) 384 (60) 1,930 (50) 525 (50) 2,060 (30)
Most Some Few No No No
Most Many Many Some Some Few
Strong support Support Support Some Some Support Some
Very protective Protective Protective Protective Protective Protective Protective
Some Little Some Some Some Some
Degree of endangerment 54 4 3 3 3 3
Notes: The figures are from 1995 data of the Linguistic Society of America’s Committee on Endangered Languages and their Preservation (www.indigenous-language.org).
Table 24.5. Language vitality in Yuman Language
Total population
% of speakers
Acquired by children
Language use
Attitude
Document
Comments
Majority Many
Most Many
Support Strong support Support Some
Good Very good
Open Open
54
Good Some
Open Protective
2 1
Increasing support Support Support
Good
Protective
2
Very good Very good
Open Open
3 2
Havasupai Hualapai
565 1,872
93.8 53.4
Yavapai Pee-Posh (Maricopa) Mojave
1,448 797
None None
Rarely Rarely
965
2 Less than 2 10
None
Rarely
Cocopah Quechan
712 3,000
40 30
A few None
Some Some
Degree of endangerment
Notes: The population figures and the percentage of speakers for the Upland Yuman group are from Martin (1994), Watahomigie (1994), and the Linguistic Society of America’s Committee on Endangered Languages and their Preservation (www.indigenous-language.org). The population figures for other Yuman groups are from Booth and Cameron (1994) (for Pee Posh), Butler (1994) (for Mojave), de Williams (1994) (for Cocopah), and Bee (1994) (for Quechan).
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and they continue to engage in intergenerational interactions. In addition, the school in the community has a bilingual/bicultural education programme as a part of its curriculum. Accordingly, the level of language vitality is high in this community, and 93.8 per cent of the population actively use the language. However, when the size of the whole population (565 in total) is considered, the situation is not so optimistic. External influences from natural disaster, disease, or economic development could devastate the community. In fact, through their major industry, tourism, the community is facing constant exposure to non-Havasupai elements. More and more younger people receive education outside their community, and English seems to be gaining its entry into the community in more ways than before. The Hualapai community is situated along the US Highway 66,200 km west of the city of Flagstaff and 80 km east of Kingman, making modern conveniences easily accessible to the people. Their reservation is relatively free of tourism compared with Havasupai and Yavapai, and it maintains a strong sense of community integrity. The kindergarten to eighth grade school in the heart of the reservation plays a vital role in arousing a strong awareness of the traditional language and culture and maintaining them. However, the spread of radio and television is extensive, and these have taken over entertainment, resulting in disruption of traditional cultural and linguistic transmission within and across generations. Still, the language situation for Hualapai seems stable, and there are approximately 1,000 active speakers of the language out of 1,872 in the total population. The interest in maintaining the language continues to persist and is beginning to be applied to community-based programmes. The Yavapai have three reservations in central Arizona constituting three separate governments: the Fort McDowell Mojave-Apache Indian Community (640 people), the Yavapai-Prescott Tribe (158), and the Camp Verde Yavapai-Apache Indian Community (650). Fort McDowell is only 40 km away from the metropolitan area of Phoenix, and every possible modern convenience is immediately accessible. The Yavapai-Prescott is in the middle of the city of Prescott. These communities all have gaming centres and focus their efforts on economic development. Unlike the Havasupai or Hualapai children, the Camp Verde and Prescott children attend public schools outside their own communities. As a result, the language retention in the Yavapai communities is minimal, especially in Prescott Yavapai (Yavbé): among the total population of 158, there may only be five people who remember the language.
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24.4. Efforts in Documentation and Revitalization4 Although the Spaniards arrived in the Southwest as early as the 1540s, documentation of the languages of this area is relatively new, compared with the other parts of North America. There are no early records of the languages by the missionaries of this area, probably due to a difference in language policy on the part of the Franciscans in the Southwest as compared with the Jesuits elsewhere (Davis 1979: 391). In the nineteenth century, travellers and explorers to this “frontier” compiled word lists based on their encounters with indigenous peoples, and, in the twentieth century, more extensive documentation of the Southwest languages was conducted by researchers including prominent figures of the era such as Edward Sapir and John Harrington. In his later years, Sapir (1884–1939) focused his energy on Navajo. His effort was continued by Hoijer, which resulted in a series of publications: Sapir (1942) and Hoijer (1945). There are also a large number of other published materials on and in the Navajo language, the most significant of which is Young and Morgan (1980) with over 1,500 pages of description of the language. Early documentation of the Tanoan languages includes that by Harrington (1910). The documentation of the Keres language is somewhat limited, particularly for Santo Domingo and Zia Pueblos. Generally, the conservative nature of many pueblos, including Keres- and Tanoan-speaking Pueblos, causes limited documentation activities for their languages. Virtually in all language communities, we now find some form of language programme being implemented: some are community based and others are school based; some are designed to have elders come and socialize in their language and some offer structured language classes; some are one-on-one master–apprentice programmes and some are one-on-many immersion classes; some have tribal endorsement and others do not. Just as there are differences in the communities, there are differences in language programmes. What is common among those involved in language programmes is a sense of urgency; that is, they recognize the vulnerability of the language. They feel that their native languages will be lost if they do not do something to counter language shift. In response to the urgently felt need to create and recreate an environment in which a native language is the language of communication, of thinking, and of being who they are, 4 An excellent bibliography was compiled by Bright (1982) for Native languages of California and adjacent areas.
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language teacher training opportunities began to appear. Speakers as well as non-speakers began to seek out these opportunities. Since the summer of 1978 in Arizona, the American Indian Language Development Institute (AILDI; Ofelia Zepeda and Teresa McCarty, codirectors) has been active in training teachers of Native American languages (McCarty et al. 1997). For several years now, it has been held at the University of Arizona. The University of Arizona saw the important role of AILDI for the State of Arizona and the rest of the country, and in 1996 it committed permanent funding for the institute. It has attracted teachers of Native American languages throughout Arizona, California, Alaska, Maine, Canada, and South America. AILDI continues to train Native American language teachers, ESL teachers, multicultural teachers, curriculum developers, and materials developers. In New Mexico, the Linguistic Institute for Native Americans (LINA; Christine Sims, chair) has been providing linguistic and language teaching training for tribes, language programme staff, and teachers. In the Navajo Nation, the Department of Education has provided training in language education in general and immersion techniques in particular (Holm and Holm 1995). The Pai language communities of the Yuman language family are moving forward in strengthening their languages. During the past three years, they have organized a gathering of the Pai groups where they exchange information on language situations and strategies for fortifying their languages. The gathering has expanded to broader Yuman language groups and it will continue to support and encourage community language activities. One of the most important aspects of the documentation and revitalization efforts in the Southwest is the spirit of cooperation and collaboration between the language communities and trained professionals including linguists. Based on this, a rich pool of quality language materials has been produced for many languages.
24.5. Final Remark In this brief discussion of the language situations in the Southwestern United States, we have reaffirmed, as in other parts of the language world, that successful fortification of endangered languages must be desired and initiated by their communities to be truly viable and vital. To this end, it is crucial that the people become aware of the language situation in their community, of the complex issues associated with languages including economies and politics,
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language attitude, and resources, and also of the significance of maintaining and strengthening their language. When the people feel that their language is an integral part of their existence (i.e. what makes them who they are), they may not be so easily swayed to switch to English with its apparent socioeconomic and political power. Instead, they may see the important different roles of their own language and of English and, thus, resolve to keep both languages as their way of life.
References Bee, R. L. (1994). “Quechan”, in M. B. Davis (ed.), 524–5. Booth, P. M., and Cameron, R. (1994). “Pee-Posh”, in M. B. Davis (ed.), 439–41. Bright, W. (1982). Bibliography of the Languages of Native California, Including Closely Related Languages of Adjacent Areas. Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press. Butler, E. J. (1994). “Mojave”, in M. B. Davis (ed.), 355–7. Center for Sustainable Environments (2002). Safeguarding the Uniqueness of the Colorado Plateau: An Ecoregional Assessment of Biocultural Diversity. Flagstaff: The Center for Sustainable Environments, Northern Arizona University (with Terralingua: partnerships for Linguistic and Biological Diversity, Washington and Grand Canyon Wildlands Council, Flagstaff, Ariz.). Cole, D. C. (1994). “Apache”, in M. B. Davis (ed.), 44–8. Davis, I. (1979). “The Kiowa-Tanoan, Keresan, and Zuni languages”, in L. Campbell and M. Mithun (eds.), The Languages of Native America: A Historical and Comparative Assessment. Austin: University of Texas, 390–443. Davis, M. B. (ed.) (1994). Native America in the Twentieth Century: An Encyclopedia. New York: Garland Publishing. de Williams, A. A. (1994). “Cocopah”, in M. B. Davis (ed.), 120–2. Driver, H. (1969). Indians of North America. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Goddard, I. (ed.) (1996). Handbook of North American Indians, xvii: Languages. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution. Grimes, B. (2000). Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 14th edn. Dallas: Summer Institute of Linguistics. Hale, K., and Harris, D. (1979). “Historical linguistics and archaeology”, in A. Ortiz (ed.), 170–7. Harrington, J. P. (1910). “An introductory paper on the Tiwa language, dialect of Taos, N.M.”, American Anthropologist, 12: 11–48. Hoijer, H. (1945). Navaho Phonology. University of New Mexico Publications in Anthropology 1. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. Holm, A., and Holm, W. (1995). “Navajo language education: retrospect and prospects”, Bilingual Research Journal, 19/1: 141–67. Innis, G. C. (1994). “Pima”, in M. B. Davis (ed.), 452–4. Krauss, M. (1992). “The world’s languages in crisis”, Language, 68/1:4–10. —— (1998). “The scope of the language endangerment crisis and recent responses to it”, in K. Matsumura (ed.), Studies in Endangered Languages: Papers from the
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International Symposium on Endangered Languages, Tokyo, November 18–20, 1995. Tokyo: Hituzi Syobo, 101–13. Lange, C. H. (1994). “Santo Domingo”, in M. B. Davis (ed.), 515–16. McCarty, T. L., Yamamoto, A.Y., Watahomigie, L. J., and Zepeda, O. (1997). “Schoolcommunity-university collaborations: the American Indian Language Development Institute”, in J. Reyhner (ed.), Teaching Indigenous Languages. Flagstaff: Center for Excellence in Education, Northern Arizona University, 85–104. Martin, J. F. (1994) “Havasupai”, in M. B. Davis (ed.), 231–3. Mithun, M. (1999). The Languages of Native North America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Ortiz, A. (1979a). “Introduction”, in A. Ortiz (ed.), 1–4. —— (ed.) (1979b). Handbook of North American Indians, ix: Southwest. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution. —— (ed.) (1983). Handbook of North American Indians, x: Southwest. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution. Sapir, E. (1942). Navoho Texts, with Supplementary Texts, ed. H. Hoijer. Iowa City: Linguistic Society of America, University of Iowa. Sherzer, J. (1976). An Areal-Typological Study of American Indian Languages North of Mexico. Amsterdam: North-Holland. Spicer, R. B. (1994). “Yaqui”, in M. B. Davis (ed.), 708–10. UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Section (2003). “Language vitality and endangerment”. Paris: UNESCO. Voegelin, C. F., and Voegelin, F. M. (1965) “Languages of the world: Native American fascicle two”, Anthropological Linguistics, 7/7: 1–150. Watahomigie, L. J. (1994) “Hualapai”, in M. B. Davis (ed.), 246–7. Woodbury, R. B. (1979) “Prehistory: introduction”, in A. Ortiz (ed.), 22–30. Young, R. W., and Morgan, W. (1980). The Navajo Language: A Grammar and Colloquial Dictionary. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press (rev edn. 1987).
The Authors
Oscar E. Aguilera Address: ARCIS University (University of Arts and Social Sciences) Libertad 53, Santiago, Chile E-mail:
[email protected] Oscar E. Aguilera, ethnolinguist born in Santiago, Chile in 1949. He studied Germanistik, Classical Philology, and Linguistics at the Universidad de Chile. Since 1975 he has been doing research on Kawesqar, an almost extinct Fueguian language, which has been thoroughly described by him. He has published a Grammar of this language, and numerous papers on phonology, discourse, and cultural aspects of this ethnic group. He is also co-author (with Professor Jose Tonko) of an unpublished KawesqarSpanish, Spanish-Kawesqar Dictionary. Since 1999 he has been carrying out a project of revitalization of the last two Fueguian languages, Kawesqar and Yaghan, funded by the Bureau of Indigenous Affairs (CONADI), which is a governmental institution. He has taught in the main universities in Chile (for more than 30 years in the Universidad de Chile), and at present he teaches Discourse Analysis, Research Methodology, and English at ARCIS University (University of Arts and Social Sciences).
Alexandra Y. Aikhenvald Address: Research Centre for Linguistic Typology, La Trobe University, Victoria 3086, Australia E-mail:
[email protected] Alexandra Y. Aikhenvald is Professor and Associate Director of the Research Centre for Linguistic Typology at La Trobe University. She has worked on descriptive and historical aspects of Berber languages and has published, in Russian, a grammar of Modern Hebrew (1990). She is a major authority on languages of the Arawak family, from northern Amazonia, and has written grammars of Bare (1995, based on work with the last speaker who has since died) and Warekena (1998), plus A Grammar of Tariana, from Northwest Amazonia (Cambridge University Press, 2003), in addition to essays on various typological and areal features of South American languages. Her monographs, Classifiers: a Typology of Noun Categorization Devices (2000, paperback reissue 2003), Language Contact in Amazonia (2002) and Evidentiality (2004, paperback reissue 2006) were published by Oxford University Press. She is currently working on a reference grammar of Manambu, from the Sepik area of New Guinea.
Marcellino Berardo Address: Applied English Center, 204 Lippincott Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66045 U.S.A E-mail:
[email protected] Marcellino Berardo is a linguist at the Applied English Center at the University of Kansas. He specializes in second language learning and teaches courses on second
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language acquisition, in addition to teaching English as a second language. He has been involved in language revitalization for 10 years working with tribal groups in Oklahoma and Kansas. Much of his work consists of working with speakers of endangered languages to describe the grammar of the languages and develop curricula to teach the languages to other members of the tribe.
David Bradley Address: La Trobe University, VIC 3086, Australia Tel: + 613/03 9479 2362, Fax: +613/03 9479 1520 E-Mail: D.
[email protected] Prof. David Bradley of La Trobe University in Australia is a leading expert on language policy and language endangerment in Southeast and East Asia, with many books including “Language Endangerment and Language Maintenance” and a 2005 issue of International Journal of the Sociology of Language, “Language Endangerment in the Sinosphere”. He also works on the sociolinguistics and historical linguistics of a variety of Sino-Tibetan languages and English.
Bernard Comrie Address: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Deutscher Platz 6, D-04103 Leipzig, Germany E-mail:
[email protected] Bernard Comrie is director of the Department of Linguistics at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig and Distinguished Professor of Linguistics at the University of California Santa Barbara. He is interested in the documentation and description of endangered languages (with a particular current emphasis on languages of Daghestan), linguistic typology, and “languages and genes”. He is the author of Aspect (1976), Tense (1981), Language Universals and Linguistic Typology (1989), editor of The World’s Major Languages (1987) and (with G. G. Corbett) The Slavonic Languages (1993), and managing editor of the journal Studies in Language. Sabine Ehrhart Address: Dr Sabine Ehrhart, 12, Cote de Weinbourg, F-67340 Ingwiller, France E-mail:
[email protected] Sabine Ehrhart studied at the Universities of Barcelona, Augsburg, Orléans, and the Sorbone. She has carried out extensive fieldwork in New Caledonia, Vanuatu, and Palmerston. She has worked on a number of research projects at the University of the Saarland, University of Strassbourg, and the University of Freiburg. Her main publications are in the areas of bilingualism, educational linguistics, and Pacific linguistics. Her dissertation Le créole français de St-Louis (le tayo) en Nouvelle-Calédonie was published by Buske, Hamburg, 1993.
Fubito Endo Address: Faculty of Economics, Wakayama University, Sakaedani 930, Wakayama 640-8510, Japan E-mail:
[email protected] Born in 1960. Graduated from the Faculty of Letters, Hokkaido University in 1983. Completed the course of Linguistics at the Graduate School of Letters, Hokkaido University in 1986 (M.A. in Literature). Currently Professor, Wakayama University.
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Specialized in the descriptive study of the Yukaghir languages. Engaged in field research and corpus study of Kolyma Yukaghir. Published a book Grammatical Outline of Yukaghir with Text and Glossary (in Japanese, Sapporo: Department of Linguistics, Faculty of Letters, Hokkaido University, 1993).
Collete Grinevald Affiliations: Département des Sciences du Langage (Department of Language Sciences) & Laboratoire CNRS Dynamique du Langage, Université Lumière, Lyon2, France Address: Laboratoire Dynamique du Langage, Institut des Sciences de l’Homme, 14 Avenue Berthelot, 69363 Lyon cedex 07, France E-mail:
[email protected] PhD from Harvard University (1975). University in Oregon, USA, 1974–96 (as Colette G. Craig) and University Lyon2, France since 1996 (as Colette Grinevald). Specialist in the description of Amerindian languages and issues related to fieldwork on endangered languages. Extensive field experience in Latin America. Advisory Board member of VW-DOBES program. Committee member of FEL. Member of the ad-hoc UNESCO Expert Linguist Panel on Endangered Languages. Recipient of a HRELP grant for Rama documentation.
Leanne Hinton Address: Dept. of Linguistics, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720-2650 E-mail:
[email protected],
[email protected] Phone (cell): (510) 219-4842 Fax: (510) 643-5688 Leanne Hinton is a professor of linguistics at the University of California at Berkeley, specializing in the languages of California and the Southwest, and in language loss and language revitalization. She is also the director of the Survey of California and Other Indian Languages, and a member of the board of the native-run Advocates for Indigenous California Language Survival. She has published numerous books and articles on American Indian languages and language revitalization. Kumiko Ichihashi-Nakayama Address: c/o T. Nakayama, Research Institute for Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies, 3-11-1 Asahi-cho, Fuchu-shi, Tokyo 183-8534, Japan E-mail:
[email protected] Kumiko Ichihashi-Nakayama, currently adjunct professor at Tokyo University of Foreign Studies, received an MA in linguistics from the University of Kansas and has been continuing her linguistic education in the doctoral program at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Her research emphasis is on functional and typological aspects of language, and her publication includes several papers on Hualapai, a Yuman language. Michael E. Krauss Address: Alaska Native Language Center, University of Alaska Fairbanks, PO Box 80123, Fairbanks, Alaska 99708, U.S.A. E-mail:
[email protected]
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After student and postdoctoral years devoted to Gaelic, Icelandic, and Faroese, to 1960, Michael Krauss has spent his entire career with Alaska Native languages, all more or less seriously endangered, with special attention to Siberian Yupik, documentary and comparative work with Athabaskan, and above all, Eyak, now with one surviving native speaker (Eyak Dictionary 1970, In Honor of Eyak 1982). Krauss founded and directed the Alaska Native Language Center, 1972–2000, at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, assembled the archive of Alaska Native language documentation and has, especially since 1990, has worked to call attention to the enormity of the language endangerment crisis.
Megumi Kurebito Address: Faculty of Humanities, Toyama University, Gofuku 3190, Toyama 930-8555, Japan E-mail:
[email protected] Professor of Linguistics at Toyama University. She has been engaged in the descriptive study of Koryak, a member of Chukchee-Kamchatkan language family, since 1994 and has published a number of papers on its phonology and grammar. She edited Comparative Basic Vocabulary of the Chukchee-Kamchatkan Language Family : 1 (ELPR Publication Series A2-011, 2001) and also published the book Save the Endangered Language: Facing a Dying Language on the Tundra (in Japanese, Tokyo: Taishukan shoten, 2003). Randy J. LaPolla Address: Linguistics, La Trobe University, Bundoora, VIC 3086, Australia E-mail: r.lapolla@latrobe/edu.au Randy LaPolla received his PhD from the University of California, Berkeley, and then worked at the Academia Sinica in Taiwan and City University of Hong Kong before becoming Chair of Linguistics at La Trobe University. He is also a Cheung Kong Scholar at the Central University of Nationalities in Beijing. His work has focused on the recording and analysis of Sino-Tibetan languages, and attempting to answer the question of why the languages of this language family are the way they are.
Osahito Miyaoka Address: Semiyama 1-8-907, Fukiai, Chuo-ku, Kobe 651-0058, Japan E-mail:
[email protected] Osahito Miyaoka is currently Professor of Linguistics at Osaka Gakuin University. In 1999 while holding the chair of Linguistics at Kyoto University, he started the nationwide project of Endangered Languages of the Pacific Rim (ELPR) under the five-year financial support from the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology. He has worked on Central Alaskan Yupik, an Eskimoan language, and is now at the final stage of completing a reference grammar of the language. Research associate at University of Alaska’s several campuses (between 1967 to 1991 for different periods, involved in establishing the practical orthography, material developments, and bilingual teacher training) and visiting fellow at the Research Centre for Linguistic Typology at La Trobe University (2004). He has published articles and books in various aspects of the language in addition to Japanese books on linguistic morphology and anthropology.
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Peter Mühlhäusler Address: Linguistics (Humanities), University of Adelaide, Adelaide 5005 Australia E-mail:
[email protected] Peter Mühlhäusler was born in 1947 and studied Germanic, general, and Pacific linguistics at Stellenbosch (South Africa), Reading (UK), and the Australian National University. He lectured at the TU Berlin and in the University of Oxford before taking up the position as the Foundation Professor of Linguistics at the University of Adelaide. He has published extensively on Pidgin and Creole languages, ecolinguistics, Pacific and Australian languages, pronominal grammar, missionary linguistics, and language planning. His current projects are language of Norfolk Island and the revival of Aboriginal languages of the West Coast of South Australia. Hiroshi Nakagawa Address: 1–33 Yayoicho, Inage-ku, Chiba-shi 263–8522, Japan E-mail:
[email protected] Professor, Department of Eurasian Languages and Cultures, Chiba University. Linguistic description of Ainu and Nivkh and study of language contacts in the northern area of Japan have been his major works and now he is putting a great deal of effort into teaching Ainu to the Ainu people. Major publications include Field works on Ainu Language (1995 Tokyo: Taishukan Shoten), The Ainu-Japanese Dictionary: Chitose Dialect (1995 Tokyo: Sofukan), The World of Ainu Narratives (1997 Tokyo: Heibonsha), and Express Ainu Language (An Ainu textbook for beginners: 1997 Tokyo: Hakusuisha). Toshihide Nakayama Address: Research Institute for Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies, 3-11-1 Asahi-cho, Fuchu-shi, Tokyo 183-8534, Japan E-mail:
[email protected] Toshihide Nakayama is associate professor at the Research Institute for Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies (Japan). His publications include Nuu-chah-nulth (Nootka) Morphosyntax (2001, University of California Press), and two volumes of Ahousaht Nuuchahnulth texts with grammatical analysis (2003, ELPR Publication). He is currently involved in the project to edit Edward Sapir’s unpublished Nuuchahnulth textual materials for publication (Mouton de Gruyter). Osami Okuda Address: 11, Bunkyodai, Ebetsu-shi 069–8555, Japan E-mail:
[email protected] Associate Professor, Sapporo Gakuin University, B.A. (University of Tokyo), M.A. (Chiba University). Work in progress includes linguistic description of the Shizunai dialect of Ainu and research of Ainu heroic epics. Major Publications include (as a coauthor) Tradition of Shizunai District: Oral Literature Recounted by Suteno Orita vols. 1–5 (1991–1995 Shizunai: Shizunai Board of Education) and “On the Objectives of Linguistic Research on the Ainu”, in Matsumura ed. Studies in Endangered Languages: Papers from the International Symposium on Endangered Languages, Tokyo, November 18–20, 1995 (1998 Tokyo: Hituzi Shobo).
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Dory Poa Address: RCLT, La Trobe University, Bundoora, VIC 3086, Australia E-mail:
[email protected] Dory Poa received her PhD from Stanford University, California, USA, then taught in Taiwan and Hong Kong, and is now visiting at the Research Centre for Linguistic Typology, La Trobe University, Autralia. Her linguistics work has focused on the documentation and analysis of the Qiang, Rawang and Dulong languages.
Osamu Sakiyama Address: 7-31-1002, Chuo-1, Otsu, Shiga 520-0043, Japan. E-mail:
[email protected] Osamu Sakiyama is Professor Emeritus of Linguistic Anthropology at the University of Shiga Prefecture after serving professorship for nineteen years at the National Museum of Ethnology, Osaka. He specializes in the Austronesian languages, and has worked in Indonesia, Madagascar, Hainan, Micronesia and Papua New Guinea. He is the author of Studies of Minority Languages in the Western Pacific Rim, ELPR Publications Series C-006, 2003, and Comparative and Historical Studies of Micronesian Languages, School of Human Cultures, University of Shiga Prefecture, 2004.
Shinji Sanada Address: Department of Japanese Linguistics, Osaka University, 1–5 Machikaneyamacho, Toyonaka, Osaka 560-8532, Japan E-mail:
[email protected] Shinji Sanada is professor of Japanese linguistics at Osaka University. After completing his graduate studies at Tohoku University, he worked at the National Institute for Japanese Language before he came to Osaka University. He specialises in Japanese linguistics and sociolinguistics. His publications include Chiiki Gengo no Shakaigengogakuteki Kenkyu (Sociolinguistic studies of Japanese dialects) (1990), Shakaigengogaku Zushu (Japanese Sociolinguistics Illustrated) (1997). Hogen no Nihonchizu: Kotoba no Tabi (Japanese Maps of Dialects) (2002). Fumiko Sasama Address: Faculty of Informatics, Osaka Gakuin University, 2-36-1 Kishibe Minami, Suita 564-8511, Japan E-mail:
[email protected] Associate Professor at Osaka Gakuin University, Japan. She has worked on the phonology and morphology of the Coast Tsimshian language (Sm’algyax) spoken in British Columbia, Canada, since her graduate years at Hokkaido University and Kyoto University. Her work includes “A Descriptive Study of the Coast Tsimshian Morphology” (Kyoto University, 2001).
Tonya N. Stebbins Address: La Trobe University, Bundoora, VIC 3086, Australia E-mail:
[email protected] Tonya N. Stebbins has worked for several years with the Tsimshian Nation, on the Northwest Coast of Canada. She was awarded her PhD in Linguistics in 2000 at the University of Melbourne. Her PhD dissertation, Fighting language endangerment:
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community directed research on Sm’algyax (Coast Tsimshian), was published by in 2003, within The Endangered Languages of the Pacific Rim Project (ELPR A2-026). She has also compiled and published the Sm’algyax Learners’ Dictionary to support language maintenance. She has numerous publications in the areas of linguistic typology, discourse analysis, conversation analysis, orthography development, language endangerment, and lexicography. She is currently a lecturer in the Linguistics Program at La Trobe University conducting research on the Papuan languages of East New Britain, Papua New Guinea, with an aim to clarify the relationships among them and identify similarities between unrelated languages arising from language contact. To do this she is documenting several previously undescribed and endangered languages; concentrating initially on Mali Baining and Taulil. Her reference grammar, a comprehensive dictionary, and a text collection of Mali Baining will be published by Pacific Linguistics.
Shigeru Tsuchida Address: 4-42-1 Kugahara, Ota-ku, Tokyo 146-0085, Japan E-mail:
[email protected] Professor at Teikyo Heisei University. Born in Tokyo, 1934. Professor at Teikyo Heisei University (current); Curator, Shun’yi Museum of Taiwan Aborigines (1995–99); Professor at Tokyo University (1980–1995).Major Publications: Reconstruction of Proto-Tsouic Phonology. Tokyo: Institute of Languages & Cultures of Asia & Africa (1976). “Classificatory prefixes in Tsou.” Tokyo University Linguistic Papers’ 89:17–52 (1990).Pazih Dictionary. (joint work with Jen-kuei Li). Taipei: Institute of Linguistics, Academia Sinica (2001). Naomi Tsukida Address: 1522-3 Ibaragabazama, Kumabari, Nagakute, Aichi 480-1101, Japan E-mail:
[email protected] Born in Japan 1967. Assistant Professor at Faculty of Foreign Studies, Aichi Prefectural University Major Publication: Seediq. In Adelaar, A. and Himmelmann, N. (eds.), Austronesian Languages of Asia and Madagascar (2005). Toshiro Tsumagari Address: Graduate School of Letters, Hokkaido University, Kita 10, Nishi 7, Kita-ku, Sapporo 060-0810, Japan E-mail:
[email protected] Born in 1951. Graduated from the Fuculty of Letters, Hokkaido University in 1974. Completed the course of Linguistics of the Graduate School of Letters, Hokkaido University in 1976 (M.A. in Literature). Professor of Linguistics, Hokkaido University since 1998. Specialized in the descriptive and typological study of the Tungusic languages. Currently engaged in the field research of Udehe. Published a textbook Twenty Introductory Lessons on the Manchu Language (in Japanese, Tokyo: Daigaku Shorin, 2002). Yukio Uemura Address: 3-12-1, Harumi, Fuchu, Tokyo 183-0057, Japan E-mail:
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Yukio Uemura is a retired professor of Ryukyuan at Okinawa University. After graduating from Tokyo University, he worked at the National Institute for Japanese Language where he studied phonetics and dialectology. He became a professor at University of the Ryukyus where he established Okinawa Centre for Language Study. He conducted a number of researches on dialects of Ryukyu Islands. His publications include Okinawago Jiten (A Dictionary of Okinawan) (1963), Hogen to Hyojungo (Dialects and Standard Japanese) (1975).
Michael Walsh Address: Department of Linguistics, University of Sydney NSW 2006, Australia E-mail:
[email protected] Michael Walsh joined the Linguistics Department at Sydey University in 1982. Beginning fieldwork on Australian Indigenous languages in 1972 he has continued this interest to the present, mainly in northern Australia but more recently in New South Wales. Apart from the documentation and description of languages, he is particularly interested in lexical semantics, cross-cultural communication and the law. Currently he is involved in a team project documenting song traditions at Wadeye in the Northern Territory. At the same time he is developing a database for the languages of New South Wales.
Honoré Watanabe Address: Faculty of Economics, Kagawa University, 2-1 Saiwai-cho, Takamatsu 7608523, Japan E-mail:
[email protected] Professor at Kagawa University, Japan. He has worked on the language of the Sliammon people in British Columbia, Canada, spending two to three months every year since 1990 with the elderly speakers of the language. His recent publication includes A Morphological Description of Sliammon, Mainland Comox Salish, with a Sketch of Syntax (2003, ELPR Publication Series A2-040, Osaka Gakuin University), which is a revised version of his doctoral dissertaion at Kyoto University. Akira Y. Yamamoto Address: Department of Anthropology, 622 Fraser Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66045, U.S.A E-mail:
[email protected] Akira Y. Yamamoto, professor of anthropology and linguistics at the University of Kansas, has been active in bringing together language communities and professional communities for effective and long-lasting language and culture revitalization programs. He is a member of language teams of various Native American communities that have been engaged in projects such as documentation, language teacher training, and development of language programs such as preschool immersion centers. He chaired the Linguistic Society of America’s (LSA) Committee on Endangered languages and Their preservation, was a member of Ken Hale Chair Committee, the Executive Committee of the Society for the Study of Indigenous Languages of the Americas (SSILA), and he also co-chaired UNESCO Ad Hoc Expert Group on Endangered Languages.
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Yoshiho Yasugi Address: National Museum of Ethnology, Senri Expo Park, Suita, Osaka 565-8511, Japan Email:
[email protected] Professor at National Museum of Ethnology, Suita, Osaka. Publications: Native Middle American Languages: An Areal-Typological Perspective. National Museum of Ethnology, 1995; Materiales de lenguas mayas de Guatemala, 4 vols., ELPR A1-007a-d, 2003; “Fronting of Nondirect Arguments and Adverbial Focus marking on the Verb in Classical Yucatec,” IJAL, 71, 56–86, 2005. Yukihiro Yumitani Address: Department of Nursing, Miyagi University, 1 Gakuen, Taiwa-cho, Kurokawagun, Miyagi 981-3298, Japan E-mail:
[email protected] Yukihiro Yumitani is a professor of ESL and linguistics at Miyagi University (Japan). He has been involved since 1987 in the documantation of Towa, a Kiowa-Tanoan language spoken at Jemez Pueblo in New Mexico. His Ph.D. dissertation A Phonology and Morphology of Jemez Towa (University of Kansas, 1998) is a grammatical description of the Pueblo language. His current research includes an investigation into the contribution of Spanish loanwords to some linguistic diffusion among Southwestern languages.
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Index of Subjects
This index is in 4 parts—Subjects, Languages and Language Families, Person Names and Place Names. Figures, notes and tables are indexed as f, n, and t e.g. 210t, and tables on the same page as (a) and (b). ablative 195 Aboriginal Education Act 291 aboriginal languages Australia 121, 226, 230, 231, 250 Formosa 287–288, 292–293 Fuegian 214–215 Aboriginal Languages Syllabus (Australia) 232 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission (Australia) 98n, 223–224 Aborigine Equal Pay Act (Australia, 1964) 130 Aborigines, Australian see Australian Aborigines Aborigines Protection Law (Japan, 1899) 78 Aborigines (Taiwan) see Yuanzhumin academic linguists see linguists academic research(ers) 39, 111, 112 Academy of Mayan Languages 176, 179–180 accents Basque 31 Japanese dialects 357, 362 Kawesqar 211, 230 Ad Hoc Expert Group on Endangered Languages xiv, 159 Adam cycle 63 adaptation environmental 151–153, 158 strategies 149–150 adaptive 147 adjectives 170, 197 administrative languages 125, 131–133 Advocates for Indigenous California Language Survival 102, 457–458 AEA see Aboriginal Education Act aesthetic 13, 16–17, 154 Aesthetics 154 affiliative 381 affixes 378n agglutinative languages Ainu 377–378 Kawesqar 212 Tungusic 387–388 Pacific Coast of South America 193t, 194 Yahgan 216–218 agrarian society 10
Aheu people 305t, 322 AILDI see American Indian Language Development Institute Ainu Association of Hokkaido 379 Ainu Cultural Promotion Act (Japan, 1997) 78, 379 Ainu-English-Japanese dictionary and grammar (Batchelor) 380 Ainu people 18, 77–78, 153, 359, 377–379 Akha people 325–326, 327, 328 Akimel O’odham 461, 465–467t Alaska Native Language Center 21, 411, 415–417 Alaska Natives 410 alcoholism 214, 288, 388 alienable vs. inalienable possession 246, 387, 463 allative 195 allophones 112 alphabetization see writing systems alphabets see writing systems alternation 30, 33 see also mutation Amazonian linguistic type 192–193, 199 American anthropology 145 American demographic penetration 415 American Indian Language Development Institute (AILDI) 108, 109, 115, 472 American Indians see Native Americans American linguistics 40 priorities 21–22 American Philosophical Society 96, 154n analytical xiii Andean/Andine linguistic types 191–193, 193t, 194, 195, 199 animacy 197 Anökumene vii anthropology 73 see also American and Mexican anthropologies Anthropos alphabet 215n applicatives 378, 424 Arakanese people 323, 324 arbitrariness linguistic categorization 146 linguistic signs 152, 156, 157
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archives access 97–98, 101–102 endangered languages 94–99, 411, 496 principles of use 99–102 Archive of Indigenous Languages of Mexico 41n, 175 areal diffusion 184 areal features 56n see also linguistic areas Northwest Coast 420–425 Pacific Coast of South America 183–184, 192–193 Siberia 392 South-East Asia 334 Southwest United States 463–464 Trans-New Guinea phylum 249, 251 Arem people 305t, 322 arrogance 17, 159 articles 245, 254 articulation bilateral 153, 155–156, 157 double 155, 155n. 157–158 words 155–156 aspect marking 212–213, 217, 245, 252, 253, 255, 424, 478 aspiration 30n, 31, 156, 170, 194, 327 assimilation 85, 89, 307, 427 Ainu 78, 328 Alaska 412 Australia 85 California 452 Canada 86, 426–427 Micronesia 275 Middle America 174 Northwest America 426–428 Siberia 394–395 South-East Asia 320, 329 Taiwan 153, 290 Association to Promote Aboriginal Rights (Taiwan) see Yuanquanhui associative 195 Atlas Bahasa Tanah Maluku (Taber et al.) 274 Atlas of the world’s languages in danger of disappearing (Wurm) viii, ix, 271, 279 attitudes 70, 87, 200, 347, 416–417 see also language attitudes 465, 468–469 negative 69–70, 315, 341 normative 47–48 positive 89, 120 shift 416 audio device 382, 454 audio(-visual) recordings 18, 93n, 100, 104n, 349 augmentative 424 Australian Aborigines 222–223 Australian Indigenous Languages Framework 232 Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (Canberra) 98n
Austro-Altaic origin xii Austronesian-speaking peoples expansion 244 autobiographical text 392 see also texts ‘average-size’ language 10, 246 average total per language 23 Bad Godesberg Colloquium (2000) xiv Bancroft Library 98n, 454 barter, silent 126 beach community languages 124–125 Beagle, The (ship) 207–208 benefactive 195 Bible translation 5, 21, 42n, 293 bilateral articulation see articulation bilingual advantage 89 bilingual education 85, 87 Australia 211, 230 California 455–456 China 337, 348 Middle America 174, 176, 179 bilingualism xi, 47, 131–133, 140, 191, 269 China 339–343 and education 174, 178–179, 210 California 455–456, 457 Papua New Guinea 258–260 Taiwan 291–292 lingua francas 6 Middle America 171–172, 179 Northwest Coast languages 425–426 Pacific 269, 275, 277, 279 Pacific Coast of South America 188–189, 191 biolinguistic diversity 60 biological ecosystems vii–viii, 16, 150 see also ecosystems biology, research methods 14–15 biosphere 16–17 Bit people 319 boarding schools 127, 133, 135, 137, 388, 452 see also residential schools Boasian linguistics 95, 428–431 ‘grammar, texts, dictionary’ 19 see also GTD books see also textbooks and elicitation 55 Paleosiberian languages 396 bound forms and words (Hattori) 156n see also clitics bound word (clitic or non-clitic) phrases 156n. Brief description series 349 British missionaries 214 broadcasting 234, 293, 382 Bru people 316 Bulang nationality 318 Bunu people 314 Bunun people 290 Bureau of American Ethnology 454
index of subjects Bureau of Indigenous Affairs (CONADI) 209 Buyi nationality 310, 345 Californian Gold Rush (1849) 451–452, 454 Canadian Museum of Civilization 96, 98n Caolan people 310 career development, linguists 58–59 cartillas 174 cases 195–196 see also ablative; allative; dative; ergativity; genitive; locative; nominative-accusative; polative core 253 marking 192–194, 195–199, 225, 378 nominal 195, 217 oblique 193t Castilianization 173 Catalogue of the Ancient Texts of China’s Minority Nationalities Project 350 catastrophe, linguistic 4, 59 categorizations 146, 149 see also noun categorization Catholic Church 87 causative 196, 217, 253 CD-ROMs 234 Celtic peoples 88 Census, U.S. 408–410, 445 Cham people 307–308 chaos (diffuse continuum) 148 characters, Chinese see writing systems Chaw Thalee 310 Chilotans 209, 214n Chimú empire and people 189–190 Chinese Academy of Social Sciences 349–350 Chinese characters see writing systems Chinese migrants 308 Chrau people 317 Chut people 322 CIP see Council of Indigenous Peoples CIPL see Comité International Permanent de Linguistes circumfixes 387, 380 Civil Rights Movement 455 classification see also linguistic classification Ainu language 380 Australian languages 225–226 California 444, 451 China 271, 342, 343–349 Japanese 357 Kawesqar 208 Kuki-Chin-Naga languages 331–332 Middle American languages 165–171 Nivkh 371–372 Northwest Coast languages 420–425 Pacific 269, 277 Pacific Coast of South America 185–192 Palaeosiberian languages 393 Papuan languages 250–256 pidgins and creoles 124–130
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South-East Asia 79, 303, 309, 314, 317, 322, 327, 331–332 Southwest United States 461–464 Taiwan 290 Trans-New Guinea phylum 248–249, 250n Tungusic languages 389–390 Yukaghir 397–398 classification, language endangerment xiv–xv, 8–10 classification, speakers 49–52 Classification and index of the world’s languages (Voeglin) 5 classificatory verbs 254–255 Athabaskan 463–464 classifiers 185, 193t, 197, 250n, 254–255, 325 noun classifiers 197 clauses relative 31, 253 complement 31 clause chaining 255 see also switch reference clause linking 245, 255 see also switch reference clicks 33 clitics 156n, 378n see also enclitics; proclitics clitic phrases 157n cliticize 373n coastal migration theory xiv code-mixing 140, 289 code-switching 83, 140, 288–289 coevolution vii cognition 148, 154 environmental 148–150 cognitive anthropology 149 cognitive-ecological view 148 cognitive function 148 collaborative projects 72, 114 Collected works of Edward Sapir, The 99 collective art of thought (Sapir) 159 collective sharing 151 colloquialisms 378, 381 colonialism 131 colonization viii, 18, 270, 355 Burma 329 effect on language attitudes 47–48, 125–126, 129–130 Japanese policy 153 Micronesia 275 Middle America 173, 178 New Guinea 241 Pacific region 121–122, 268–269, 279 and pidginization 128 Western Pacific Rim 80–86 Comité International Permanent de Linguistes viii communicative function, language 144–145, 148, 153 communities attitude 48, 315, 465 commitment 11
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index of subjects
communities (cont.) empowerment 43, 71–72, 102, 107–116 experience of linguists 40, 42–44 language activists 47–48, 51 linguists’ role 57–58 training of community linguists 41, 56, 85, 101–102, 108–109, 111–113, 175–176, 215, 233, 363 comparative linguistics 19, 248, 267, 397 comparative linguists 246, 397 competence, level of 50–51, 257, 395, 399 competence, range shrinking 6 competent speakers 52, 208, 213, 287 compounding 212, 215, 217, 381 compounds, verb 156n, 217, 255–256, 381 compulsory concentration 374 CONADI see Bureau of Indigenous Affairs conative function, language 152n ‘conceptual categories’(Taylor) 149 ‘confirmatory’ function, language (Hale) 158 conjunct-disjunct person marking 198, 199 consonants Ainu 376 Australian languages 226 clusters 113–114, 420, 424, 434 Fuegian languages 211, 216 glottalized 170, 434 Hebrew 19 initial (word-) 30, 113–114, 249, 325, 373, 376 initial mutations 30, 33 Middle American languages 165, 170 Nivkh 373 Northwest Coast languages 420–424, 428, 434 Pacific Coast of South America 194 Papuan languages 249, 251–253 Potawatomi 113–114 transcription 19 consultants, language 49–50, 56n, 62–64, 65–68, 210, 455 contact languages 241 Australia 223 creoles 131–139 domains 126, 132f, 133f intensity of contact 131–134 pidgins 125–129 contact situations 32–33, 119–120, 269 Americas 128n Australia 223 California 451–452 China 271–272, 337–343 Melanesian Pidgin 121–122, 130–131 New Guinea 241, 245–246 and pidginization 123 South-East Asia 309–310 Contra War 61, 64n, 67, 71 convergence 145 ethnological 145n semantic 246
Southwest United States 463–464 typological 122 core participants 253 co-reference 217 cosmos (discretely classified world) 148 costs documentation 20, 22–23 Rama Language Project 70–71 Council of Indigenous Peoples (CIP) 290–291 Course in modern linguistics, A (Hockett) 215 creaky phonation 327 creoles xi boarding schools 127, 135 definition 119–120, 130–131 development 128–129 dynamics 131–134 life-cycle 123, 128–129, 131, 133, 138–139 Pacific 118–140 status 119–120 creolization vii, 123, 130, 135, 136, 139, 146 culture as adaptation strategy 148–149, 150–151 culture elements 151 and linguistic diversity 144, 145–146, 147–149, 158–160 culture areas (North America) xivn, 60–61, 145, 418, 426 curriculum design 110–111, 292, 433, 470, 472 standardization 348 cut-off age 409 Cyrillic alphabet 375, 395, 399 Dai nationality 311–312 Daimyo (feudal lords) 356 Darwinism, social 14 data collection 37, 40, 48, 53–55, 60, 71–73 elicitation 20–21, 55–56 endangered languages 43 field philological approach 99–105 last speakers 53–57 natural language use 54–55, 63 use of written records 91–105 video recordings 54–55, 416 dative 195 De’ang nationality 318 decimal counting system 197, 245 deforestation 11, 341–342 deictics 208, 212 delinquency 288 democratization 290 demography effect on language maintenance 28n, 415–416 and pidginization 121 demonstratives 217–218, 254 Department of Aboriginal Affairs see Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission
index of subjects Department of Orang Asli Affairs 272 dependent-head synthesis 373 descriptors, spatial 212 determiner tests 113–114, 255 diachrony 146 ‘dialect art’ 359n dialect variation 31–32, 467n dialects continuum 6, 186, 310 diversity 31–32, 179, 414 Japanese 355–365 division 357f revival 359–360 obsolescence 358, 359 variation 21, 31–32, 176 dictionaries 20–21 Ainu 380–382 Alaskan languages 411–415 Australian languages 227 Austronesian languages 268, 276 China 349–350 compilation 20–21, 85 ‘comprehensive’ 21–22, 458 costs 22 Etruscan 27 Formosan languages 294–297 GTD (grammar, texts, dictionary) 19, 39, 40, 175, 268, 411, 465 Japanese dialects 361–362 Middle American languages 165–180 minimum-size 21 New Guinea 256 Nivkh 375–376 Northwest Coast languages 430–432 projects 62,70 Ryukyuan 363–364 Siberian languages 392–400 digital recordings 104 diglossia 126, 137, 242, 258, 279, 312 diminutives 254, 424 Dirección General de Educación Indígena 174 direct functionality, language 152–153 direct objects 30, 254, 373 discourse 55n, 164, 195, 210 discrimination 47, 67n, 70, 379 Kawesqars 210 Middle America 179 disease 214, 257, 388, 426, 451, 470 skin 321 distributive 424 divergence vii, 146, 159 diversity, linguistic see linguistic diversity DNA 15, 28 documentation xii, xiv–xvii, 18–23, 25–34, 39–40 Ainu language 379–382 Alaskan languages 411–415, 416–417 audio and video recordings 18, 93n, 104n, 350
489
Australian languages 227–228 China 349–351 costs 22–23, 70–71 definition 25 formats 103–104 Fuegian languages 209–211, 214–216 Japanese dialects 361–362 linguists’ role 13, 18–19 Malay inscriptions 268 Middle American languages 173–177 Nivkh 375–377 Northwest Coast languages 428–434, 431t Pacific Coast of South America 187, 188, 191 Papuan languages 256 priorities 19–20, 21–22 record formats 103–104 Ryukyuan 362–364 South-East Asia 332–335 Southwest United States 471 and standardization 31–32 Taiwan 292–297 unpublished materials 94–99, 411, 454 use in revitalization projects 91–105 videorecordings 18, 93n, 104n, 428 Documentation of the Languages of Mesoamerica Project 175–176 domains see contact languages loss 44–45, 312, 394–395 domestic pidgins 131–133 dominant languages bilingualism 6 China xii, 339–343, 347–348 colonial xii, 48, 80, 85 Spanish 178–179, 191 vernacular 278 dominant society 7–8 double articulation see articulation Du Ponceau-Sapir-Greenberg tradition 154n duality 121–122, 254, 463 Dulong nationality 322–323, 344–345 E-MELD see Electonric Metastructure for Endangered Languages Data project ecology 119f, 341n, 442 ecology, linguistic see linguistic ecology economics, conflicts of interest 17–18, 337–343, 374 ecosystems vi, 150, 159 see also biological ecosystems; linguistic ecosystems Edo era (1603–1867) 355–356 see also Tokugawa era education see also schools Alaska 409–410, 415, 416 bilingualism 174, 210 California 455–458 China 346–349 Korea 78 language of instruction 134, 178–179 Mexico 174
490
index of subjects
education (cont.) Northwest America 426–428 Papua New Guinea 258–260 Taiwan 291–292 Education Law (China) 347 ejectives 211 Electronic Metastructure for Endangered Languages Data Project (E-MELD) 104 elicitation 19–20, 45, 53–54 direct 55–56, 56n, 63–64 and emotional loss 45–46 grammatical 63 literacy and 63–64 methodology 55–56 triggers 54–55 use of books 55 Ellis Phonotype 215n elongation, vowels 170 ELPR Project see Endangered Languages of the Pacific Rim Project emblematic function, language 27, 34, 43, 150, 152–153, 259, 269, 348–349, 434 Lummi 434 Mayan languages 178 Pitkern 137 Welsh 29 empowerment see communities encapsulating property, language 106, 150, 153, 158–159 enclitics 245 see also clitics; proclitics endangered languages vii–xvii Alaska 406–417 Australia 223–225 California 442–459 categorization xiv–xv, 8–10 causes xi China 337–351 communities 107 creoles 129–134, 138–140 definition ix, xv density ix–xiv, 246, 420 documentation 25–34, 43 fieldnotes 94–99 fieldwork 35–73 types of project 38–41 Fuegian 206–218 Japan 355–365, 371–382 Middle America 171–172 Northwest Coast 425–428 Pacific Coast of South America 183–185 Papuan 256–260 pidgins 123–124, 129–130 Siberia 387–400, 393–400 South-East Asia 301–335 Southwest United States 464–470 Taiwan 288–290 Tungusic 387–388, 390–391
Endangered languages (Robins and Uhlenbeck) 4 Endangered Languages of the Pacific Rim Project (ELPR, 1999–2004) xv–xvi, 15, 362, 364, 392 endangered species 7 environment adaptation 147, 150–151, 158 cognition 148–149 and linguistic diversity xi environmental deterioration, and linguistic extinction vii–viii epics 379, 380, 381 epidemics 214 ergativity 33, 195, 225–226 split-ergatives 193t Ersu people 343 escuelas mayas (Maya schools) 179 Estudios de lingüística chibca see Journal of studies of Chibchan linguistics 176 ethical argument 14 ethics 57–58, 72 and fieldwork 38n, 43–44, 71 and language revitalization 89, 111–113 ethnic identity 61, 153, 178–179, 427–428 see also emblematic function ethnicity 259, 343 see also under names of individual groups, e.g. Ainu people ethnography 95, 97 ethnolinguistics 54n, 148 ethnological convergence 145n Ethnologue (Grimes, Gordon) ix, x Californian languages 445, 450–451 languages of China 339n Middle American languages 165n, 171, 177 number of languages 5–6 number of speakers 10–11 Papua New Guinea 33n ethno-X-ology 149 Etruscan inscription 18 European colonization 121n, 268, 270 Australia 221 European invasion, South America 184–185, 189 Europeans 426 beachcomber communities 138 and domestic servants 127 effect on indigenous population 214, 418, 426, 442, 451–452 effect on language attitudes 129–130 evangelization viii, 214 evidentiality systems 15, 185, 196–197, 255 exaptive 147 expeditions viii expletives 156, 157, 157n expulsion (ethnic) 11 extinct languages 3–24, 226–227 definition xv
index of subjects nearly ix, x Pacific Coast of South America 189–191 families, small xi, xiii fashionable words 152n FATSIL (Federation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Languages) 234 fieldnotes (materials, records) 42–43, 54, 91–105, 362, 364, 376, 454 formats 103–104 field philology 93 fieldwork 35–73 and ethics 38n, 43–44 good practice 44n, 102–104 methodology 42–57, 112 philological approach 99–105 practical difficulties 60–71 social gatherings 54–55 use of technology 54–55 written records 91–105 First Nations Language Program (Canada) 433 First tier inland ix First Voices Project (Canada) 234 fluent speakers, definition 51 focus marking 388 folie (Foucault) 159 folk taxonomy 149, 380 folklore 88, 359n, 363, 364, 376–377, 380, 382, 392, 399–400 folktale 370–382, 396, 399–400 food production, effect on society 10 forced assimilation 86 California 452 Middle America 172 Northwest America 426–428 forced migration, China 339–343 see also relocation forced name change 153 form feeling 157 formhood see words fourth person (logophoric) 378 Franciscans 471 Franz Boas collection 96 fricatives 193t, 194, 211, 216, 251, 420 Full Name Registration Law (Taiwan, 2000) 291 functionality direct 147–148, 152–153 of language 146, 149–153 vs. less diversity 150–151 Gaoshan national minority (Taiwan) 80 Gedou people (Ge) 314 gender see grammatical gender genealogy, linguistic see genetic affiliation General Bureau of Indigenous Education 174 Genesis (Bible) 149, 152 genetic affiliation see linguistic affiliation
491
genetic diversity see linguistic diversity genetic units x, xii genitive 170, 195, 196, 212 genocide 7, 11, 172, 226, 257, 451 Geological Survey of Canada 94 ghost speakers 53n GIDS see Graded Intergenerational Disruption Scale globalization 11, 341 and language loss 136, 268–269, 351 glossary 74, 349 glossematic 155 glottalization 156 consonants 170 obstruents 420, 434 resonants (sonorants) 420, 434 stops 420n, 463 see also ejectives Gold Rush (California, 1849) 451–452, 454 good practice, in fieldwork 44, 44n Graded Intergenerational Disruption Scale (GIDS) 226 gradient past tense 212–213 gradual death 257 grammars 15, 19–22, 55, 110, 424 see also Language Revitalization Reference Grammar Alaskan languages 22, 411–415 Australian 227 costs 22–23 Eten language 190 and fieldnotes 103 Formosan 294–297 Fuegian 211n, 215 Melanesian 276 Middle American languages 174–177 New Guinea 249, 256 Pacific Coast of South America 187, 188 pedagogical 110–111, 400 Rama 63, 70 reference 211 Yukaghir 400 grammatical gender attrition 32 marking 33, 193t, 197, 217, 250n, 253–254 Welsh 29–30 grammatical relations 185 Green book of language revitalization in practice, The (Hinton and Hale) 40 grooves, thought 149n group identity, role of language 88–89 GTD (grammar, texts, dictionary) 19, 39, 40, 175, 268, 411, 465 documentation grading for Alaskan languages 411–415 Gumbaynggir people 232 Hakka people 286 Han Chinese 285–286, 290, 293, 337, 341, 345–346
492
index of subjects
Handbook of American Indian Languages (Boas) 294 Hani nationality 325, 327 harpoon heads (Eskimo) 147, 151n Havasupai community 467–470 Hawaiians 86–87 head marking 170, 193t, 194 head-modifier languages 170–171 Hearst Museum of Anthropology 454 Heilongjiang Manchu Research Institute 392 historical linguistics 378 Hokkaido Ainu 153 Hokkaido Museum of Northern Peoples 376 Holo people 286 homelands 130, 131, 270 linguistic 279, 406 Hsaloun people 310 Htin people 319 Hualapai community 469–470 Hui nationality 309–310 Huililiches 208–209 human-centred ecosystem 150 human prehistory 4, 10, 27–28 human rights 14, 71 language rights 61, 77, 87, 119 ‘hundred linguists working a hundred years’ 16 hunter-gatherers xi, 10, 319, 395, 467 ‘ice-free corridor’ theory xiv identity see ethnic identity ideographic 157n idiosyncrasies, of languages 33, 119, 146, 157–158 illiteracy, and elicitation 55, 56, 63 immersion programmes 9, 21, 29, 30, 31, 44, 86 107–108, 109, 292, 417, 457, 458, 467, 471, 472 immigrants, Japan 355, 361 implosive, voiced 194 inalienable possession 387, 463 Inca conquest 189 Incas 190 inclusive-exclusive distinction 122, 246 inclusive first person plurals 121–122, 138, 246, 378n incorporation see noun incorporation indefinite person 378n Independent Department of Indian Affairs 173 Indian Country Today 107 Indians 130 Indians, American see Native Americans Indigenous Law (Chile, 1993) 210 indirect functionality 146, 147–148, 151–152 Indonesians 82–83 industrialization 11 inferior vs. superior languages 13–14, 120
instrumental function 144, 147–148 intelligibility 6 intensive 424 inter-village trade languages 128 intergenerational transmission xv, 7–10, 12–13, 44, 78, 86 Ainu 379 Australia 221, 230 Northwest Coast 425–428 Southwest U. S. 464–465 Taiwan 289 interlanguages, idiosyncratic 119 intermarriage, effect on language maintenance 87, 277–278, 410 International Decade of the World’s Indigenous People (1995–2004) viii International Expert Meeting on UNESCO Programme Safeguarding of Endangered Languages (2003, Paris) xiv International Symposium on Endangered Languages (Tokyo, 1995) Internet 26, 98, 234 intuitive knowledge 157 irrealis 252 isolates x–xiii see also language isolates California 444–446, 449, 463 China 339 documentation 20, 165 New Britain 250 New Guinea 239, 243, 246, 250, 253, 255, 257 Pacific Coast of South America 183–184 isolating languages 156, 157n, 243 isomorphism 155n iterative 424 Itta (group) 374 Japanese immigrant communities 355 jargon-pidgin-creole cycle see creole life-cycle Jesuits 137, 379, 471 Jingpo nationality 331 Journal of studies of Chibchan linguistics (Estudios de lingüística chibca) 176 Kamchatkan expeditions 396 Kam-Sui nationality 310 Kanakanavu people 287, 295 Karen people 329 Katang people 316 Katu (Kantu) people 316 Kaurna Plains School (Australia) 231 Kavalan people 287, 290, 291, 295 Kawesqars 207–213 urban 208–209 Keresen pueblo communities 463, 467 Kesen-go New Testament (Yamaura) 362 Kesenese orthography 362 Kha Bit people 305, 319
index of subjects Khang people 319 Khao people 319 Khasi people 321 Khmer empire 321 Khmu people 319 kinship systems 15 Klor people 316 Koho people 317 koinés 123, 128 Koreans 78, 153 Korean War 125 Koreo-Japanic relationship xiii Koryak people 394, 395 Kriang people 316 Kuna people 185n Kuy people 316 Kyoto Conferences (2000–2002) xviii La Trobe University xvii, 333, 350, 351 Research Centre for Linguistic Typology i, 256 Laba people 314 Lachik people 324 Ladinos 178, 179 Lahu nationality 325, 326, 328 land rights 78, 85 language and culture 144, 145–146, 147–149 functions see communicative; confirmatory; conative; direct; emblematic; encapsulating (property); phatic (communion); poetic; socialization of identity see emblematic function languages see also individual languages and language families in Languages and Language Families Index agglutinative 194–199, 212, 217, 378, 387 convergence 123, 246, 463 idiosyncrasies 33, 119, 146, 157–158 interlanguages 119 isolating 156, 157n, 243 legal status 346 see also national languages median-size 10 polysynthetic 154, 156n, 193t, 252, 254, 424 size distribution 10–12 standardization 31–32 synthetic 193t, 194, 211, 217, 252 total numbers 5–6, 6t language activists 47–48 language attitudes xi, 13, 29, 37, 42, 44, 46–49, 69–77, 87–88, 108, 112, 246, 272, 287–288, 315, 361, 468t, 469t, 473 California 455–456 China 272, 341 ‘colonial ideology’ 120 colonization 47–48, 125–126 family’s 289
493
negative 32, 47, 69, 88–89, 189, 214t, 242, 315 normative 47–48 New Guinea 246 Northwest America 427–428 pidgins and creoles 119–120, 139 positive 32, 216 Southwest United States 464–465, 468t, 469t language attrition 26, 29, 32, 51, 53, 121, 129 loss of dialect diversity 31–32 language change xii, 32–33 and standardization 47–49 use of written materials 97 language characteristics, loss of 29–34 language communities see communities language consultants 49–50, 56n, 62–64, 64–68 language contact 27, 32–33, 119–120, 132–133, 269 Americas 128n Australia 221–223, 227 California 451–452 language and dialect, definition 5 China 337–343 Melanesian Pidgin 130–131 New Guinea 241, 245–246 and pidginization 121–122, 123–124, 127, 135 Siberia 397 South-East Asia 309–310, 334 Southwest United States 463 Tsat 271–272 language deceleration 414, 416 language documentation see documentation language domains, loss 44–45, 312, 394–395 language education Burmese 82 curriculum 348 nationalization 358 New Guinea 259–260 Soviet native 391 training in 472 language endangerment viii–xviii, 144–160 Alaska 406–417 Australia 223–225 causes xi, 9–12 China 337–351 classification/categorization xiv–xv, 8–10 creoles 129–134, 138–140 degree 20, 279, 331, 425, 464 Siberia 390–391, 393–394, 398–399 definition ix density ix–xiv documentation 25–34, 43 see also fieldnotes fieldwork 35–73 types of project 38–41 loss prevention 12–13 Middle America 171–172
494
index of subjects
language endangerment (cont.) Northwest Coast languages 425–428 Pacific Coast of South America 185 Papuan languages 256–260 pidgins 123–124, 129–130 Siberia 387–400 South-East Asia 301–335 Southwest United States 464–470 Taiwan 288–290 Tungusic languages 387–388, 390–391 language extinction 3–23, 185, 226–227 attitudes 13–18 Language Files Project (China) 349 language isolates, Siberia 393, 397 language learning materials see teaching materials; textbooks language loss 11–19, 226–228, 451–453 language maintenance Alaska Native language 415 arguments for 14–18, 87–89 attitudes 8–9, 341 Australian languages 85, 228–234 children 7–10 government support 346–347 Koreans in China 78 and war 61, 135–136 language nest (te kohanga reo) 86 language obsolescence 189, 257, 298 see also language endangerment language of instruction 134, 346, 457 bilingual programmes 178–179 Language of Matsumae, The 379 language ownership 48, 111–113, 429 language policy v, viii, 77–89 China 80, 269, 346–349 Eastern Pacific Rim 86–87 Indonesia 273 Japan 358 Papua New Guinea 259–260 Southern Pacific Rim 82–86 Southwest United States 471 Western Pacific Rim 77–82 language preservation 25–28, 31–32, 40 language recovery/revitalization/revival 9–10, 26–28, 32–34, 39–40 Ainu 78, 379 attitudes 87–88, 107–108, 114–116 Australian languages 229–235 California 455–458 community-based 457, 470 community involvement 110–111 Mayan languages 179–180 place names 229 role of schools 26, 30, 89 Siberia 396, 399–400 Southwest United States 471–472 Taiwan 290–293 use of written records 91–105 Welsh 28–32
Language Revitalization Reference Grammar (LRRG) 110–113 language rights 61, 77–89 China 346–347 Eastern Pacific Rim 86–87 pidgins and credes 119 Southern Pacific Rim 82–86 United Nations recognition 14, 83 Western Pacific Rim 77–82 language shift 44–50 Australia 224 California 451–453 China 339–343 loss of domains 44–45 Middle America 171–172 Papua 257 language and schools 87, 358 language size 10–12 language status 13–14, 397 Ainu 379 Alaska 409, 410–411 California 442–451 creoles 134 Eastern Pacific Rim 86–87 Fuegian 208–209, 213–214 Japan 359–360, 362 Pacific region 279–280 Southern Pacific Rim 83–84 Southwest United States 464–470 language suppression see suppression language teacher training 232–234, 433 language teaching 108–110, 115–116, 471– 472 see also immersion programmes; language nest (te kohanga reo) language teaching materials 110–111 primers 211, 392, 399 language transmission Australia 85, 224, 231–232 intergenerational xiv–xv, 86 Taiwan 289 language vitality xvn, 258–259 Australia 222f, 223–225 creoles 129–134 deterioration 426 evaluation xiv–xv, 43, 49, 339, 450, 464 pidgins 123–125, 129–130 Southwest United States 464–470 Language Vitality and Endangerment xiv last speakers 45 data collection 53–57 Kawesqar 211 social identity 53n Latin alphabets 375, 395 Lau Remedies (1952) 456 Lawa people 318, 324, 328 learning, language of see language of instruction legends 95, 173 Lenguas de Panama (Instituto Nacional de
index of subjects Cultura and Instituto Lingüístico de Verano) 177 lexemes, elicitation 20–21 lexical affixes 424 lexical change 319 see also relexification lexical creativity 21, 31–32, 157n lexical numbers 217 lexicon 27 and environment 147, 149 Kawesqar 211 lexifier languages 122–123, 128, 134, 139 see also relexification lexigraphic 157n life-cycle, creolization see creoles LINA see Linguistic Institute for Native Americans lingua franca(s) (lingue franche) xi, 6 bilingualism 6 Mandarin 288–289, 340 Melanesia 279–280 New Guinea 241–242, 243 South-East Asia 331 Southern Pacific Rim 83–84 Tetun 83 linguists academic 33 career development 58–59 fieldworkers 57–60 relationships with communities 40, 42–44 role in language maintenance 12–13, 18–19 linguistic affiliation 27–28, 56n, 159, 303–307 Ainu 377 California 377 New Guinea 243–250, 464–465 Nivkh 377 Northwest Coast 420 Pacific Coast of South America 183–185, 199 Paleosiberian languages 393 South-East Asia 303–307 Southwest United States 461–463 Tibeto-Burman languages 322 Tungusic languages 389–390 linguistic anthropology 149, 280 linguistic areas 122, 192, 246, 249, 463–464 Linguistic Atlas of Japan (National Language Research Institute) 358–359 linguistic classification 148, 149 linguistic diversity vii–xiv, 60 see also genetic diversity Amazonia 185 backgrounds 145–146, 150–152, 157–158 decline 144–160 definition vii densest areas 11 effect of language attrition 32–34
495
erosion x genuine xi importance to science 14–16, 27–28, 158–160 link with biological diversity vii–viii, 16–17, 144 New Guinea xii, 239–260 Northwest Coast 420, 421–422 Pacific Coast of South America 183–185, 200 Papua New Guinea 256–260 and prehistory 27–28 Southwest United States 460–473 linguistic ecology 122, 124, 129, 150, 159 linguistic ecosystems 16, 150 linguistic extinction vii, ix, x, xii see also language extinction linguistic fieldwork 35–73 Linguistic Institute for Native Americans (LINA) 472 linguistic methodology see fieldwork methodology linguistic morphology see morphology linguistic rediversification vii Linguistic Society of America (LSA) viii, 22 linguistic signs 152, 156, 157 linguistic strata 270, 280 linguistic test 113–114 definition 113 linguistic units see words linguistics see also Boasian linguistics; comparative linguistics; ethnolinguistics American linguistics 21–22, 40 ‘genuine object of ’ (Kono) 154 synchronic linguistics 39 Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area 351 Lisu nationality 325 literacy 8, 242, 259 China 348 and language revitalization 62, 292–293 Middle American languages 173 Tok Ples programmes 259–260 Tungusic languages 391–392 literacy, effect on language maintenance 7–8 loan words 83, 185, 208, 214n, 371 see also lexifier languages locative 193t, 195–196 locutor-non-locutor person marking 197n logographic 157n logophoric see fourth person logosphere 16–17, 150, 159–160 Lolo people 323, 325, 326, 350 see also Yi nationality loss, emotional 44–46 loss prevention 25–28 linguists’ role 12–13 loss reversal 9–12, 13–17, 31–34 Welsh 28–32
496
index of subjects
LRRG see Language Revitalization Reference Grammar LSA (Linguistic Society of America) viii, 22 Lua people 318 Lummi people 433–434 lumping (phylum) x, 444 Ma people 317 magical spells 152 Maingtha people 324 maintenance see language maintenance Manchu studies 392 market economy 145, 347 market languages 279–280 mass language extinction 3–24 mass media 11, 293, 342, 353 mass nouns 217 massacres 46, 452 master-apprentice model (language teaching) 40n, 64n, 86, 457–458, 471 Masterpieces of the Intangible Heritage of Humanity 159 Matsumae no Kotoba 379 Matsumae regional feudal lords (Japan) 77–78 Maya people 172, 176–179 Maya Revitalization Movement 177 median-size languages 10 Meiji era (1868–1912) 358, 364, 378 mestizos 61 metatypy (Ross) 32 Mexican anthropology 173 Miao nationality 314, 339 migration see also coastal migration theory China 339–343 Mongoloid ix military pidgins 125 minority languages 77–78 Alaska 416–417 China 337–351 legal status 346–347 Northwest Coast 425 Pacific region 270–280 revival 88, 89 Siberia 388–389, 395 South-East Asia 334–335 status of 7–8 Western Pacific Rim 81–82 Minzu Yuwen (Nationality Languages) 349 mirativity 196 Mishmi people 322 mismatches 451, 453 missions 127–128 Australia 136 California 451–452 creoles 135–136 era 451, 453 language 132–133
missionaries, as linguists 42n, 173, 214–215, 379–380 Mlabri people 305, 319 Mnong people 317 modifier-head languages 170–171 Mon people 320 Monash University, Department of Linguistics 228 money economy xi Mongolians 339, 340 mongoloid ix, 267 monolingualism 50, 145 see also bilingualism; multilingualism attitudes 145 China 340–341, 342 Guatemalan languages 177 Indonesia 82–83 Japan 361 Pacific Coast of South America 188–189 Wales 28 monosyllabic xiii, 190, 271 moribund languages 7 definition ix, xv Rama Language Project 60–71 morphemes 96, 101, 424 morphology Ainu language 378 articulation 155–156 diversity and idiosyncracy 146, 157, 159 Fuegian languages 212, 217–218 Nivkh 372 Northwest Coast languages 424–425 Oceanic 32 Pacific Coast of South America 195–196 Papuan languages 252–255 Tungusic 387–388 morphosyntax 46, 377–378, 424, 430t Mosuo people 343 mother tongues 80–82, 409, 425 multiculturalism 211 multilingualism xi, xv, 145, 211 see also bilingualism; monolingualism attitudes 145 Australia 224 China 340–341 Indonesia 273–274 Melanesian 130–131, 269, 270, 277, Northwest Coast 425 Papua New Guinea 123–128, 242 Solomon Islands 277–278 Southern Pacific Rim 270 Muong people 321 music 40, 293, 359n, 377 mutation 30, 30n, 33 mutual intelligibility 187, 274, 314, 467 Bible translation 5 Chinese 80 mythical past 213 myths 63, 95, 173
index of subjects naming forced name changes 153 places 152, 229 narrative skills 55n, 56–57 narrative texts 46, 54–55, 63, 95 nasals 194, 211, 216, 251 see also (prenasal) stops Bisoid languages 328 nasal mutation 30 nasal vowels 194 nasalization 30, 156, 170, 211, 251 contrastive 193, 194 National Aboriginal Languages Program (Australia) 230 National Anthropological Archives (Washington) 98n National Language Commission of China 350 National Language Research Institute (Japan) 358 national languages 8 pidgins as 134 Pacific Rim 62, 78–84, 88, 89, 107, 134, 174, 243, 273, 312–315, 323, 358 National Minorities Commission (China) 350 National Museum of Man (Ottawa) 96 nationalities policies China 79, 80, 343–349 East and South-East Asia 79 Soviet Union 78–79 Western Pacific Rim 78–79 Native American Languages Act (USA,1990– 1992) 21, 457–458 Native Americans 107–114, 114–115, 426, 451–453 and language revitalization 111–116, 455–458 native linguists see community native speakers see speakers native teachers 108–109, 111 native writers 414–415 natural language use, data collection 54–55 Navajo Nation 465, 466t, 472 Naxi people 343 negation test, Potowatomi 113–114 neologisms 21, 31–32 new languages, discovery 5–6 New found minority languages in China 350 new speakers 30–32, 111, 456 new technologies 26 Ngeh people 316 nicknames, of reindeer 395 Nivkh people 373 nominative-accusative 193t, 195–196, 217 non-clitics 156n non-linguistic world see reality non-speakers 47, 53, 111, 472 see also speakers normative attitudes see attitudes northern minorities ix noun categorization 197–199
497
noun classes 247, 253, 254 noun incorporation 154n, 378, 381n, 388, 424, 463 nouns and verbs, distinction of 424 Nu nationality 322–323, 344–345 number (system) 188, 195, 253 numbers 197, 217, 245 number of languages vii, xi, 5–6, 191 breakdown by continent 6t number of speakers 7–8, 10–11, 189, 189n, 200, 224 numberless (uncountable) 217 Nung people 304, 310–311 Nungven people 313 Nuuchahnulth people 94–97 Nyahkur people 305, 320 objects, direct see direct objects oblique case markers 193t OCLS see Okinawa Centre for Language Studies odul (Kolyma Yukaghirs) 397 official languages 85, 241, 309 see also national languages Okinawa Centre for Language Studies (OCLS, Japan) 363–364 Okinawan theatres 360 Oklahoma Native Language Association 114 OKMA (Oxlajuuj Keej Maya Ajtz’iib) 41n, 176 omoro (Ryukyuan oral literature) 364 Ong people 316 O’odham people 465, 467t oral traditions 45, 53, 364 Adam cycle 63 and elicitation 56 Kawesqar 208 Northwest Coast 433 Palmerston Island 137 Tayo 135 of vowels and prosody (Hebrew) 19–20 Orang Asli (original people, Malaysia) 82, 272 Orang Laut 310 Original Nations (Canada) 86 orthographies see writing systems Pacific Linguistics 256 Pacoh people 316 pancasila (five pillars) 82 pandanus language 258 Pasing people 305t, 319 passive 196, 217 passive knowledge 51, 214n, 216, 320, 359n pastoral industry 223 pause, potential 156 Pear people 305t, 320–321 Pecherays (Alikhoolip) 207–208 pedagogical materials 21, 41n, 400, 411 Peipo people 286–287
498
index of subjects
‘period of equilibrium’ (Dixon) xii Permanent International Committee of Linguists viii, 4 person marking 197–200, 378, 381 conjunct-disjunct 198, 199 locutor-non-locutor 197n personal clitics 378n see also clitics personal narratives see narrative texts personal pronouns 195, 217, 249 phatic communion 152n philology field philological approach 99–105 and fieldwork 92–94 Phin people 326 phonemes 194 articulation 155–156 Fuegian languages 211–212, 216 inventory 33 liquid 193t phonetic symbols 433 phonetics 376–377, 420n, 424 Nivkh 375 transcription 91 phonographic 157n phonology articulation 155 attrition 30 Australian languages 225–226 change 33 Fuegian languages 211–212, 216 Middle American languages 165, 170 Northwest Coast languages 432t, 434 Pacific Coast of South America 187, 194–195 Papuan languages 251–252 Phuang people 316 Phula people 306t, 325–326, 328 Phunoi see Sinsali people phylogenetic diversity vii, xii, xiii California 444–445 New Guinea xii, 243–250 Northwest Coast languages xiii, 420–425 Southwest United States 461–463 pictionaries 111 pidgins xi, 119–140 Australia 123, 124, 130 and colonization 128 contact situations 121–122, 127 definition 119–120 development 128–129 domestic 127, 133 life-cycle theory 138–139 linguistic ecology 122 military 125 missions 135 Pacific 84–85, 118–140, 270 shopkeeper 125 sign language 120
social classification 124–127 status 119–120 study of 119 Tok Pidgin xi, 84, 134 trade 126 pitch accent Basque 31 Japanese dialects 357, 362 place names 96 see also individual places in Place Name Index Ainu 377 Australia 231 Pacific Coast of South America 189 recording of 66, 96 South-East Asia 311 spelling of 178 planes, expression and content 155–156 plantation creoles 121, 129–130, 133 pluralism see multiculturalism plurals inclusive first person 121–122, 378n marking 195 pronouns 121–122, 461 verbs 212 poetic function, language 152n poetry, Ainu epic 382 polygenetic formation xiii polyglossia 126 see also diglossia polysemy 196 polysynthesis 154n, 372 polysynthetic languages xiv, 154, 156n, 193t, 252, 254, 372, 424 non-slot type 156n possession 195 alienable vs. inalienable 387, 463 marking 254 nouns 170, 381 pronouns 30, 463 post-Columbian era viii postpositional languages 170, 378 potentially endangered languages x definition xv prayers, Ainu 379, 381 precontact population xi prefixes 193t, 195, 252 Ainu 378 Australian languages 225 Middle American languages 170 Nivkh 373n Southwest United States 463 Tungusic languages 387–388 vs. proclitics 195, 217, 245 Yahgan 217 prefixing type 225 prenasal see stops present and non-present tenses 195 primary data see data collection primers 211, 392, 399 see also pedagogical grammars
index of subjects primitive languages 13, 47, 69, 215n primordial function, language 148–149, 149–150 prioritization, linguistic work 20, 23, 411 proclitics 195, 217 see also clitics; prefixes Project for the Documentation of the Languages of Mesoamerica 175–176 prolative (case) 195 pronouns 195 dual 121–122 inclusive first person 121–122 personal 195, 217, 249 plurals 121–122 possession 30, 246, 463 Welsh 29–30 Yahgan 217–218 prosody 19, 156, 194 Proyecto Lingüístico Francisco Marroquín 176 psychological reality 157 public awareness viii, 13 Public Education Secretariat (Secretaría de Educación Pública; SEP) 173–174 Publications on Tungus languages and cultures 392 pueblos 460, 461, 468, 471 see also Place Names (Acoma Pueblo, Ana Pueblo, Cochiti Pueblo, Hopi Pueblo, Keresan Pueblos, Laguna Pueblo, San Felipe Pueblo, Santo Domingo Pueblo, Zia Pueblo, Zuni Pueblo) seven 467 Pula people 306t, 328–329 Pumi nationality 345 Pupeo people 304t, 313 purposiveness 150–153 Qiang people 342–344, 348, 350 radio 360 Rama Language Project (RLP) 60–71 costs 70–71 Rama people 61 ‘tiger people’ 67n, 69–70 Rawang people 322–323, 344–345 re-syllabification 113–114 reading see literacy reality (realia), perception of 15, 147–148, 151 reciprocal marking 245, 373n recognised languages see national languages Recommendations for Action Plans xiv, xvii recorded data 100 see also data collection recordings see audio recordings; video recordings format of 103–104 Red book (UNESCO) 7, 390n reduplication 217, 252, 387–388, 424, 463 see also areal features reference grammars 211 see also grammars
499
referential systems 151–152 regional languages 7–8, 8–9 reindeer herding xi reindeer nicknames 395 relative clauses 31 relexification 123 see also lexical change religious argument 17 relocation, population 78, 130, 136, 275, 319, 334, 342, 453 see also forced migration rememberers 51, 52, 53, 64, 67, 414 see also terminal speakers definition 51 renmen-style see writing systems researchers see linguists residential schools 395, 426–427, 433, 452 see also boarding schools residual area, definition 442 ritual pandanus language (New Guinea) 258 RLP see Rama Language Project RRme people 344 Saaroa people 287, 290, 296 safe languages 4, 7–8, 8–9, 175, 464 definition xv sandhi phenomena 156, 373 Sandinista Revolution (Nicaragua) 61, 71, 176 Sanqiao people 314 Saoch people 321 Saussurian ‘valeurs’ 156 schools see also boarding schools; residential schools; education Alaska 409–410, 415, 416 and assimilation 89 Australia 230, 231–232 California 455–456 Chile 209 China 340n, 342, 346, 348–349 English-only 86, 135 Guatemala 178 immersion 29, 457 Indonesia 273 Japan 359, 361 and language loss 87, 358 Middle America 179–180 New Guinea 258–260 Northwest America 426–428 pidgins 127 Rama Language Project 64n, 67 role in language revival 26, 30, 89 Sakhalin Island 374 Siberia 392, 395–396, 399 Southwest United States 464, 467, 470–471 Thailand 82 science, importance of linguistic diversity to 14–16, 27–28, 158–160 sea nomads 273
500
index of subjects
semi-speakers 45, 51, 52n, 53, 54, 67–68, 72 see also rememberers; speakers Burmic languages 324 definition 51 and elicitation 56 Kawesqar 208–209 Rama Language Project 62 role in language revival 26, 43 Yahgan 213 serial verbs (serialization) 217, 252–253 seriously endangered languages, definition xv Serui people 276–277 severely endangered languages 306n, 311, 330 shamanistic incantations 152 shopkeeper pidgins 125–126, 134 Siberian peoples 388–389, 390–391, 393–394, 397–399 sign-content 155 sign-expression 155 sign languages, pidgin 120 Sila people 306t, 325–326, 328 silent barter 126 Simon Frazer University 433 Singpho (Jinghpaw) 331 Sinicization 286, 288, 294, 341 Sinsali people 306t, 325–326 Smithsonian Institution 428 So people 316, 322 social gatherings, in fieldwork 54–55, 66 socialization 152–153, 257, 471 society and food production 10 and minority languages 7–8 socioeconomics factors xiii, 8, 200 sociolinguistic factors community division 69–70 Southwest United States 465–470 Yukaghir 398–399 songs, language of 206, 360 sonorants 194, 420, 463 sound recordings 382 sound systems see phonology Soviet native language education 391 speakers see also competent speakers; last speakers; new speakers; non-speakers; semi-speakers identification of 62, 64, 67 numbers of 7–8 typology 49–52, 288–289 spelling conventions 121 see also traditional spelling Bislama 134 English 157n Guatemalan languages 176 Indonesian 82–83 Kawesqar 212t Mayan 171n, 178 split-ergative system 193t St. Petersburg Archive of the Russian Academy of Science 375
stability 151–152, 158 stabilization 258, 414 stable yet threatened languages, definition xv standardization 31–32, 51, 179, 293 China 351 Japanese 358–359 and language change 47–49 Qiang 349 status of language 13–14, 397 Ainu 379 Alaska 409, 410–411 California 442–451 creoles 134 Eastern Pacific Rim 86–87 Japan 359–360 Kawesqar 208–209 Pacific region 279–280 Southern Pacific Rim 83–84 Southwest United States 464–465 unique 148 Yahgan 216 Stieng people 317 stops aspirated 170, 194, 327 glottalized 420n, 434, 463 prenasal 170, 251, 328 voiced 194, 251, 328 voiceless 194 stress 156, 194, 251 Su-ung people 321 Suai people 303t, 316, 317 subject co-references 217 subject-verb-object 170–171, 270 subordination 15, 31, 217 subsistence xi, 48, 147, 149 agriculture 150, 259 substratum languages 121–122, 124, 171–172 Ainu 362 Austronesian 244 influence on dominant language 51, 245 sudden death, languages 257 suffixation 195, 212, 217, 225, 373 suffixes 156n, 193t, 195–196, 197, 211–212, 252, 254 Australian languages 225 Middle American languages 170 New Guinea 245–246 Nivkh 372–373 Tungusic languages 387–388 Yahgan 217 suffixing type 225 exclusively 195, 385 Summer Institute of Linguistics (SIL) 5, 173–174, 233, 242, 256, 259 archives 239n superior/inferior languages see inferior vs. superior languages superstratum languages 121, 122–123, 124 suppletive verb stems 217
index of subjects suppression viii, xi, 172 see also assimilation Survey of California and Other Indian Languages 454 surveys, areal ix, xiii, xv, xvi ‘survival of the fittest’ 14, 257, 269 switch reference 245, 255–256 syllables 146, 156 Potawatomi 113–114 South-East Asia languages 308–309 syllabes de contenu 155n synchronic linguistics 39 syntagmes 155n syntax 32, 154, 158, 229 New Guinea languages 255–256 variation 145–146 synthesis 194, 372–373, 424 synthetic languages 191t, 192t, 194, 212, 217, 252 see also polysynthetic languages taboo 153n taiga 393, 397 Taiwanese 153, 346 Ta’oih people 316 Taruang people 322 Tay people 310–311 te kohanga reo see language nest teaching see language teaching teamwork, language recovery/revitalization/ revival 110–111 technology, endangered languages 19, 26, 47, 54, 72, 104, 106, 116, 234 television 26, 234, 342, 360, 388, 416, 453, 467, 470 tense 195, 424 see also gradient past; mythical; present and non-present and aspect 212, 217, 245, 253, 255 voiced 194 terminal speakers 51, 52n, 64, 67, 72 see also speakers definition 51 texts 20, 60, 95–96, 101n Ainu 379–382 China 349–350 Formosa 293–297 Fuegian 215 Melanesian 268 Middle America 179 Nivkh 375–377 Northwest Coast 429, 430–432 Siberian 392, 393, 379, 400 textbooks 109, 292–293, 348, 375, 394 –395, 399 Thai people 82, 310–312 Thao people 287, 290, 291 Thavung people 305, 322 theatres Okinawan 360 Thin (Htin) people 319 Tho people 310 thought-grooves 149n Tibetan people 340n, 343, 344–345, 348–349 Tobati people 276
501
toggle harpoon heads (Eskimo) 147, 151n Tohono O’odham 461, 465 Tok Ples programmes 259–260 Tokugawa era (1603–1868) 378, 379 see also Edo era Tokugawa Shogun 356 Tokyo Japanization 358–360, 362–363 tonal-monosyllabic xiii tone (phonology) 18 Athabaskan languages 411, 413 Middle American languages 170 Papuan languages 251–252 South-East Asia 334 Tsat 271, 309–310 toponyms see place names Torres Strait Islanders 222–223 tourism 87, 137, 290, 341–342, 470 trade pidgins 126, 133t, 134 traditional culture see oral traditions traditional speakers 31–32, 47–48, 51 see also new speakers; speakers traditional spelling 171n, 178 training see also language teacher training community linguists 41n, 101–102, 111–113, 175–176, 233–234 Trans-New Guinea features 249 transitive verbs 148n, 195, 252, 373, 378 translations 21, 96 see also Bible translation transmigration 242 Treaty of Waitangi (1840) 86 tribal languages 8–9 Tsachi people 188, 198 Tseshaht community 94–95 Tsou people 287, 290, 296 typological characteristics, loss of 29–32 typological convergence 122 typological diversity xiii North Pacific Rim xiv typology Ainu language 377–378 Altaic languages xiii Australian languages 225–226 endangered languages xiv–xv, 7–10 Kuki-Chin-Naga languages 331–332 Nivkh 376 Northwest Coast languages 420–425 Pacific Coast of South America 192–199 Palaeosiberian languages 393 Papuan languages 250–256 pidgins and creoles 121, 122–123 reversing language endangerment 27 Southwest United States 461–464 speakers 49–52, 72 see also speakers Tungusic languages 389–390 UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization) viii, xvii, xviii United States Exploring Expedition 428 University of Arizona 472
502
index of subjects
University of British Columbia 433 University of California 40n, 453–455 University of California at Berkeley 458 University of Costa Rica 176 University of Leiden 256 University of Mexico 173, 175 University of Northern British Columbia 433 University of Sydney 228, 256 University of Victoria 433 University of Washington archives 102 unpublished material, endangered languages 94–99, 411, 454 urbanization 11, 130–131, 341n Alaska 410, 412, 413, 414 California 453 Kawesqars 208–209 valency 217, 381 vanishing languages, and deterioration of environment vii, xvi verbal complexes 156n verb-final languages 255 verb-initial languages 170–171 verb-medial languages 255 verbs 193t, 196, 212–213, 245, 252–255, 424 classificatory 254–255, 463–464 compounds 255–256, 381 dimensional extent 325 evidentiality systems 15, 196–197 reduplication 252 serial 217, 252–253 stem compounds 217, 252, 378, 463 vibrants 194 video recordings 18, 93n, 104n, 428 see also documentation and data collection 54–55 and language revitalization 109, 110, 416 violence 135–136, 138 visual stimuli for language production 55 vogue words 152n voices, indigenous 107–116 voiceless vowels 194, 463 see also areal features Volkswagen Foundation 19 vowels 193t, 211, 216 length 18, 170 Pacific Coast of South America 194 Papuan languages 251 Southwest United States 463 voiceless 194, 463 see also areal features Wa nationality 318 wadul (Tundra Yukaghirs) 397 wakeru vs. wakaru (Japanese transitive vs. intransitive pair) 148n war 124, 135–136, 172, 327 and linguistic rights 61 white demographic intrusion 416
wide spread family or structural type x, xiii, xiv words 146, 153, 154–158 definition 155 formhood 154–158 Northwest Coast languages 424 vogue 152n vowelless 424 word and thing 152 World War II 95, 121, 125, 286, 288, 291, 358, 362, 371, 376, 380, 392, 452–453 writing systems 157 Anthropos alphabet 215n Chinese characters 78, 80, 81, 157n, 348–349, 351 Cyrillic alphabet 375, 395, 399 Ellis Phonotype 215n Fuegian languages 212t, 217t Hiragana (syllabic) writings 157n Kesenese 362 Middle America 173, 177–178 Nivkh language 375 Northwest Coast languages 433 renmen-style 157n Siberia 394, 399 spelling 112 Bislama 134 English 157n Guatemalan languages 176, 177–178 Indonesian 82–83 Mayan 171n Tungusic languages 391–392 written records see also documentation difficulties in using 97–99 use in revitalization projects 91–105 Wycliffe Bible Translators see Summer Institute of Linguistics Yahgan people 213–216 Yahi Translation Project 101n Yao nationality 314 Yavapai communities 469t, 470 ‘year 2100’ 7, 9, 12 Yi nationality 313, 323, 325, 326, 339, 343, 345, 347 Yir people 316 young fluent speakers, definition 51 Yuanquanhui 290–291 Yuanzhumin (‘aborigines’) 291 Yuhup Maku 48n Yukaghirs 397, 398 Yup’ik people 408, 409, 415 Zaiwa people 324, 333 Zang nationality 344, 345 Zhonghua minzu (Chinese nationality) 337n Zhuang nationality 312, 345
Index of Place Names
Abashiri (Japan) 376 Acoma Pueblo 467, 468t Adelaide (Australia) 85 Adelaide Plains 231 Africa ix, x, 6, 8, 11, Akimel O’odham 467t Akita (Japan) 377 Alaska 4, 38, 228, 406–417, 418, 472 Alazeya (Siberia) 393, 397 Alor Island (Indonesia) 242, 248, 270 Amami Islands 360, 363 Amazonia 48, 146, 184–185, 192, 193t, 194, 196 Ambon Island 279 Americas see Alaska; Middle America; Northwest North America; South America; Southwest United States; United States Amur River (Siberia) 371–377, 393 Anchorage 410, 412 Andes 185, 191–192, 194 Andryushkino (Siberia) 397, 398, 399, 400 Anglicized Rhymney district 29–30 Aomori (Japan) 377 Arakan (Burma) 81, 323, 330, 331, 332 Arctic xivn, 151n, 397, 406 Arctic (culture area) xivn Arctic Village (Alaska) 412, 413 Arizona 461, 470, 472 Armidale (New South Wales) 229 Arnhem Land (Australia) 224 Asia 6, 8, 429 Atacama (Chile) 206 Australia ix–xii, 9, 11, 84, 88, 221–235 South 231 Western 123, 124, 231 Bacan Island 274 Baja California 446, 449, 451 Bangka Island (Indonesia) 273 Bangladesh 306t, 315, 324, 330, 332 Barrow (Alaska) 417 Bathurst Island 224 Beagle Channel (Tierra del Fuego) 207, 213 Belau (Palau) 125, 274–275 Belize (Middle America) 171, 176 Bering Strait xiii see also St. Lawrence Island
Bethel (Alaska) 417 Biratori (Japan) 382 Bismarck Archipelago (New Guinea) 244, 250, 251, 253, 256 Bluefields 62, 64, 66n, 67, 69 see also Rama Cay Nicaragua) Bolivia 46, 191, 192 Bonin (Ogasawara) Islands 125 Bougainville Islands 208, 244, 250, 251, 254, 256 Brazil 184–185 Brecknock Peninsula (Tierra del Fuego) 213 British Columbia 427 Brunei 82, 83, 309 Burma (Myanmar) 81–82, 303, 306t, 307 California xiii, xivn, 40n, 64n, 102, 406, 418, 442–459, 461, 463, 472 California (Culture area) xivn Cambodia 81, 303–335 Canada 38, 86–87, 408t, 418–434, 472 Canton 126 Cape Horn (Chile) 213 Caroline Islands (Micronesia) 138, 274 Cenderawasih Bay (New Guinea) 244, 249, 276 Central America see Middle America Champa 271, 307 Chan Chan (ruins; Peru) 189 Chechnya (Caucasus) 79 Chemehuevi 467t Chiangdao (Thailand) 318 Chile 19, 189, 192, 206–218 Chiloe Island (Chile) 208, 209 Chin State (Burma) 331, 332 China 78–81, 271–272, 303–335, 337–351, 389–391, 392 Choiseul Island (Solomon Islands) 277 Christmas Island 84 Chukotka 393, 414 Cochiti Pueblo 467, 468t Cocos Island 84 Colombia 185–186, 187, 188, 200 Columbia River ix Cook Islands 84, 86, 137–138, 279 Costa Rica 62–67, 168t, 176 Cotabato City (Philippines) 137
504
index of pl ace names
Dillingham (Alaska) 409 Dulong (China) 339, 344–345 East New Britain 241, 244, 250, 254 East Timor see Timor Leste (East Timor) Easter Island 84, 206 Eastern Pacific Rim see Pacific Rim Echang village (Balau) 275 Ecuador 187–188, 190–192 El Salvador 168t, 176 Eurasia x Europe 6, 429 Fairbanks (Alaska) 410 Far East (Russia) 387, 392–393 Federated States of Micronesia 84 Fiji 84, 129, 130, 271 Formosa see Taiwan Fort McDowell (Arizona) 470 French Polynesia 84, 123, 138t, 315 Gapun village (New Guinea) 257 German New Guinea 123, 125, 136 Greenland 406 Groote Island (Australia) 224 Guam 84 Guangxi (China) 310–311, 325, 345 Guatemala 41n, 172, 175–176, 177–180 Guatemala City 171, 179 Guizhou (China) 310, 320, 325, 339, 345 Gulf of Mexico xiv Gulf of Penas (Chile) 208 Hachijo Island (Japan) 359n Hainan Island (China) 271–272, 303, 309, 314 Halmahera (Indonesia) 239, 250 Northern 242, 269 Hatohobei State (Belau) 274 Hawaii 84, 86, 129, 130, 243, 280, 355 Hokkaido (Japan) 77–78, 153, 358, 359, 377–382, 392 Honduras 61, 168t, 176 Hong Kong 80–81, 345t, 346 Honiara (Solomon Islands) 128 Hopi 467t Hopi Pueblo 467 Hopi-Tewa 467t Horobetsu (Japan) 380 Hualien County (Taiwan) 290 Humboldt County (California) 456 Huon peninsula (New Guinea) 248 Ilan County (Taiwan) 290 India 81, 307, 311, 314, 315, 321, 322, 324, 325, 330 Indochina 81, 268 Indonesia 11, 82–84, 244, 268–269, 271, 273–274, 279–280, 309, 314 Inner Mongolia 339–340 Irian Jaya (West Irian) xii, 84, 239, 242, 267
Irrawaddy River (Burma) 324 Isla Navarino (Chile) 213, 214n, Isleta 466t Israel 88 Iwate (Japan) 362, 377 Japan xv, xvi, 4, 23, 77–78, 81, 87, 153, 271, 279, 333, 355–365, 371, 375–376 Japanese Archipelago xiii Jayapura (New Guinea) 249, 276, Jemez 466t Jiuzhaigou (China) 341n Kal’ma village (Amur region) 374–375 Kalimantan 273 Kamchatka 393, 394–396 Karkar (Papua New Guinea) 32 Katha 330 Keresan Pueblos 467 Kienka village (Thailand) 318 Kiribati 84 Kolyma 393, 397–400 Korea 78 Korean Peninsula xiii Koryak Autonomous Region 395 Kovran (Kamchatka) 396 Kuril Islands 377 Laguna Pueblo 467, 468t Lake Titicaca 191 Lancang County (China) 311, 327 Lao 79, 303–335 Latin America xii, 38t, 41t, 42t, 71t, 87 Laut Island (Indonesia) 273 Liangshan (China) 343 Lima 189–190 Lombok Island (Indonesia) 83 Loyalty Islands 271, 278 Macao 80–81, 126 Madagascar 268 Madang (Papua New Guinea) 245, 249, 252, 254, 260 Magadan region 395 Magellan Strait 207–209 Malaysia 82, 268–269, 271, 272, 303, 306t, 307–310, 315, 332–335 Malta 33 Maluku Islands (Indonesia) 269, 274, 279–280 Mamberamo River (New Guinea) 249, 253 Matsumae (Japan) 78, 379 Melaka (Malacca) 82, 307, 332 Melanesia vii, xi, 85, 124, 125, 267, 275–279 Melbourne 228, 256 Melville Island (Tiwi Islands) 224 Menglian County (China) 327 Mesoamerica (culture area) xvi, 170–171, 175–176, 458, 460 Mexico xiv, 38, 165n, 167, 170, 173, 174, 175–176, 446, 451
index of pl ace names Micronesia xii, 84–85, 125, 138, 267, 269, 271, 274–275, 279 Middle America xii, xvi, 165–180, Moa Island 135 Mon State (Burma) 320 Monbetsu (Japan) 381 Murray Island (Australia) 85n, 222 Murray Narrows (Chile) 213 Myanmar see Burma (Myanmar) Naha (Japan) 364 Nakanai Mountains (West New Britain) 244 Nambe 466t Native North America 418 Nauru 84, 124, 126 Nekrasovka (Sakhalin) 374, 377 Nelemnoe (Siberia) 397–400 Nelson Strait (Patagonia) 208 Nevada 457 New Britain 241, 245–246, 250, 254, 260 New Caledonia x–xii, 122, 126, 127, 146, 183 New Georgia Island 277 New Guinea x–xii, 126, 146, 239–260, 275–277, 442 Highlands 242, 247–248, 253, 254, 255, 258 New Ireland (Papua New Guinea) 242, 244, 245, 250 New Mexico 463, 472 New South Wales 122, 124, 229–230, 231–232 New World see Americas New Zealand ix, xii, 84–85, 138n, 279 Ngatik (Sapwuahfik Atoll) 125, 138 Ngulu Atoll 275 Nicaragua 37, 38, 60–71, 176 Nine Village Valley (China) 341n Ningxia (China) 339 Niue 84 Nogliki (Sakhalin) 373, 374, 377 Norfolk Island 84, 122n, 129, 137 North America x, xiv, 9, 35n, 37–38, 92, 94, 107, 173, 353, 418, 427, 429, 434, 471 see also Northwest North America, Western North America North China see China, North North Pacific Rim see Pacific Rim Northeast Asia xiii Northeastern Siberia. 397 Northern Halmahera 242, 269 Northern Territory (Australia) 84, 135, 136, 224, 230, 233 Northwest Coast (culture area) xiii, xiv, xivn, 102, 418–434 Northwest North America xi, 86, 94–99, 146, 418–434 Nu River valley 344–345 Oaxaca (Mexico) 171, 175 Oceania ix Okinawa (Japan) 275, 358, 360, 361, 363 Orchid Island (Taiwan) 287
505
Oregon 418, 447 Pacific Coast of South America xii, 87, 146, 183–200 Pacific Ocean x Pacific region ix–x Pacific Rim ix–xvi, 38–39, 77–79, 89, 146, 206 Eastern 86–87 Northern ix, xiii–xv, 355, 393 Southern 82–86 Western 77–82 Palana (Kamchatka) 395–396 Palau see Belau Palmerston Atoll 125, 137–138 Panama 165, 177, 187 Pantar Island (Indonesia) 242, 250, 269 Papua 83–84, 125, 239, 241–249, 253, 267 see also Irian Jaya (West Irian); Papua New Guinea Papua New Guinea xii, 11, 83–85, 120–125, 134, 239–260, 270, 275–277, 280 Patagonia 208–209 Peru 39, 185, 189, 191–192 Philippines 83, 127, 128, 137, 244, 268, 271, 287 Phongsaly (Lao) 319 Phuket 310 Picuris 466t Pitcairn Island 83, 122n, 125, 137 Pojoaque 466t Plateau (culture area) xivn Polynesia xii, 84, 123, 267, 271, 279–280 Poronaisk (Sakhalin) 374, 376–377 Port Alberni (British Columbia) 94–95 Prescott (Arizona) 470 Prince of Wales Island (Alaska) 406 Propinsi Maluku (Indonesia) 269, 274 Propinsi Nusa Tenggara (Indonesia) 270 Propinsi Papua (Indonesia) 269, 275–276 Puerto Edén (Patagonia) 208–209, 210 Puerto Natales (Patagonia) 208 Puerto Williams (Isla Navarino, Chile) 213, 216 Punta Arenas (Patagonia) 208 Qiang (Sichuan) 339, 339n, 342–344, 344n, 348–349, 350 Queen Charlotte Islands (Canada) 406 Queensland (Australia) 84, 122, 124, 126, 127, 130, 135–136, 227–228, 231, 270 Raja Ampat Islands 277 Rama Cay (Nicaragua) 61, 62, 64, 69 Ramu River (New Guinea) 246 Rhosllannerchrugog (Wales) 29, 30, 31 Rhymney (Wales) 29, 30, 31 Russia 78–79, 363, 371–372, 375, 389, 390–391, 408, 410 Ryukyu (archipelago) 355–365 Sabah (Malaysia) 82 Saibai (Torres Strait) 222
506
index of pl ace names
Saint-Louis (New Caledonia) 135–136 Sakha Republic (Yakutia) 397 Sakhalin Island 371–381, 392–393 Samoa 84, 86, 121–122, 123,126, 129, 130, 270 San Cipriano (San Jorge River) 187 San Felipe Pueblo 467, 468t San Ildefonso 466t San Juan 466t San Nicolas Island (California) 451 Sandaun (New Guinea) 246–247, 255, 257, 260 Sandia 466t Santa Ana Pueblo 467, 468t Santa Clara 466t Santa Isabel Island (Solomon Islands) 277 Santo Domingo Pueblo 467, 468t, 471 Sapwuahfik Atoll (Micronesia) 138 Sarawak 82 Sepik basin (New Guinea) 246–247, 253–254, 256, 257 Seram Island 274 Severo-Evensk district 395 Shan State (Burma) 311, 318, 324, 329 Shizunai (Japan) 381 Shuri (Japan) 363, 364 Siberia xi, 387–400 Central 393 East 387 Sichuan 339, 340, 343–345, 347, 348 Sierra Madre 442 Singapore 80, 81, 82, 333 Solomon Islands 84,127–129, 239, 243, 250, 270, 277–278 Sonsorol State (Belau) 274–275 South America xvi, 39n, 87, 146, 183–200, 207, 217, 251, 355, 472 Southeast (culture area) xivn South-East Asia xii–xiii, xiv, xv, 77, 79, 126, 243, 301–335 South Ossetia 79 South Pacific xii, xv, 128 Southern Pacific Rim see Pacific Rim Southwest (culture area) 460 Southwest Asia vii Southwest United States 460–474 Soviet Union xi, 78–79, 344, 373, 389, 396 Srivijaya (Malaysia) 308 St Lawrence Island (Bering Strait) 414, 415–416 Straits Settlements (Malaysia) 81, 82 Subarctic (culture area) xivn Sulawesi 273–274 Sumatra 273 Tahiti xii, 126 Taiwan 80, 267–269, 285–297, 337, 346 Taos 466t Tesque 466t Thailand 82, 303–335
Ternate Island 279 Tibet 339–340, 348–349 Tidore Island 280 Tierra del Fuego 206–218 Tigil’ (Kamchatka) 396 Timor 239, 242, 248, 250 Timor Leste (East Timor) 83, 270 Tochobei State (Belau) 274 Tohoku (Japan) 358, 362 Tohono O’odham 467t Tonga xii, 84, 86, 279, 304t, 315 Torres Strait 84, 124, 136, 222, 224 Torricelli Mountains (New Guinea) 247 Toyama (Japan) 359n Trinidad 184 Trujillo 189–190 Uganda 12 Ukika (Chile) 213, 214n, 216n United States 11, 78, 83, 86, 452–454, 457 continental 87 Southwest xvi, 460–473 Ushuaia (Tierra del Fuego) 214n Ussuri River ix Utah 461 Vanikolo Island (Solomon Islands) 277 Vanuatu 84, 85, 127, 134, 270, 278 Venezuela 184 Victoria (Australia) 231, 232 Vietnam 79, 303–333, 335 Wales 28–32, 88 West New Britain 244, 250 West Papuan linguistic area 249, 251, 252, 253 Western North America 217 Western Pacific Rim see Pacific Rim Western Patagonia see Patagonia Western Samoa 84 Xinjiang (Uygur) 339, 340 Yakutia 397 Yangtze River 341 Yap 275 Yapen Island (New Guinea) 276–277 Yaqui 467t Yasachnaya 397 Yenisei 393 Yotefa Bay (Papua) 276 Yunnan 307, 308, 317–320, 325–330, 339,340, 343, 345 Yurumangui River 190–191, 195 Zamboango 137 Zia Pueblo 467, 468t, 471 Zuni Pueblo 463, 466t
Index of Names
Acuña, E. (Yahgan consultant). 213, 215–216 Adam, L. 215 Adelaar, W. F. H. 184, 186, 188, 189, 190, 191, 194, 196, 200 Aguilera, N. 211n Aguilera, O. E. 206–218 Aguirre Licht, D. 185n, 186, 187, 194–195, 197, 200, 204 Aikawa N. viii Aikhenvald, A. Y. 144n, 154, 156n, 183–200, 239–260 Alvarados, Velasco 191 Amery, R. 85, 138, 231 An, C. 297 Anderson, N. 253 Andrade, M. J. 430t Andrews, V. 176 Angelis, J. de 379 Antorveza, H. Triana y see Triana y Antorveza, H. Aoki, H. 432t Asai, E. 293–294, 295, 297 Asai, T. 381 Ash, A. 228 Assadi, B. 62, 63n, 64, 70 Atkins, J. D. C. 452 Austerlitz, R. 376–377 Austin, P. K. 38, 92 Avrorin, V. A. 391 Bai, B. 347 Baker, M. A. R. 432t Baker, P. 121, 121n, 122, 124 Baldauf, R. B. 229 Ball, K. 21–22 Banks, J. 227 Barnes, D. 259 Barnes, R. 259 Barr, D. 277 Barr, S. 277 Barrett, S. A. 454 Bartholomew, D. 165n Batchelor, J. (Anglican priest) 379–380 Bates, D. 431t Baxter, A. N. 126, 301n, 332
Beaumont, R. 430t Bedell, G. 333 Bee, R. L. 469t Bellwood, P. 250, 286–287 Benedek, D. 297 Benedict, P. K. 303, 308–309, 310 Benjamin, G. 301n, 307n, 333 Benjamins, C. 62, 63, 66, 68 Berardo, M. 107–116 Bergsland, K. 414 Bernot, D. 301n, 333 Bert, M. 50n, 53n Beynon, W. 429, 430t Bianco, J. Lo see Lo Bianco, J. Bierwert, C. 431t Binder, K. 187 Binder, R. 187 Bird, S. 104 Black, P. 233 Blake, B. 227, 228, 231 Blake, S. J. 421t, 423n Blust, R. A. 245, 268, 297 Boas, F. xiv, 95, 294, 428–429, 430t, 431t Bogoras, W. G. 396 Boldyrev, B. V. 387 Bommelyn, L. 456 Booth, P. M. 469t Bouda, K. 397 Bougainville, L.-A. de 208 Bouquiaux, L. 54n Boyd, R. T. 426 Bozzi, O. 48n Bradley, D. 27, 77–90, 301–335, 337, 341, 344, 345, 346, 347, 350 Bradley, M. 87, 88, 332, 344, 346, 347 Bravo Ahuja, G. 174 Breen, G. 233 Brenzinger, M. ix, xiv, 144n, 153 Bridges, E. L. 215n Bridges, T. (Anglican missionary) 213, 214–215, 215n Briley, D. 253 Brinton, D. G. 188 Broberg, B. 102 Brown, R. 254, 258
508
index of names
Bruce, L. 239n, 247, 252, 253 Bugaeva, A. 382 Bugenhagen, R. D. 257, 259 Burcell, S. 456 Burling, R. 330, 331 Burung, W. 239n, 242 Burykin, A. A. 394 Buszard-Welcher, L. A. 113 Butler, E. J. 469t Cahill, M. 259 Calderón, C. (Yahgan consultant) 213, 215–216 Calderón, U. (Yahgan consultant) 215–216 Calvache Dueñas, R. 189 Camacho, R. Pineda see Pineda Camacho, R. Cameron, D. 44n, 112 Cameron, R. 469t Campbell, L. x, xiv, 50, 52n, 62, 172–173, 176, 186n, 187, 188n, 189, 191, 249n, 256–257, 444 Cantañeda, L. Manrique see Manrique Cantañeda, L. Cao, S. 294 Capell, A. 228 Carlson, B. F. 424n, 431t Carrera, F. de la 190, 194 Carrington, L. 256, 275 Castañeda, M. 165n Cauquelin, J. 295 Cerrón-Palomino, R. 191 Chafe, W. 55n Chamberlain, B. H. 363 Chamberlain, J. 333 Chang, H.-C. 295 Chang, H.-H. 297 Chang, Y. 295, 296 Chaoke 392 Chapin, P. 21 Charpentier, J.-M. 126, 134 Chaudenson, R. 121 Chazee, L. 328 Chen, K. 295 Chiri, M. 380, 382 Chiri, Y. 381, 382 Chomsky, N. 14, 21 Chowning, A. 244 Christensen, S. 254 Cincius, V. I. 391 Clairis, C. 210, 214n Claudius (Roman emperor) 27 Clifton, J. 258 Clouse, D. A. 249, 252 Cohen, M. 5 Cole, D. C. 466t(a) Collinder, B. 397 Collins, R. 413 Columbus, C. 184
Comrie, B. 25–34, 158–159, 267, 269, 277, 396 Conrad, R. 247 Constenla-Umaña, A. 176, 187 Contreras García, I. 173 Cook, J., captain 227 Cooper, J. M. 54n, 209, 213–214 Corne, C. 135 Costillas, Q. 458 Couro, T. 456 Craig, C. see Grinevald, C. Croce, B. 154, 156 Crowley, T. 278 Crystal, D. 38, 41, 158 Curnow, T. J. 188, 189, 194, 197, 198 Czaykowska-Higgins, E. 423n Dai, Q. 347, 350 Dauenhauer, N. 412 Dauenhauer, R. 412 Davis, D. R. 254 Davis, I. 463, 471 Davis, M. B. 464 Davis, P. W. 430t de Graaf, T. 373, 374t, 377 de Reuse, W. 414 De Tovar, C. Larrucea see Tovar, Consuelo Larrucea De de Williams, A. A. 469t Demirdache, H. 424 Despard, G. P. (missionary) 214 Dickinson, C. 188, 196, 197, 198 Difang 293 Diffloth, G. 301n, 333 Dirks, M. 414 Dixon, R. M. W. viii, xii, 150, 154, 156n, 184, 192, 195, 196–197, 198–199, 223, 225, 226, 227, 228, 229–230, 231, 235, 239, 239n, 240, 242, 259, 276 Djebar Hapip, A. 273 Doak, I. G. 431t Dobrin, L. 247, 253, 257 Dobrotvorskij, M. M. 380 Dol, P. 242 Donohue, M. 247, 251, 252, 276 Dorian, N. 35n, 45n, 49, 50, 51 Drechsel, E. J. 120, 126 Dressler, W. U. 50, 52n, 342 Driver, H. 461 Du Ponceau, P. S. 154n, 157n Dunn, J. A. 423n, 430t Dunn, M. 250n Dutton, T. E. 127, 130, 241, 241n Dyk, W. 431t Easton, C. 85 Edel, M. 431t Edmondson, J. A. 251, 301n, 324n, 329, 333 Efrat, B. S. 431t Egerod, S. 294, 295
index of names Egesdal, S. M. 431t Egli, H. 295 Ehrhart, S. 85, 118–140 Elizondo Figueroa, F. 176 Ellis, A. J. 215 Elson, B. 194 Embry, V. 175 Endo, F. xvi, 79, 387–400 England, N. 41n, 176 Enrico, J. 412 Eremin, S. 375 Evans, N. 68n, 154n, 228 Favre, H. 173 Feldman, H. 247 Fernando Tesucún, F. 175 Ferrell, R. 295 Fesl, E. 234 Fey, V. 294 Finnobogatóttir, V. 144n Fishman, J. A. xiv, 27, 37, 226 Fitz-Roy, R. 207–208 Flett, P. 431t Foley, W. A. 126, 239–241, 243–245, 246–248, 248n, 249–250, 252–254, 255, 257–259 Fonnegra, M. 187 Ford, K. 240 Foreman, V. 247 Fortescue, M. 144n, 154n Fortune, R. 247, 253 Foucault, M. 159 Frachtenberg, L. 431t, 432t Franklin, K. J. 239n, 251, 258 French, M. A. 243 Fry, E. 241 Fu, M. 337n Galloway, B. 430t García Segura, G. 170 Gardner, B. 173 Garza Cuarón, B. 165 Gashilova, L. B. 376 Gerdts, D. B. 41, 430t Gerstner-Link, C. 239n, 249, 258 Gibbs, G. 428 Gibson, J. A. 431t Gifford, E. W. 454 Girfanova, A. X. 391 Givón, T. 55n Goddard, I. 92–93, 100 Goldenweiser, A. A. 145, 145n Golla, V. 95, 101n, 432t Goodbar, P. G. de 215 Gordon, R. G. ix, x, 5, 268, 270, 271, 277, 279, 421t, 423n Grace, G. W. 144n, 148 Granites, R. J. 233 Green, J. 228 Greenberg, J. H. 154, 184, 187
509
Grenoble, L. A. 38, 342 Grimes, B. F. 4–5, 188, 191, 240–242, 339n, 464 Grimes, J. 4–5, 9–10 Grinevald, C. 35–73, 342, 351 Gros, S. 345 Grubb, D. 430t Grube, W. 375 Gruzdeva, E. 373–374, 376 Guerra E., A. M. 215 Gusinde, M. 208, 213 Haas, M. 454–455 Hadel, R. E. 176 Hagège, C. 38 Hajek, J. 83, 315 Hale, H. 428 Hale, K. 4, 15, 40, 40n, 146, 158, 228, 461 Hale, S. W. 228 Hall, R. A., Jr. 123n, 129, 138–139 Hancock, I. 120 Hansen, M. H. 341 Hapip, A. Djebar see Djebar Hapip, A. Harding, T. G. 126 Hargus, S. 413 Harms, P. L. 187, 195, 197 Harrell, S. 341, 343, 345, 349 Harrington, J. P. 189n, 190, 195, 197, 454, 471 Harris, D. 461 Harrison, S. 257n Hartman, D. 232 Harvey, P. 112 Hateruma, E. 363 Hattori, S. 156n, 363, 372, 381 Hattori, T. 376 Haviland, J. 227 He, J. 347 He, R. 294 Heath, G. R. 176 Heizer, R. 451 Henderson, E. J. A. 331 Henderson, J. 232 Hess, T. M. 424, 431t Heusser, C. J. xiv Hill, J. D. 184 Hill-Tout, C. 429 Himmelman, N. 39 Hindle, L. 430t Hinton, L. 40, 40n, 64n, 101n, 102 Hirayama, T. 361 Hjelmslev, L. 155n, 156 Ho, D. 295 Ho, Y. 297 Hockett, C. L. 122, 215 Hofling, C. A. 175 Hoijer, H. 432t, 471 Hokama, S. 363, 364 Holm, A. 472 Holm, W. 472
510
index of names
Holmer, A. 296 Holton, G. 413 Hoogenraad, R. 230 Hornberger, N. H. 191, 192 Hosking, D. F. 229 Hosokawa, K. 123 Howe, D. M. 421t, 424 Hu, Z. 390 Huang, L. M. 295, 297 Huang, R. 340 Huang, X. 297, 339, 342, 346 Huber, R. Q. 189, 190 Hukari, T. E. 430t Hunt, G. 430t Hurd, C. 254 Hutcheson, C. 456 Hymes, D. 431t Ichihashi-Nakayama, K. 460–474 Iha, F. 363, 364 Ikegami, J. 389, 391–392 Ikuta, S. xvii Inenlikej, P. I. 396 Inglis, D. 333 Ingram, A. 249, 251, 252, 254, 258 Inoue, F. 357, 359 Inoue, K. 375 Inouye, D., senator 21–22 Iredale, R. 340, 340n, 348 Irimoto, T. 144n Ishi (Californian Yahi) 45, 46, 101n Izui, H. xiii Izutsu, K. 376 Izuyama, A. 364 Jackson, B. 54n Jacobs, M. 431t, 432t Jacobson, S. 414 Jacobson, W. H. 424 Jacq, P. 333 Jakobson, R. 389, 396 James, W. A. 434 Janhunen, J. ix, 388, 390n, 395 Jeng, H. 295 Jinbo, K. 380 Jochelson, W. 372, 399 Jones, A. 126 Jones, E. 413 Jones, L. K. 242 Jones, M. C. 28–32 Jourdan, C. 130 Ju, J. 347 Justeson, J. 175 Kajiku, S. 363 Kale, J. 239n, 259 Kamei, T. 154 Kanazawa, Sh. 380 Kanchuga, A. A. 392
Kane, H. M. 126 Kaneko, T. 373, 374–375, 377 Kannari, M. 381 Kaplan, L. 21 Kari, J. 412, 413 Kato, T. 326, 333 Kato, Y. 333 Katsura, M. 333 Kauffmann, M. 62, 68 Kaufman, T. 176, 184, 190n Kayano, Sh. 382 Kazama, Sh. 387, 390, 392 Keesing, R. 120, 122 Kenstowicz, M. 396 Kenworthy, M. A. 103 Kibrik, A. E. 394–396 Kiku, T. 363 Kindaichi, H. 357, 378, 380–381 Kindaichi, K. 378, 380, 381 King, K. A. 191, 192 Kinkade, M. D. 420n, 422t, 423t, 423n, 424, 424n, 428n, 429, 431t Kirikae, H. 378n, 382 Klokeid, T. J. 95 Kobayashi, T. 362 Kolås, Å. 349 Kono, R. 154, 157 Koonooka, C. 414 Kosaka, Ry. 333 Krauss, M. E. viii, ix, xiii, xiiin, xiv–xv, 3–23, 150, 158, 159, 358n, 391, 393–394, 397n, 398, 406–417, 423n, 434 Krejnovicˇ, E. A. 373, 375, 388, 397–399 Kroeber, A. L. 101n, 418, 444, 453–454 Kroeber, T. 45 Kruspe, N. 333 Kubodera, I. 380 Kuipers, A. 424, 430t, 431t Kulick, D. 257 Kurebito, M. 79, 387–400 Kurebito, T. 388, 395–396 Kurilov, G. N. 399 Kurilova, L. V. 399 Kuzuno, T. 381 Ladefoged, P. 12–13, 89, 434 Lama Ziwo 329 Landaburu, J. 187n, 189 Landweer, M. L. 240, 259 Lang, A. 254 Lang, J. 456 Langdon, M. 456 Lange, C. H. 467 LaPolla, R. J. 79, 337–351 Las Casas, B. de, O. P. 159 Lastra, Y. 165 Laughlin, R. M. 175 Laughren, M. 233 Laves, G. 228
index of names Lawrence, M. 255 Laycock, D. 246 Lee, J. 224 Leeden, van der 277 Leer, J. 144n, 412, 414, Lehmann, W. 176 Lenin (Soviet premier) 79 Leonova, Ju. 373–374 Leslie, A. R. 430t Li, Ch. 147, 148n Li, F. 350 Li, P. J. 294, 295, 296, 297 Li, Sh. 390 Li, T. 286, 288 Licht, A. 197 Liddicoat, A. 188, 189, 194, 197 Ligorred, F. 173 Lin, S. 295 Lin, X. 348 Lin, Y. 343 Lincoln, N. J. 430t Lindström, E. 244, 258 Lipschütz, A. 214 Lipski, J. M. 128 Llerena Villalobos, R. 185n, 187, 187n Lo Bianco, J. 226 Loeweke, E. 255 Loewen, J. A. 187 Lok, G. D. 377 Long, D. 125 Loukotka, C. 183, 184, 190, 190n, 191 Loving, R. 257, 258 Lowe, K. 233 Luangthongkum, Th. 317 Luo, C. 337n Luykx, A. 192 Lynch, J. 28n, 240, 244–245, 271, 279 Ma, R. 295 Mabo, E. 85, 85n MacCrea, P. 68 Mackerras, C. 301n, 302n MacLean, E. 415 Mair, C. 139–140 Majewicz, A. 375 Malchukov, A. 144n Manda, M. 274 Manrique Cantañeda, L. 165n Margery-Peña, E. 176, 187 Martinet, A. 155n Marx, W. G. 176 Maslova, E. 399 Mason, J. A. 190 Mason, K. 333 Mather, E. 414 Matsumura, N. 4 Matthews, S. 267, 269, 277 Matthewson, L. 424 Mattina, A. 431t
511
Mattina, N. 422t, 431t Mattissen, J. 144n, 154n, 373 May, J. 255 McCarty, T. L. 233, 472 McConvell, P. 221, 223, 224, 226, 227, 228, 229 McDaniel, M. 327 McGregor, A. R. F. 254 McGregor, D. E. 254 McGregor, W. 124 McKay, G. 222, 228, 229, 231–232, 233, 234 McLaughlin, J. E. 448 McQuown, N. A. 165 Mead, D. 274 Meadows, M. 234 Meillet, A. 5 Mejía Fonnegra, G. 185n, 186n, 187, 188, 189, 195 Menchú, I. Rigoberto see Rigoberto Menchú, I. Mendoza, P. 215 Merlan, F. 253, 254 Middendorf, E. W. 190, 194 Migliazza, B. 333 Migliazza, E. 186n, 187, 188n, 333 Miss Nora 62–64, 64n, 67–68 Mitchell, M. R. 431t Mithun, M. xiv, 43, 421t, 444 Miyagi, T. 363 Miyajima, T. 361 Miyanaga, M. 363 Miyaoka, O. xiv, xv, xvn, 3n, 22, 92–93, 144 –160, 214, 214n Miyara, T. 363 Moag, R. F. 128 Moeckel, Barry 258 Moeckel, Bonnie 258 Moll, T. A. 396 Molnar, H. 234 Montler, T. 33, 431t, 433–434 Moore, B. R. 194 Mora, F. Pereira see Pereira Mora, F. Morey, S 312 Morgan, W. 471 Moriguchi, T. 295 Mortensen, C. A. 186n, 187, 195, 197 Mosel, U. 120 Moses (Biblical) 18 Mostny, G. 206, 214 Mueller, G. 69n Mühlhäusler, P. 85, 118–140, 223 Munro, J. M. 135 Muntzel, M. C. 50, 52n, 172, 257 Murasaki, K. 381 Nabesawa, M. 381 Nagasaki, I. 400 Nagayama, Y. 394–396 Nagy, N. 41 Nakagawa, H. 77n, 78, 371–382
512
index of names
Nakamoto, M. 363 Nakamura, Ch. 376 Nakanome, A. 376–377 Nakashima, H. 274 Nakayama, T. 91–105, 424, 430t Nancen Pinco 190 Nash, D. 228 Nater, H. F. 424, 430t Nedjalkov, V. P. 376, 396 Nekitel, O. 240, 247, 253, 257, 258, 259, 275–276 Nettle, D. xiii, 38, 41, 146 Nevskiy, N. 297, 363 Newman, P. 38, 60n Ni, D. 271 Nichols, J. x, xiv, 146, 442 Nidue, J. A. 257, 258 Niederer, B. 301n Nikolaeva, I. A. 391–392, 399 Nishida, K. 147n Nishida, T. 333 Noel Kya Heh 333 Nolan, S. 333 Noor, B. 274 Noor, D. 274 Nukishio, Y. 382 Numao, T. 297 Nurhayati, 274
Payne, D. L. 184, 184n Payne, T. 54n, 184n Pearson, M. 223 Pecoraro, F. 296 Peiros, I. 301n, 333 Pereira Mora, F. 176 Perekhvalskaya, E. 392 Person, K. 333 Peter, K. 414 Petruska, B. 413 Pevnov, A. 392 Pickett, V. 175 Pilsudski, B. 375, 380 Pineda Camacho, R. 200 Platzmann, K. J. 215 Poa, D. 79, 337–351 Polet’eva, S. F. 376 Polinskaja, M. S. 396 Polinsky, M. 267, 277 Polivanov, E. xiii Powell, J. V. 421t, 430t Powell, J. W. 444, 454 Proschan, F. 319, 333 Pukhta, M. N. 376
Obando Ordonóñez, P. 189 Obata, K. 243 Oda, J. 396 Oda, S. 275 Ogawa, N. 293–294, 295, 297 Okamoto, K. 376 Okamoto, M. 273 Okuda, O. 78, 371–382 Oliver, J. R. 184 Onishi, M. 144n, 250, 254, 256 Ono, Ch. 394–396 Ordonóñez, P. Obando see Obando Ordonóñez, P. Ortiz, O. 214 Ortiz, S. E. 191 Ortiz, W. 6, 62–63, 64n, 66n, 67 Osada, S. 363 Osada, T. xiii Ospina Bozzi, A.-M. 48 Osumi, M. 278–279 Otaina, G. A. 375–376 Ozolinja, L. V. 390
Raffo, Y. A. 431t Rath, J. C. 430t Ratliff, M. 38, 60n Rau, D. V. 295 Reagan R. (U.S. President) 87 Reed, I. 414 Reed, R. B. 189 Reesink, G. P. 239n, 242, 249, 252, 257 Refsing, K. 380 Reichard, G. A. 431t Reid, N. 229 Reinecke, J. 135 Ren, Q. 340 Renault-Lescure, O. 39n Rheeden, H. van 127n Rhydwen, M. 226 Richardson, N. 456 Ridley, R. 413 Rigby, L. see Miss Nora Rigoberto Menchú, I. 178 Rigsby, B. 420n, 423n, 430t, 432t Rischel, J. 333 Ritter, J. 413, 414 Rivet, P. 189n, 191, 195 Roberts, J. R. 245, 256 Roberts, S. J. 126 Robinne, F. 318 Robins, R. H. ix, 4, 5 Rodrigues, A. D. 184, 185 Rojas, M. Pardo see Pardo Rojas, M.
Pabón Triana, M. 189, 200 Païta, Y. 278 Paklina, T. I. 376 Palacios de la Vega, J. see Vega, J.de la Panfilov, V. Z. 373, 375 Pardo Rojas, M. 186, 187, 188 Pawley, A. K. 245, 248n, 252–253
Quack, A. 296 Queixalos, F. 39n Quigley, S. 254
index of names Romaine, S. viii, 38, 41 Romero, C. 191 Rose, S. 430t Ross, M. D. 28n, 32, 245, 248n, 249n, 250, 251 Rouse, I. 184 Rude, N. 432t Ruhlen, M. 187 Rule, W. M. 255 Rumsey, A. 253 Sagart, L. 303, 309 Saigo, N. 364 Sakiyama, O. viii, xv, 85, 267–280, 303, 309, 310 Salas, A. 210, 215 Šalugin 399 Samarin, W. 54n Sanada, Sh. 355–365 Sandefur, J. 136 Sangi, V. M. 375–376 Sankoff, G. 241–242, 258 Santos-Granero, F. 184 Sapir, E. 94–97, 99, 146, 147n, 149, 149n, 151n, 152, 154, 154n, 159, 424, 429, 430t, 431t, 432t, 444, 454, 471 Sasama, F. xvii, 33, 418–434 Sasse, H.-J. 50, 52n, 154n Sato, T. 382 Saunders, R. 430t Savage, T. 77n Savel’eva, V. N. 375 Sawada, H. 333 Schmidt, A. 223, 224–225 Schmidt, W. 190, 215n, 303, 309 Schneider, R. 176 Schrenk, L. I. 375 Schroeder, D. 296 Scott, G. 251, 252 Seiler, W. 249, 255 Seler, E. 191 Senft, G. 246 Shaw, P. A. 429 Shearer, W. 337 Shi, N. 297 Shibata, N. 279 Shibatani, M. 378 Shibuya, K. 125 Shimada, T. xvii, 144n Shimizu, J. 295 Shinozaki, K. 362 Shintani, T. 278, 328, 333 Shiraishi, H. 377 Shnukal, A. 136 Shoji, H. ix Shopen, T. 54n Shternberg, L. J. 372, 375 Sidwell, P. 333 Siegel, J. 124, 129–130 Simons, G. 104
513
Sims, C. 466t, 472 Skorik, P. J. 396 Skutnabb-Kangas, T. 119 Slobin, D. 55n Smith, G. P. 134, 257 Smith-Jones, M. (Eyak consultant) 412 Solomon, I. 413 Spegazzini, C. 215 Spencer, A. 396 Spiridonov, V. K. 399 Staalsen, P. 251 Stalin, J. V. 344 Stark, L. R. 188, 189, 190, 194 Stebbins, T. N. 239–260, 430t Stebnickij, S. N. 396 Stefaniw, R. 258 Stewart, R. 173 Stites, R. 340n, 348 Su, W. 340 Suárez, J. 175 Suazo, S. 176 Sun, H. 323, 337, 337n, 339, 341, 342, 343, 345–346, 348, 350 Sun, J. T. 350 Sunik, O. P. 387, 391 Suriya Ratanakul 333 Suttles, W. 430t Suwilai Premsrirat 301n, 333 Suyama, N. 363 Swadesh, M. 41n, 95, 430t Swadesh, M. H. 430t Swanton, J. R. 429 Szakos, J. 295, 297 Taber, M. 274 Taff, A. 102 Tailleur, O. G. 397 Takahashi, M. 376 Takahashi, T. 363 Takeuchi, M. xvii Taksami, C. M. 375–376 Tamura, S. 381 Tarpent, M.-L. 411, 430t Tasato, Y. 356 Tate, H. W. 429 Tay Coyoy, A. 170 Taylor, J. R. 148, 149, 157 Teit, J. A. 429 Terrill, A. 243, 250n Tesucún, F. Fernando see Fernando Tesucún, F. Theraphan Luangthongkum 301n, 316, 317, 333 Thieberger, N. 89, 221, 223, 224, 226, 227, 229, 230 Thomas, A. 95 Thomas, J. 54n Thompson, L. C. 423n, 424n, 429, 431t Thompson, M. T. 431t
514
index of names
Thongpheth Kingsada 328, 333 Thurgood, G. 350 Thurston, W. R. 244, 245–246, 259 Tian, J. 350 Tibbitts, B. 70 Ting, P. 296 Tojo, M. 357 Toki, S. 125 Tokugawa, M. 364–365 Tolskaya, M. 391–392 Tomei, J. 144n Tomskij, I. E. 398–399 Tonko, J. 210, 211 Touchie, B. 430t Tovar, A. 183, 190, 191, 194 Tovar, Consuelo Larrucea De 183, 190, 191, 194 Trew, R. 123 Triana, M. Pabón see Pabón Triana, M. Triana, Pabón 189 Triana y Antorveza, H. 200 Triviño Grarzon L. 197 Tryon, D. T. 120, 125, 126n, 134, 138, 276, 277, 278 Tsao, R. 297 Tschentscher, A. 347n Tsuchida, S. 80, 285–297 Tsukida, N. 80, 285–297 Tsumagari, T. 79, 387–400 Tsung, L. 342 Tung, M. 297 Tung, T. 297 Turpana, A. 170 Tuttle, S. 413 Tuzin, D. 258 Uehara, K. 379 Uemura, Y. 355–365 Uhlenbeck, E. M. ix, 4, 5, 269 Uluro Ado 399 Upton, J. L. 348 Uwano, Z. 362 Vakhtin, N. 398–399 Valencia, A. 210, 215 van Eijk, J. P. 424, 431t Vasilevicˇ, G. M. 391 Vásquez de Ruíz, B. 197 Vaux, B. 54n Vdovin, I. S. 396 Vega, J. de la 187 Voegelin, C. 5, 6, 274 Voegelin, F. 5, 6, 274 Vogt, H. 431t Volodin, A. P. 396 Vovin, A. xiii Voorhoeve, C. L. 275, 277 Vyrdylina, G. A. 399 Vysokov, M. S. 374
Wade, M. 253 Walker, D. E. 432t Walsh, M. 85, 221–235 Wang, Y. 339, 340, 341n, 348 Wannemacher, M. 333 Warner, N. 458 Warren, K. B. 172 Watanabe, H. 33, 92, 144n, 418–434 Waterman, T. T. 454 Wen, Y. 344n Wendel, T. D. 251 Whaley, L. J. 38, 342 Whitehead, C. R. 240, 242 Wilkes, C. 428 Williams, A. A. de see de Williams, A. A. Williams, B. 415 Williams, F. 95 Wilson, P. 251 Windsor, E. W. 430t Wogiga, K. 247 Wolcott, H. 38n, 54n Woodbury, A. 39, 414 Woodruff, F. 430t Wright, S. 333 Wu, C. 294 Worth, D. S. 396 Wurm, S. A. viii, 5, 120, 125, 223, 225, 241, 242, 243, 248n, 250n, 259, 274, 275–276 Xasanova, M. 392 Xu, S. 340, 349–350 Yabu, Sh. 324, 333 Yamada, H. 377 Yamada, T. 144n Yamada, Y. 297 Yamaguchi, K. 376 Yamamoto, A. Y. 107–117, 144n, 460–474 Yamaura, H. 362 Yanagita, K. 363 Yasugi, Y. 41n, 165–180 Yeh, M. 296 Young, R. W. 471 Yuan, X. 340 Yuan, Y. 341 Yumitani, Y. 460–474 Zárraga, Cr. 216 Zavala, R. 35n Zeitoun, E. 295, 296, 297 Zepeda, O. 472 Zhang, T. 340 Zhang, W. 341 Zheng, Y. 272 Zhou, Q. 347 Zhou, Y. 339 Žukova, A. N. 396 Zúñiga Muñoz, Z. 170
Index of Languages and Language Families
Note: Alternative names for the language are shown in square brackets; language families are shown in round brackets, e.g. Aheu [Phonsung] (Vietic) Alutiiq see Sugpiaq A-o see Gelao languages Alutor (Chukchi-Kamchatkan) 393–396 A-uo see Gelao languages Alyawarre (Pama-Nyungan) 224 Abau (Papuan) 247 Amahai (Malayo-Polynesian) 274 Abelam (Ndu) 252 Amara (Malayo-Polynesian) 245 Aboriginal Pidgin English 124 Amazonian languages 39n, 46, 192–194, 197, Abu’ Arapesh (Arapesh, Torricelli) 257, 258 199, 239 Achang see Ngochang Lowland 192 Achumawi (Palaihnihan) 445 Ambai (Malayo-Polynesian) 276–277 Acjachmem [Juaneño] (Uto-Aztecan) 446 Ambonese Malay (Malayo-Polynesian) 279 Aheu [Phonsung] (Vietic) 305t, 321–322 Amele (Gum) 256 Ahi [Aribwatsa] (Malayo-Polynesian) Amis (Austronesian) 293, 294 275–276 Amur dialect (Nivkh) 372, 375 Ahlao/Ahao see Thavung Amuzgo (Otomanguean) 168t Ahom (Thai) 311 Anal (Chin) 332 Ahtna (Athabaskan) 408t, 412 Anamuxra (Pomoikan) 252, 253, 254, 258 Ainh see Nung Ven Andean/Andine languages 185, 192–194, 199 Ainu (isolate) xiii, 4, 18, 77–78, 87, 153, 279, Anêm (non-Austronesian) 244, 245–246, 362, 377–382, 393 250, 259 Aiton (Thai) 311–312 Anewan [Nganyaywana] (PamaAjie (Malayo-Polynesian) 279 Nyungan) 229 Akateko (Mayan) 169 Angan family 240f, 247, 254, 256, 257 Akeu (Southern Ngwi) 16t, 327 Angku (Angkuic) 318 Akha (Southern Ngwi) 325–328 Angkuic languages 305t, 318 Akimel O’odham (Uto-Aztecan) 461, 465, Anindilyakwa (isolate) 224 467t Anmatyerre (Pama-Nyungan) 224 Alacaluf/Alakaluf see Kawesqar Anong/Anung (Tibeto-Burman) 306t, 340, Alamblak (Sepik Hill) 253 341 Albanian 14 Ansus (Malayo-Polynesian) 276 Alaskan Athabaskan languages Aore (Malayo-Polynesian) 278 (Athabaskan) 412 Apache (Apachean, Athabaskan) 406, 460, Aleut (Eskimo-Aleut) 393, 408t, 410, 411, 463, 466t(a) 414, 415 Apachean 461, 463 Eastern dialect 414 Arabic (Semitic, Afroasiatic) 33, 272 Western dialect 414 see also Atka; Attuan Arakan [Rakhine] (Burmish) 323–324, 332 ‘Aleut’ (in English) see Alutiiq; Sugpiaq Arapesh languages (Torricelli) 247, 253, 256 Aleutian Aleut 415 Araucanian see Mapuche Algonquian 14n Arawá languge family 184, 184n Algic family 444 Arawak family 183–184, 184n Algonquian family (Algic) 444 Arem (Vietic) 305t, 322 Algonquian languages 426 Arho (Malayo-Polynesian) 279 Alikhoolip see Kawesqar Aribwatsa [Lae] (Malayo-Polynesian) 275–276 Alsea (Alsean) 419f, 423t, 431t Armidale (Pama-Nyungan) 229 Alsean languages 423t Arrandic languages (Pama-Nyungan) 224 ‘Altaic’ languages xiii, 387, 393 Aslian languages (Mon-Khmer) 304t, 315 Altaic type languages x, 373, 387
516
i n d e x o f l a n g uag e s a n d l a n g uag e fa m i l i e s
Asmat [Asmat-Kamoro-Sempat] family 240f, 248 Asumboa (Malayo-Polynesian) 277 Ata see Wasi Atacameño [Kunza/Likan-antai] 206 Atalán (isolate) 190 Atayal (Austronesian) 287, 294–295 Athabaskan family (Athabaskan-EyakTlingit) 406, 410, 412–414, 423t, 426, 444, 460, 461–463, 466t(a) Athabaskan-Eyak group (Athabaskan-EyakTlingit) 412 Athabaskan-Eyak-Tlingit family 406, 408t Atka (Western dialect of Aleut, EskimoAleut) 414 Atlantic languages (Niger-Congo) 33 Atsi [Tsaiwa] (Burmish) 324 Atsugewi (Palaihnihan) 446 Attuan (Western dialect of Aleut, EskimoAleut) 414 Australian English 85 Australian languages 195, 221–235 Austric languages 303, 309 see also Austroasiatic languages; Austronesian languages Austro-Thai languages 303, 308–314 Austroasiatic languages 82, 272, 303, 307–308, 309, 314, 334 Austronesian languages xii, xiii, 33, 83–85, 121, 126, 267–280 Indonesia 83 Malaysia 82 New Guinea xii, 239, 240, 240t, 243–246, 250n, 251, 255, 255t, 256, 257, 259 Papua New Guinea 275–276 Philippines 83 South-East Asia 303, 304t, 307, 308, 309–310, 315, 316, 333, 334 Taiwan 80, 287–288, 291, 294 Awa Pit [Cuaiquier] (Barbacoan) 188, 189, 194–195, 200 Awará (Finisterre) 254 Awakateko (Mayan) 169t Awyu [Awyu-Dumut] family 240f, 248 Ayiwo (non-Austronesian) 243 Aymara languages 191, 206 Babuza (Peipo) 287 Bacanese Malay (Malayo-Polynesian) 279 Bahasa Indonesia (Malayo-Polynesian) xii, 82–83, 84, 127n, 242, 273, 277, 279 Bahasa Serui (Malayo-Polynesian) 276–277 Baheng [Pathen] (Miao-Yao) 304t, 314 Bahonsuai (Malayo-Polynsian) 274 Bahnaric languages 305t, 316–317 see KatuicBahnaric languages Baining family 250, 254 Bajau (Malayo-Polynesian) 273, 274
Balinese (Malayo-Polynesian) 273 Bamboo English 125 Bana [Pana] (Southern Ngwi) 306t, 328 Bandjalang (Pama-Nyungan) 231 Baniata (non-austronesian) 243 Banjarese (Malayo-Polynesian) 273 Bantu languages 33 Barbacoan languages 185, 188–190, 194–198 Barbareño (Chumashan) 446 Baric languages 330 Basay (Peipo) 287 Basque (isolate) 14, 18, 31 Batanic languages 287 Batek (Aslian) 304t, 315 Baudó (South Embera, Choco) 184 Bauzi 253 Bazaar Malay 125 Beik [Myeik] (Burmish) 324 Bel subfamily (Oceanic) 245, 256 Bella Coola (Salishan) 419f, 421t, 424, 430t Besisi [Mah Meri] (Aslian) 304t, 315 Bilua (non-Austronesian) 243, 253 Binanderean family 240f, 248 Bininj Gun-Wok (Gunwinyguan) 228 Bislama (creole) 84, 129, 134, 270, 278 Bisoid languages 327–328 Bisu [Hpyen/Laopin/Laopan] (TibetoBurman) 306t, 326, 327, 327–328, 341 Bit see Pasing Biyue/Biyo (Sino-Tibetan) 327 Bo see Arem Bocotá (Chibchan) 170t Bodo (Baric) 330 Bokhopa/BoKhoPa see Phula Bora-Witoto family 184 Border family 240f, 249, 254, 258 Boruca/Brunca (Chibchan) 170t, 176 Bougainville family 240f, 244, 250, 251, 253, 254, 256 Brao (West Bahnaric) 316 Breton (Celtic, Indo-European) 7, 31, 88 Bribri (Chibchan) 170t, 176 Broken (creole) 84, 135, 136–137 Bru (West Katuic) 316 Bu-Nao/Bunu 314 Bugan (Pakan) 320 Bulang (Waic) 318 Buma (Malayo-Polynesian) 277 Bumbita Arapesh (Arapesh, Torricelli) 258 Bunu [Bu-Nao] 314 Bunun (Austronesian) 287, 289, 293, 295 Burmese language xii, 81–82, 323–324 Burmeso (non-Austronesian) 253 Burmic Burmish languages 306t, 323–324 Burmish languages 323–324 Butam (non-Austronesian) 244, 250 Buyi (Tibeto-Burman) 345
i n d e x o f l a n g uag e s a n d l a n g uag e fa m i l i e s Cabécar [Chiripó, Estrella] (Chibchan) 170t, 176 Cacaopera (Misumalpan) 172 Caddoan 463 Cahita (Uto-Aztecan) 165n, 167t Cahto (Athabaskan) 446 Cahuilla (Uto-Aztecan) 446 Canefields English 124 Cantonese [Yue] Sinitic 80, 280, 345n, 346 Caquetio (Arawak) 184 Caraque (isolate) 191 Carib family 184, 187 Catacaos (dialect of Atalán) 190 Cathlamet (Chinookan) 419f, 422t, 429, 431t Cattle Station Pidgin 130 Cayapa see Cha’palaachii Cayuse (isolate) 418, 419f, 420n, 423t, 432t Celtic languages 4, 33 Cemaun Arapesh (Arapesh, Torricelli) 257 Cemuhi (Malayo-Polynesian) 278 Central Alaskan Yupik see Central Yup’ik Central Chin languages [Laizo/Zo] 331–332 Central-Eastern Malayo-Polynesian languages 244f Central Karen languages [Kayah/Bwe] 329 Central Miao (Miao-Yao) 313 Central Siberian Yupik see Siberian Yupik Central Pomo (Pomoan) 448 Central Salish (Salishan) 421t Central Sierra Miwok (Miwokan) 447 Central Thai (South-Western Thai) 312, 320 Central Yana (Yanan) 450 Central Yup’ik [Central Alaskan Yupik] (Eskimo-Aleut) xiii, 21, 22, 156n, 408t, 409–410, 414, 415 Chachi see Cha’palaachii Chairel (Sal Luish) 331 Cham (Malayo-Polynesian) 271, 304t, 308, 309 Chamí (Embera dialect continuum) 186– 187, 195, 197 Chamic languages (Western MalayoPolynesian) 271, 303, 308, 309–310, 316, 334 Chamorro (Malayo-Polynesian) 269 Chang (Baric) 330 Chango 206 Chapacura family 184, 184n Cha’palaachii (Barbacoan) 188, 188n, 194–195, 197 see also Chachi; Cayapa Chatino (Otomanguean) 168t, 175 Chatong (East Katuic) 304t, 316 Chawte (Chin) 332 Chemakum (Chimakuan) 419f, 421t, 429, 430t Chemehuevi (Uto-Aztecan) 467t Chenapian (Papuan) 247 Cheng (West Bahranic) 316–317 Chepya (Southern Ngwi) 306t, 327
517
Chewong (Aslian) 304t, 315 Chiapanec (Otomanguean) 168t, 171 Chiapas Zoque (Mixe-Zoque) 168t Chibcha (Chibchan) 189, 190 Chibchan languages 61, 170, 185n, 187 Chichimec (Otomanguan) 167t, 171 Chicomuceltec (Mayan) 169t, 171 Chilanga (Lencan) 169t, 176 Chilula (Athabaskan) 446 Chimakuan family 421t, 424 Chimariko (isolate) 444, 446 Chimbu family 254 Chimú see Quingnam Chimu family (part of East New Guinea Highlands family) 190, 190n Chin languages 331–332 Chinantec (Otomanguean) 165n, 168t Chinese Pidgin English [CPE] 124, 126, 127 Chinese (Sino-Tibetan) xii, 80, 82, 269, 272, 337n, 339n, 340–351, 389–391 see also Holo, Southern Min, Mandarin; Putonghua Chinese Tungusic 390, 392 Chinook jargon xii Chinookan family see Lower Chinook; Upper Chinook; Wishram Chinook Chiricahua-Mescalero (Apachean, Athabaskan) 461 Chitose dialect (Ainu) 382 Chocheño (Ohlone) 448 Chocho (Otomanguean) 175 Choco family 185, 186n, 187, 188, 194, 195, 197 Chocoan subfamily (Otomanguean) 168t Chol (Mayan) 169t Cholan (Mayan) 169t Cholón (isolate) 192n Cholti (Mayan) 169t Chong (Pearic) 305t, 320–321, 334 Chong of Trat see Song Chono 206 Chontal (Mayan) 169t Choro see Chrau Chorotega [Mangue] (Otomanguean) 168t Ch’orti’ (Mayan) 169t Choynumni Yokuts (Yokutsan) 450 Chrau [Choro] (Bahnaric) 305t, 317 Chru (Chamic) 304t, 309 Chuj (Mayan) 169t Chukchansi Yokuts (Yokutsan) 450 Chukchi/Chukchee (ChukchiKamchatkan) xiii, 372, 393–396 Chukchi-Kamchatkan/ChukcheeKamchatkan languages xiii, 371, 387, 393–394, 396 Chumashan family 444, 446 Chuo-go (dialects of central Japanese) 364–365 Chuukic languages (Malayo-Polynesian) 274–275
518
i n d e x o f l a n g uag e s a n d l a n g uag e fa m i l i e s
Chu’ung [Sa-och/Sa-ong/Khamen Padong] (Pearic) 305t Chuvan (Yukaghir) 397 Clallam/Klallam (Salishan) 419f, 422t, 431t, 434 Classical Chinese 154 Coast Miwok (Miwokan) 447 Coast Tsimshian (Tsimshianic) 408t, 411, 419f, 421t, 430t Cochimi [Kumyai] (Yuman) 167t, 172t Cocopa (Yuman) 167t, 172t, 446, 451, 463, 469t Coeur d’Alene (Salishan) 419f, 422t, 431t Colán (dialect of Atalán) 190 Colorado see Tsafiki Columbian (Salishan) 419f, 422t, 431t Colville-Okanagan (Salishan) 419f, 422t, 431t Comox (Salishan) 419f, 421t, 430t Công (Southern Ngwi) 306t, 325, 328 Coos family 423t Cora (Uto-Aztecan) 167t Corachol (Uto-Aztecan) 167t Cornish (Celtic, Indo-European) 27, 88, 416 Costanoan family see Ohlone family Cosung [Kucong/Lahu/Lahlu] (Central Ngwi) 306t, 325, 326 Cotabato Chavacao (creole) 137 Cowlitz (Salishan) 419f, 422t, 431t CPE see Chinese Pidgin English Cua (North Bahranic) 317 Cuaiquier see Awa Pit Cuitlatec 167t Cuna [Kuna/Tule] (Chibchan) 170t, 185n see Kuna, Tule Cupeño (Uto-Aztecan) 446 Da Kine Talk (pidgin) 280 Dahalo (Cushitic, Afroasiatic) 12 Dakkang (East Katuic) 304t, 316 Dami (Bel family) 245 Dampal (Malayo-Polynesian) 273 Danau/Danaw (Palaungic) 305t, 318 Dani (Dani) 256 Dani Valley Police Talk 125 Danu (Burmish) 324 De’ang [Gold Palaung] (Palaungic) 317 Deg Xinag [Deg Hit’an/Ingalik] (Athabaskan) 408t, 413 Dehu (Malayo-Polynesian) 278 Dena’ina see Tanaina Desin Dola [Orang Kuala] (MalayoPolynesian) 310 Dhuwal-Dhuwala (Yolngu) 224 Diaguita 206 Diegueño (Yuman) 446 see also Kumeyaay Digarish ‘Mishmi’ languages 322 Diria [Mangue] (Otomanguean) 168t Ditidaht (Wakashan) 419f, 421t, 430t Dixon Reef (Malayo-Polynesian) 278 Djambarrpuyngu (Pama-Nyungan) 224
Djingili (Mindi subgroup) 225 Dobu (Austronesian) 241 Dong see Kam-Sui languages Dravidian xiii Duan (North Bahranic) 317 Duano [Orang Kuala] (MalayoPolynesian) 310 Dulong (Tibeto-Burman) 339 Dumbea [Paita] (Malayo-Polynesian) 278 Dumo (Skou) 251, 258 Dumna Yokuts (Yukutsan) 450 Dutch pidgins and creoles 127 Dvmang see Mvtwang Dvngsar/Tangsarr (Nungish) 306t, 323 Dvru (Nungish) 323 Dyirbal (Pama-Nyungan) 33, 228 East Katuic languages 316 East New Guinea Highland family 254 East Pear see Samre East Sakhalin dialect (Nivkh) 372, 375 Eastern Arrernte (Pama-Nyungan) 224 Eastern Highland Maya (Mayan) 169t Eastern Mixe [Mixe] (Mixe-Zoque) 168t Eastern Pomo (Pomoan) 449 Embera (Choco) 186–187, 194, 197 Embera dialect continuum (Choco) 186–187, 194, 197 Embera Proper (Northern Embera, Choco) 186–187, 195–197 Embera-Katío (Northern Embera, Choco) 186 Enga (Engan) 240–241, 254 Engan family xii, 240, 248, 248n, 254 English (Germanic, Indo-European) 25n, 28n, 29, 31, 32, 157n, 214, 214n, 241, 242, 243, 258, 259, 279–280, 349, 351, 361, 409, 426–427 Australian English 85 Old English 32 Papua-New Guinean English 280 Philippine English 83 Singapore English 81 ‘Englishes’ vii English pidgins and creoles 61, 84, 119, 121–122, 124–125, 127, 130–131 Australia 130, 135 Epena Pedee (South Embera, Choco) 195, 197 Epera [Baudó] (Choco) 186–187 Epera [Saija] (Choco) 186–187 Eskimo (Eskimo-Aleut) 410, 415 ‘Eskimo’ languages 415 Eskimo-Aleut family xiii, 393, 406, 408t, 414–415 Esmeralda (isolate) 191 Español de cocina 127 Esselen (isolate) 446 Eten (Chimú) 190 Etruscan (isolate) 27
i n d e x o f l a n g uag e s a n d l a n g uag e fa m i l i e s Eudeve [Heve/Dohema] (Uto-Aztecan) 167t European colonial languages xii Even [Lamut] (Tungusic) 389–391, 395–397 Evenki (Tungusic) 372, 389–391 Ewenke (Tungusic) 389, 392 Extra-Formosan languages see MalayoPolynesian languages Eyak (Athabaskan-Eyak-Tlingit) 21, 406, 408, 410, 412 Faeroese (North Germanic, IndoEuropean) 7–8 Fanah (Malayo-Polynesian) 274 Fasu (Kutubuan) 255 Fatamanue (Malayo-Polynesian) 274 Fijian pidgins and creoles 129–130 Fiji Hindi 128 Fiji Pidgin English 123, 139 Filipino see Pilipino (Malayo-Polynesian) Finisterre family 254 Foe (Kutubuan) 255 Folopa (Teberan-Pawaian) 253 Fore (Gorokan) 251, 252 Franco-Provençal (Romance, IndoEuropean) 50n, 53n French (Italic, Indo-European) 29, 33 French pidgins and creoles 122–123, 127 Fuegian languages xi, xii, 206–218 Gabrielino see Tongva Galice-Applegate (Athabaskan) 419f, 423t, 432t Ganan (Luish) 306t, 330 Garifuna [Black Carib] (Arawakan) 169t, 176 Garo (Baric) 330 Gauri (Baric) 331 Gazhuo (Kaduo) 327 Ge see Miao-Yao Geba (Karenic) 306t, 329 Gedou see Miao-Yao Gelao languages (Thai-Kadai) 312–313 German pidgins and creoles 123, 127, 136 Getmate (Malayo-Polynesian) 275 Gilyak [Nivkh] (isolate) xiii, 79, 371–377, 393 Gitksan (Tsimshianic) 419f, 421t, 423n, 430t Gong (Gong) 306t, 324, 334 Gold (Tungusic) 389 Gong languages 306t, 324 Gorokan family 240f, 248 Green Gelao see Gelao languages Greenlandic (Eskimo-Aleut) 7–8 Guahibo family 184 Guambiano (Barbacoan) 188, 188n, 189, 189n, 197 Guarijío [Varohío] (Uto-Aztecan) 167t Guatuso (Chibchan) 170t Guaymí (Chibchan) 170t, 176 Gumatj dialects (Pama-Nyungan) 224 Gumbaynggir (Pama-Nyungan) 231–232
519
Guoyu [Chinese] (Sino-Tibetan) see Mandarin; Putonghua Gupapuyngu (Pama-Nyungan) 224 Guugu Yimidhirr (Pama-Nyungan) 227 Gwich’in see Kutchin Hachijo dialect (Japanese) 359n Hagei-Hoki see Gelao languages Haida (isolate) 406, 408t, 410– 411, 419f Haimi (Baric) 330 Hainanese see Southern Min Haisla (Wakashan) 419f, 421t, 430t Hakka (Sino-Tibetan) 80–81, 287 Halang (North Bahranic) 317 Halkomelem (Salishan) 419f, 421t, 430t Han (Athabaskan) 408t, 412, 413 Han language see Chinese Hanhi (Ngwi) 325, 326, 347 Hani (Tibeto-Burman) 327 Hanis (Coos) 419f, 423t, 432t Hano [Raga] (Malayo-Polynesian) 278 Haoni (Southern Ngwi) 327 Harakmbet family 184, 184n Hat see Iduh Hatam 242 Hatohobei (Malayo-Polynesian) 274 Háusi Kúta (Yámana) 213–218 Havasupai [Upland Yuman] (Hokan) 462f, 463, 467, 469t, 470 Hawaiian (Malayo-Polynesian) 9, 28n, 86–87, 279 Hawaiian (Oceanic) 28n Hawaiian English 119, 280 Hawaiian Pidgin 126, 135 Hebrew (Semitic, Afroasiatic) 18–19, 19–20, 88, 416 Heiltsuk-Oowekyala (Wakashan) 419f, 421t, 424, 430t Hezhe (Tungusic) 389 Hezhe-Nanai (Tungusic) 389–392 Highland Chontal [Tequistlatec] (Hokan) 168t Hindi pidgins and creoles 128, 129–130 Hiri Motu [Police Motu] (creole) 125, 241, 241n, 242, 280 Hiroshima dialect (Japanese) 280 Hitu (Malayo-Polynesian) 279–280 Hmong Dao [White Hmong] (Miao-Yao) 313 Hmong languages (Miao-Yao) 313 Hmong-Mien languages see Miao-Yao languages Hoanya (Austronesian) 287 Hokan stock 444–445, 463 Hokan group 191 Hokkaido dialect (Ainu) 377 Holikachuk (Athabaskan) 408t, 413 Holo 288, 289, 292 see also Chinese Hopi (Uto-Aztecan) 461, 463, 467t Hpun (Burmic Burmish) 306t, 324
520
i n d e x o f l a n g uag e s a n d l a n g uag e fa m i l i e s
Hpyen see Bisu Hre (North Bahnaric) 317 Htangan (Baric) 330 Hu (Angkuic) 318, 390 Hua (Gorokan) 256 Hualapai (Yuman) 461, 463, 467, 469t, 470 Huancavilca (Chimú) 190n Huastec (Mayan) 169t Huave (isolate) 168t, 171 Huayu see Mandarin Huchiun/Juichun (Ohlone) 448 Huehuetla, Tepehua (Totonacan) 170 Huetar [Guetar] (Chibchan) 170t Huichol (Uto-Aztecan) 167t Huihui-hua see Tsat Hung (Vietic) 305t, 322 Huon family 240f, 248, 251 Hupa (Athabaskan) 446, 456 Iatmul (Ndu) 251, 252 Iau (Lake Plains) 251 Icelandic (Germanic, Indo-European) 8 Iduh [Tai Hat/Hat] (Khmuic) 305t, 319 Ilahita Arapesh (Arapesh, Torricelli) 258 Imbongu (Kaugel subgroup, Hagen branch, East New Guinea Highlands) 258 Imonda (Waris, Border) 253, 255 Indian languages see Native American languages Indo-European 393 Indo-European creoles see Dutch pidgins and creoles; English pidgins and creoles; French pidgins and creoles; German pidgins and creoles; Portuguese pidgins and creoles; Spanish pidgins and creoles Indonesian language 82–83, 84, 127n, 242 Ingalik see Deg Xinag Kuskokwim dialect 413 Insular Celtic languages (Indo-European) 30, 33 Iniseño (Chumashan) 446 Interior Salish (Salishan) 418, 422t Interior Tsimshian (Tsimshianic) 421t Intha (Burmish) 324 Inuit (Canada and Greenland, EskimoAleut) 408t, 426 see also Iñupiaq Inuktitut (Eskimo-Aleut) 426 Greenlandic Inuktitut 7–8 Iñupiaq/Inupiaq (Eskimo-Aleut) 406, 408t, 414–416 see also Inuit Bering Strait dialect 415 King Island 21 Malimiut dialect 414–415 North Slope dialect 415 Qawiaraq dialect 415 Ipai [Northern Diegueño] (Yuman) 446, 456 Isleño (Chumashan) 446 Iroquoian family xivn Isthmus Zapotec (Otomanguean) 175
Itelmen (Chukchi-Kamchatkan) 393–394, 396 Itzaj (Mayan) 169t, 175 Ixcatec (Otomanguean) 168t, 171 Ixil (Mayan) 169t Jah Het (Aslian) 304t, 315 Jahai see Jehai Jakalteko [Popti’] (Mayan) 169t Jakun (Malayo-Polynesian) 272 Jamundi (isolate) 191 Japanese (Japanese-Ryukyuan) 25n, 78, 148n, 156n, 157n, 279–280, 355–365 Taiwan 80, 288 Japanese-Ryukyuan [Japanic] xiii Japanic see Japanese-Ryukyuan Javanese (Malayo-Polynesian) 273, 279 Jeh (North Bahnaric) 317 Jehai/Jahai (Aslian) 304t, 315 Jemez see Towa Jicaque see Tol Jicarilla (Apachean Athabaskan) 461, 466t(a) Jinghpaw [Kachin] (Burmic) 324 Jinghpaw/Jingpho languages (Burmic) 330, 331 Jinuo (Central Ngwi) 326 Jova (Uto-Aztecan) 167t Juaneño see Acjachmem Juk [Suai] (Bahnaric) 305t, 317 Ka-ang (Palaungic) 317 Kabana (Malayo-Polynesian) 245 Kachin [Jinghpaw] languages 330, 331 Kaco’ [Lamam] (Bahnaric) 305t Kadai languages (Thai-Kadai) 308, 310, 312 Kadu (Luish) 306t, 330 Kaduo (Tibeto-Burman) 327 Kainantu family 240f, 248 Kaki Ae (Eleman) 258 Kala Lagaw Ya (Pama-Nyungan) 224 Kalam (Kalam-Kobon) 252 Kalam-Kobon family 240f, 248, 249 Kalapuyan (Takelman) 422t Kalaw Kawaw Ya (Pama-Nyungan) 222, 224 Kam-Sui languages (Thai-Kadai) 308, 310, 312 Kam-Tai languages (Thai-Kadai) 308, 310 Kanakanavu (Austronesian) 287, 290, 295 Kaniet (Malayo-Polynesian) 275 Kanjobalan (Mayan) 169t Kanto dialect (Japanese) 358–359 Kantu (East Katuic) 316 Kaqchikel (Mayan) 169t, 171–172, 173, 177 Karami (Papuan) 275 Karenic languages 306t, 329 Karore (Malayo-Polynesian) 275 Karuk (isolate) 444, 446, 456 Kaseng (North-West Bahnaric) 317 Kashaya Pomo (Pomoan) 448
i n d e x o f l a n g uag e s a n d l a n g uag e fa m i l i e s Kasong see Song Katang (East Katuic) 316 Kâte (Papuan) 276 Katu (East Katuic) 316 Katua (North Bahnaric) 317 Katuic-Bahnaric languages 304t, 315–317 Katuic languages 304t, 315–316 see also East Katuic languages; West Katuic languages Kaurna (Pama-Nyungan) 85, 231 Kavalan (Austronesian) 287, 290, 295 Kawaiisu (Uto-Aztecan) 447 Kawesqar [Alacaluf/Alakaluf/Alikhoolip] (isolate) 206–213 Kayan [Padaung] (Karenic) 329 Kayardild (Tangkic) 228 Kayong (North Bahnaric) 317 Kaytitj (Pama-Nyungan) 224 Kazukuru 277 Kenaboi (Aslian) 304t, 315 Kensiu (Aslian) 304t, 315 Kerek (Chukchi-Kamchatkan) 393–394, 396 Keres/Keresan (isolate) 461, 463, 465–467, 468t, 471 Kesen dialect (Japanese) 362 Ket (isolate) 371, 393, 397 Ketangalan (Austronesian) 287 Kewa (Engan) 251, 256, 258 Kha Bit see Pasing Kha Pai see Sila Khaco’ (North Bahnaric) 317 Kham Myang (South-Western Tai) see SouthWestern Tai languages Khamen Padong see Chu’ung Khami/Khumi (South Chin) 332 Khamnigan Evenki (Tungusic) 389–390 Khamti Shan (Thai-Kadai) 311 Khamyang (Thai) 311 Khang (Khumic) 319 Khao (Khumic) 319 Khasi (Mon-Khmer) 315, 321 Khienmungan [Kalyokengnyu] (Baric) 330 Khla Phlao see Laha Khmer (Austro-Asiatic) 81, 308, 315, 334 Khmic languages 305t, 319 Khmu (Khmuic) 319 Khoisan languages 33 Khyn (Thai-Kadai) 311 K’iche’ (Mayan) 169t, 173, 177 Kiksht (Chinookan) 418n, 419f, 422t, 429, 431t Kilivila (Malayo-Polynesian) 246 Kiliwa (Yuman) 167t, 172t Kilmeri (Border) 256, 258 King Island Iñupiaq (Eskimo-Aleut) 21 Kintaq (Aslian) 304t, 315 Kiowa-Tanoan family 461, 463 Kitanemuk (Uto-Aztecan) 447 Klallam see Clallam
521
Klamath [Klamath-Modoc] (isolate) 418, 419f, 423t, 432t, 444, 447 Klor [Ngeh] (East Katuic) 316 Koho (South Bahnaric) 317 Koiari (Papuan) 276 Koinés (creole) 123 Kokota (Malayo-Polynesian) 277 Kol (non-Austronesian) 250 Kolyma Yukaghir (Yukaghir) 393, 397–400 Konkow (Maiduan) 447 Konomihu (Shastan) 447 Konyak (Baric) 330 Kopar (Lower Sepik, Lower SepikRamu) 259, 260 Korean (isolate) viii, xiii, 78, 280, 355 Korafe (Binanderean) 256 Koroni (Malayo-Polynesian) 274 Koryak (Chukchi-Kamchatkan) 393–396 Kove (Oceanic) 245 Koyukon (Athabakan) 408t, 413 lower and southern Upper dialects 413 Kravet (West Bahnaric languages) 316 Kri (Vietic) 305t, 322 Kriang (East Katuic) 316 Kriol (creole) 84, 135 Kristang (Portuguese creole) 80, 306t, 307, 332 Krung (West Bahnaric) 316 Ksinmul [Puoc] (Khumic) 319 Ku Waru (Kaugel subgroup, Hagen branch, East New Guinea Highlands) 253, 254 Kuanua [Tolai] (Malayo-Polynesian) 125, 241 Kucong see Cosung Kukatja (Pama-Nyungan) 224 Kuki-Chin-Naga languages 331–332 Kulon (Austronesian) 287 Kuman (Chimbu) xii Kumeyaay [Diegueño] (Yuman) 446, 447 Kuna see Cuna Kunza see Atacameño Kuot (non-Austronesian) 244, 250, 253, 257 Kurdish (Indo-Iranian, Indo-European) 14 Kuskokwim, Upper (Athabaskan) 413 Kutchin/Gwich’in (Athabaskan) 408t, 411, 412, 413 Canadian dialect 414 Kutubuan family 255 Kuy (West Katuic) 316 Kwak’wala (Wakashan) 419f, 421t, 430t Kwalhioqua-Clatskanie (Athabaskan) 419f, 423t, 432t Kwanga (Papuan) 247 Kwi [Lahu Shi/Yellow Lahu] (Ngwi) 325 Kwoma (Papuan) 247 La (Waic) 318 Lacandon (Mayan) 169t, 171, 172t Lachi/Lati (Thai-Kadai) 304t, 313 Lachik (Burmish) 324
522
i n d e x o f l a n g uag e s a n d l a n g uag e fa m i l i e s
Lacid (Burmish) 324 Lae [Aribwatsa] (Malayo-Polynesian) 275–276 Laemae (Central Ngwi) 326 Laghu (Malayo-Polynesian) 277 Laghuu [Xa Pho/Muji] (South-Eastern Ngwi) 306t, 328–329 Laha [Khla Phlao] (Thai-Kadai) 304t, 313, 333 Lahe (Malayo-Polynesian) 276 Lahu [Lahlu/Muser] 325, 326, 328 see also Cosung Lai (Paliu) 319–320 Laji (Lachi) 313 Lajia (Thai-Kadai) 310 Lake Miwok (Miwokan) 447 Lakes Plain family 240f, 249, 251, 256 ‘Lamam’ see Kaco’ Lamet (Palaungic) 318 Lamu (Central Ngwi) 326 Lamut [Even] (Tungusic) 389 Langwaw (Langsu) 324 Lanoh (Aslian) 304t, 315 Lao (Thai-Kadai) 79, 310–311, 312, 333, 334–335 Laomian (Southern Ngwi) 306t, 327 Laopin/Laopan see Bisu Laqua see Pubiao Lashi (Lacid) 324 Lassik (Athabaskan) 447 Lavi see Swoeng Lavüa/Lawa (Waic) 305t, 318 Lavukaleve (non-Austronesian) 243, 253 Lawa see Lavüa Lawseng see Sinsali Leko (isolate) 192n Lenca (Lencan) 169t, 172, 176 Li (Kadai) 271, 310 Likan-antai see Atacameño Lili (isolate) 191 Lillooet (Salishan) 419f, 422t, 431t Lipo (Central Ngwi) 326, 345 Lipuo (Tibeto-Burman) 345 Lisu [Lisaw] (Ngwi) 325, 326, 331, 339, 340, 341, 345 Lolo (Ngwi) 325, 326 Lololish languages [Ngwi] (TibetoBurman) 323, 345, 350 Lom (Malayo-Polynesian) 273 Lorediakarkar (Malayo-Polynesian) 278 Lower Chehalis (Salishan) 419f, 422t, 431t Lower Chinook (Chinookan) 419f, 422t, 429, 431t Lower Ramu family 240f, 246, 252, 259 Lower Sepik family 240f, 246, 252, 253, 257, 259 Lower Sepik-Ramu family 246, 251, 252, 256 ‘Lower Tanana’ (Smithsonian usage) see Tanana
Lowland Chontal [Huamelultec] (Hokan) 168t Luiseño (Uto-Aztecan) 447, 451 Luish languages (Sal) 306t, 330–331, 330–331 Lummi (Salishan) 33, 422t, 433 –434 Lungmi (Nungish) 306t, 323 Luritja (Pama-Nyungan) 224 Lushai [Mizo] see Central Chin languages Lushootseed (Salishan) 419f, 422t, 431t Lusi (Oceanic) 245 Ma [Koho] (South Bahnaric) 317 Macro-Jê family 184 Madang languages 249 Madurese (Malayo-Polynesian) 273 Mae Rim Lawa see Phalok Mafea (Malayo-Polynesian) 278 Mah Meri see Besisi Maidu, Mountain (Maiduan) 447 Maiduan family 444 Maingtha see Ngochang Maipuran family 184n see Arawak family Makah (Wakashan) 419f, 421t, 423n, 430t Makatao (Austronesian) 287 Makolkol (non-Austronesian) 244, 250 Makopin Arapesh (Arapesh, Torricelli) 257, 259 Makú family 184 Mal (Mal-Phrai) 319 Malaccan Creole Portuguese 80, 307 Malay (Malayo-Polynesian) 82, 268–269, 273, 280, 309, 332, 334–335 see also Bahasa Indonesia Malayic languages (Malayo-Polynesian) 303, 304t, 332–333 degree of endangerment 309, 310 Malayo-Polynesian languages (Austronesian) 206, 244–245, 267–280 Maleng [Pakatan] (Vietic) 305t, 322 Malin (Luish) 306t, 331 Maltese (Semitic, Afroasiatic) 33 Mam (Mayan) 169t, 177 Manabita (Chimú) 190n Manambu (Ndu) 252, 253, 258 Manchu (Tungusic) 389–392 Manchu-Tsungusic (Altaic) xiii Mandarin [Chinese] (Sino-Tibetan) 79, 80, 81, 154n, 293, 343n, 341, 345n, 348 see also Putonghua South-East Asia 308 Taiwan 288–289 Mang (Pakanic) 305t, 319–320 Mangue (Otomanguean) 168t Maniq [Tonga’/Mos/Ten’en] (Aslian) 304t, 315 Manjiljarra (Pama-Nyungan) 224 Mansim (Hattam) 257 Manta (Chimú) 190n Manu (Karenic) 306t, 329 Manx (Celtic, Indo-European) 88
i n d e x o f l a n g uag e s a n d l a n g uag e fa m i l i e s Maori (Malayo-Polynesian) xii, 9, 28n, 85–86, 137, 279 language recovery/revival 9 Mapuche [Mapudungu(n)/Araucanian] (isolate) 192n, 206 Maragus [Tape] (Malayo-Polynesian) 278 Maricopa (Yuman) 463, 469t Marind (Marind) 256 Marind family 240f, 248 Maring (Chin) 332 Maritime Tsimshian (Tsimshianic) 421t Maru (Langwaw) 324 Matagalpan (Misumalpan) 170t Matlazinca (Otomanguean) 167t, 175 Matsi see Mo’ang Mattole (Athabaskan) 447 May (Vietic) 305t, 322 Ma’ya (Malayo-Polynesian) 277 Mayan family 165n, 169t, 170, 176, 177–179 Maybrat 242 Mayo (Uto-Aztecan) 165n, 167t Mazahua (Otomanguean) 168t Mazateca(Otomanguean) 165n, 168t Mbambatana 277 Mehek (Tama) 257, 259 Meithej [Manipur] (Chin) 332 Mekeo Pidgins 126 Melanesian Pidgin English 122, 130–131, 241, 269 see also Tok Pisin Mendriq/Menriq (Aslian) 304t, 315 Meriam (Papuan) 222 Meril (Malayo-Polynesian) 274–275 Mescaleo Apache (Athabaskan) 466t(a) Meyah 242 Miao-Yao (Miao-Yao) 303, 307, 308, 309, 313–314, 335 Miao-Yao languages xii, 304t, 308, 313–314 Micronesian languages 274–275 Miluk (Coos) 419f, 423t, 432t Mindi subgroup 225 Minnanhua see Southern Min Miram [Mara/Lakher] (Chin) 332 Miskito Coast Creole 61, 176 Mískitu (Misumalpan) 170t Misumalpan family [Misuluan family] 170t Miwok(an) family 444, 447–448 Mixe-Zoque family 168t, 170–171, 175 Mixtec (Mixtecan) 173 Mixtecan languages 170 Miyako dialect (Ryukyuan) 275, 363 Mlabri [Phi Tong Luang] (Khumic) 305t, 319 Mnong [Penong] (South Bahnaric) 317 Mo’ang [Mondi/Matsi] (South-Eastern Ngwi) 306t, 329 Mochica (Chimu) 189, 190, 190n, 194, 196, 197 Mojave/Mohave (Yuman) 448, 451, 461, 463, 469t, 470 Mok [Tai Loi] (Northern Angkuic) 305t, 318
523
Moken (Malayic Polynesian) 310 Moklen (Malayic Polynesian) 310 Molala (isolate) 418, 419f, 423t, 432t Mon (Monic) 81, 305t, 308, 320 Mon-Khmer family xii, 307, 308, 309, 314–315, 317, 319–320, 333, 334 Mondi see Mo’ang Mong Njua [Green Mong] (Miao-Yao) 313 Mongolian 340 Mongolic languages 371–372, 387 Monic languages 305t, 320 Mon-Khmer 304t, 307, 333 Mono (Uto-Aztecan) 448 Monom (North Bahnaric) 317 Monterey (Ohlone) 448 Mopan (Mayan) 169t Moquelumne see Southern Sierra Miwok Mos see Maniq Moshang clan dialect [Tangsa dialect] (Baric) 330n Motocintlec (Mayan) 172t Motu (Austronesian) 84, 241 Motuna (Papuan) 253, 254 Mountain Maidu [Northern Maidu] (Maiduan) 447 Mpi (Southern Ngwi) 306t, 327 Mro/Mru (South Chin) 332 Muhala (Malayo-Polynesian) 275 Muji see Laghuu Mulaha (Papuan) 275 Mulao (Thai-Kadai) 310 Multnomah (Chinookan) 419f, 422t, 431t Munda languages (Austroasiatic) 307, 315 Muong (Mon-Khmer) 321 Murik (Lower Sepik, Lower SepikRamu) 257, 276 Muser see Lahu Musom (Austronesian) 257 Musqueam (Salishan) 433 Mutsun (Ohlone) 448, 458 Muwekma (Ohlone) 458 Mvtwang 323 Myanmar (Burmese) see Burmese language Na-ang (Palaungic) 317 Na-Dené 444 see also Athabaskan-EyakTlingit family Na-eang (Palaungic) 317 Naganese (Assamese pidgin) 330 Naha dialect (Ryukyuan) 364 Nahuan (Uto-Aztecan) 167t, 170–171, 175 Nahuat (Uto-Aztecan) 167t Nahuatl (Uto-Aztecan) 173 Nakaela (Malayo-Polynesian) 274 Nanai (Tungusic) 372, 389–392 Nanggu (non-Austronesian) 243 Nasarian (Malayo-Polynesian) 278 Nasioi (Papuan) 254
524
i n d e x o f l a n g uag e s a n d l a n g uag e fa m i l i e s
Native American languages 91–105 Alaska 406–417 California 442–459 Middle America 165–180 Northwest Coast xiv, 418–434 Southwest United States 460–473 Nauruan Pidgin English 126 Navajo (Apachean, Athabaskan) 18, 94, 406, 460, 461, 463–465, 466t(a), 471, 472 Navajo-Apachean (Athabaskan) 406 Ndu family 240f, 246, 251, 252, 253 Negerhollands (creole, Danish Virgin Islands) 139 Negidal (Tungusic) 389–390, 392 Nengone (Malayo-Polynesian) 278 Nere (Malayo-Polynesian) 279 New Caledonian Pidgin English 139 New Guinea Highlands languages 247–249, 251, 254 New Guinea Tok Pisin 121–122 New River Shasta (Shastan) 448 New South Wales Pidgin 138 Nez Perce (Sahaptian) 419f, 423t, 432t Ngaanyatjara (Pama-Nyungan) 224 Ngaatjatjarra (Pama-Nyungan) 224 Nganyaywana see Anewan Ngatikese men’s language [Ngatik Pidgin English] (creole) 138 Ngochang [Achang/Maingtha] (TibetoBurman, Sino-Tibetan) 324, 341 Nguluwan 275 Nguon (Vietic) 305t, 321 Ngwi languages [Loloish] 306t, 324–329 Nicola (Athabaskan) 419f, 423t, 432t Nicoya (Otomanguean) 168t Nigerian Pidgin 119 Nisgha/Nisga (Tsimshianic) 408t, 411, 419f, 421t, 423n, 430t Nissenan [Southern Maidu] (Maiduan) 448 Nisu (Ngwi) 325, 326 Nivkh [Nivx/Gilyak] (isolate) xiii, 78, 371–377, 393 Nocte (Baric) 330 Nomlaki (Wintuan) 448 non-Austronesian languages 239, 240t, 242, 243–245, 246, 249, 250, 256 see also Papuan languages Nooksack (Salishan) 419f, 421t, 430t Nootka (Wakashan) see Nuuchahnulth Nora (Thai) 311 Norf ’k (creole) 137 North Alaskan Iñupiaq (Eskimo-Aleut) 21 North American languages see Native American languages North Bahnaric languages 317 North Barbacoan languages 188 North Chin languages 331 North Maluku Malay (MalayoPolynesian) 279
North-West Bahnaric languages 317 Northeast Maidu see Mountain Maidu Northeastern Pomo (Pomoan) 449 Northern Chimú 190n Northern Diegueño see Ipai Northern Embera (Choco) 186, 195 Northern Itelmen (ChukchiKamchatkan) 395 Northern Haida (Haida) 408t Northern Karen languages 329 Northern Lowland Maya (Mayan) 169t Northern Naga languages 330 Northern Paiute (Uto-Aztecan) 448, 451 Northern Pomo (Pomoan) 449 Northern Sierra Miwok (Miwokan) 447 Northern Straits (Salishan) 419f, 422t, 431t, 433 Northern Tepehuan (Uto-Aztecan) 167t Northern Thai see Kham Myang Northern Tiwa (Kiowa-Tanoan) 466t(b) Northern Wakashan (Wakashan) 421t Northern Yana (Yanan) 450 Northwest Coast Indian languages xiv Nosu (Northern Ngwi) 326 Nuclear Micronesian languages see Micronesian languages Nukak Makú (Maku) 48n Nungish languages (Tibeto-Burman) 306t, 322–323 Nung Ven [Ainh] (Thai-Kadai) 304t, 313 Nuosu (Tibeto-Burman) 345 Nusu (Central Ngwi) 323, 326 Nusu (Ngwi) 326 Nuuchahnulth [Nootka] (Wakashan) 94–97, 419f, 421t, 424, 429, 430t Nyaheun (West Bahnaric) 316 Nyahkur (Monic) 305t, 320 Oaxaca Chontal 170, 171 Oaxaca [Tequistlatecan] (Hokan) 168t, 175 Oaxaca Zoque (Mixe-Zoque) 168t Obispeño (Chumashan) 446 Oceanic languages (Austronesian) 32, 121, 244–246, 280 classification 269 Ocuiltec (Otomanguean) 168t, 172t, 175 Ohlone family 448, 458 Oi (West Bahnaric) 316–317 Oksapmin (non-Austronesian) 255 Okwanuchu (Shastan) 448 Olcha [Ulcha] (Tungusic) 389 Old English (Germanic, Indo-European) 32 Olo (Torricelli) 254 Oluguya-Evenki (Tungusic) 389–390 Oluta Popoluca (Mixe-Zoque) 168t, 172t Omok (Yukaghir) 397 Ona [Selk’nam] (isolate) 206, 208, 214n Ong-Be (Thai-Kadai) 310 Ong (East Katuic) 316
i n d e x o f l a n g uag e s a n d l a n g uag e fa m i l i e s O’odham 461, 462f, 465 see also Akimel O’odham; Tohono O’odham Oowekyala see Heiltsuk-Oowekyala Opata [Teguima] (Uto-Aztecan) 167t, 171 Opatan subfamily (Uto-Aztecan) 167t Orang Kanaq (Malayo-Polynesian) 272, 310 Orang Kuala (Malayo-Polynesian) 272 Orochen (Tungusic) 389 Orochen-Evenki (Tungusic) 389–390 Orochi (Tungusic) 389–390 Oroha (Malayo-Polynesian) 277 Orok [Uilta] (Tungusic) 389, 392 Otomanguean languages 170 Oto-Pamean (Otomanguan) 167t, 175 Otomí (Otomanguean) 168t, 173, 175 Pa-O 329 Pacific Pidgin 84, 85, 126, 129, 138 see also Bislama; Solomon Islands Pijin; Tok Pisin Pacoh (East Katuic) 316 Paez (Poez) 189 Paici (Malayo-Polynesian) 278 Paipai (Yuman) 167t, 172t Paiwan (Austronesian) 287, 295 Paha [Bana] (Southern Ngwi) 306t, 328 Pak Tay [Southern Thai] (South-Western Tai) 312 Pakan [Bugan] (Mon-Khmer) 320 Pakanic languages 305t, 319–320 Pakanil see Tubatulabal Pakatan see Maleng Palaeoasiatic 393 Palaeosiberian languages 79, 239, 371, 387–389, 393–400 Palaihnihan family 444 Palauan (Malayo-Polynesian) 269, 275, 279 Palaungic languages 305t, 317–318 Pale [Silver Palaung] (Palaungic) 317 Palmerston English (creole) 137–138 Pama-Nyungan languages 223, 225 Pamean (Otomanguan) 167t Pana/Bana (Southern Ngwi) 306t, 328 Panamint (Uto-Aztecan) 448 Panoan languages 184 Papago (Uto-Aztecan) 167t, 461, 467t see also Tohono O’odham Papora (Austronesian) 287 Papuan languages xii, 32–33, 121, 239–240 Indonesia 83, 269–270, 274, 275–276 New Britain 244 New Guinea xii, 239–240, 245, 246–256, 259 Papua 84, 242 Solomon Islands 243, 244, 277 Papuan Pidgin English (pidgin) 124 Paraok Wa (Waic) 318 Parau Tinito (pidgin) 126 Pasing [Kha Bit/Bit] (Khmuic) 305t, 319 Pathen see Baheng
525
Patwin [Wintun] (Wintuan) 448 Paulohi (Malayo-Polynesian) 274 Paya see Pech Pazeh (Austronesian) 287, 295 ‘Pear’ of Preah Vihar (Pearic) Pearic languages 305t, 320–321 Pech [Paya] (Chibchan) 170t, 176 Pee-Posh see Maricopa Peipo languages 286, 287, 294 Pele-Ata see Wasi Penrhyn (Malayo-Polynesian) 279 Pentlatch (Salishan) 419f, 421t, 429, 430t Penutian stock 411, 444, 463 Petjo (Dutch-Malay creole) 127 Phake (Thai) 311–312 Phalok [Mae Rim Lawa] (Waic) 305t, 318 Phi Tong Luang see Mlabri Philippine English 83 Pho (Karenic) 329 Phom (Baric) 330 Phong (Khmuic) 319 Phong (Vietic) 305t, 319, 322 Phongku see Sinsali Phonsung see Aheu Phu Tai (Thai-Kadai) 311, 312 Phuang (East Katuic) 316 Phula [Pula/Bokhopa/ Bo Kho Pa] (SouthEastern Ngwi) 306t, 325, 328–329 Phunoi see Sinsali Phuong (East Katuic) 316 Picuris 461, 466t(b) see also Northern Tiwa Pidgin Fijian (pidgin) 129–130 Pidgin Hindi 129–130 Pidgin Japanese 279 Pijin see Solomon Islands Pijin Pilipino (Malayo-Polynesian) 83 Pima see Akimel O’odham Pima Alto (Uto-Aztecan) 167t Pima Bajo [Nevome/Ure/Yecora] (UtoAztecan) 167t, 172t Piman (Uto-Aztecan) 167t Pintupi (Pama-Nyungan) 224 Pipil (Uto-Aztecan) 167t, 171, 176 Pisu see Sinsali Pitjantjatjara (Pama-Nyungan) 224 Pitkern (creole) 137 Pitt River (Achumawi) 445 Plains Miwok [Valley Miwok] (Miwokan) 447 Pochutec (Uto-Aztecan) 167t Poi Tsat see Tsat Police Motu see Hiri Motu Polynesian languages 85, 86, 277, 278 Pomoan family 444, 448–449 Pomoikan languages 254 Ponapean (Malayo-Polynesian) 138, 279 Pong [Poong] (Vietic) 305t, 319, 322 Popoloca (Otomanguean) 168t, 172t Poqom (Mayan) 169t Poqomam (Mayan) 169t, 179
526
i n d e x o f l a n g uag e s a n d l a n g uag e fa m i l i e s
Poqomchi’ (Mayan) 169t Poronaisk dialect (Nivkh) 371 Portuguese pidgins and creoles 80, 82, 128, 307, 332 Portuguese (Romance, Indo-European) 80, 83 Potawatomi (Algonquian) 113–114 Pray (Austro-Asiatic) 319 Prinmi [Pumi] (Tibeto-Burman) 345, 349 Provençal see Franco-Provençal Pubiao [Pupeo/Laqua] (Thai-Kadai) 304t Pulo Annian (Malayo-Polynesian) 275 Puman see U Pumi see Prinmi Pupeo [Qabiao] (Thai-Kadai) 313 Purisimeño (Chumashan) 446 Puruhã-Cañari 190 Puscajae (isolate) 191 Putonghua xii, 80, 343n, 346, 347–349 see also Chinese; Mandarin Puyuma (Austronesian) 287, 296 Pwo [Southern Karen] (Karenic) 329 Pyu (Luish) 306t, 307, 330 Qabiao (Thai-Kadai) 313 Qanjobal (Mayan) 169t Q’eqchi’ (Mayan) 169t, 177 Qiang (Tibeto-Burman) 339, 339n, 342, 343, 344, 348–349, 350 Quechan [Yuma] (Yuman) 449, 451, 463, 469t Quechua 186f, 189n, 191–192, 192n, 195, 196, 200, 206 Queensland Kanaka English (pidgin) 127, 130 Quileute (Chimakuan) 419f, 421t, 430t Quinault (Salishan) 419f, 422t, 431t Quingam [Chimú/Yunga] (isolate) 189–190 Quingam-Chimú (isolate) 189–190 Ram family 240f, 247 Rama (Chibchan) 37, 61, 68, 69, 170t, 176 Raorou (Central Ngwi) 323, 326 Rapanui [Pascuense] (MalayoPolynesian) 206 Rawang (Nungish) 323 Red Gelao see Gelao languages Rengao (North Bahnaric) 317 Réunionnais 123 rGyalrong (Tibeto-Burman) 344, 348, 350 Riang (Palaungic) 317 Ririo (Malayo-Polynesian) 277 Roglai (Chamic) 304t, 309 Romance languages (Italic, IndoEuropean) 33 Ruc (Vietic) 305t, 322, 333 Rukai (Austronesian) 287, 293, 296 Rumai (Palaungic) 317 Rumsen (Ohlone) 448 Russian (Slavic, Indo-European) 373–374, 387–399
Russian Tungusic 390 Ryukyuan (Japanese-Ryukyuan) 7, 18, 355–365 dialects 357f, 362–364 Saanich (Salishan) 422t, 434 Saaroa (Austronesian) 287, 290, 296 Sach (Vietic) 305t, 322 Saek (Thai) 304t, 310, 312 Sahaptian family 418, 420–424, 423t Sahaptin (Sahaptian) 419f, 423t, 432t Saija (South Embera, Choco) 186, 187, 194, 197 see Epena Pedee Saisiyat (Austronesian) 287, 296 Sak [Thet] (Sal Luish) 306t, 330 Sakapulteko (Mayan) 169t Sakhalin dialect (Ainu) 377 Sakizaya (Austronesian) 294 Sal languages 306t, 330–331 Salinan (isolate) 444, 449 Salishan family 418–434 Sambú see Embera Samoan (Malayo-Polynesian) xii Samoan Plantation Pidgin (English) 121–122, 123, 129 Samray (Pearic) 305t, 321 Samre [East Pear] (Pearic) 305t, 321 Samre of Siem Reap (Pearic) 305t, 321 Samtao (Angkuic) 318 San José (Ohlone) 448 San Lorenzo (Ohlone) 448 Sangkong [Buxia] (Southern Ngwi) 328 Santa Cruz (non-Austronesian) 243 Santa Cruzan languages (nonAustronesian) 243, 254 Santiam (Takelman) 419f, 423t, 431t ‘Sa-och’/Sa-ong see Chu’ung Saru dialect (Ainu) 381 Savosavo (non-Austronesian) 243 Sayula Popoluca (Mixe-Zoque) 168t Sechelt (Salishan) 419f, 421t, 430t Sechura (isolate) 190 Sedang (North Bahnaric) 317 Seediq (Austronesian) 287, 293, 296 Sekmai [Sengmai] (Sal Luish) 331 Seletan (Malayo-Polynesian) 272 Selk’nam see Ona Semai [Senoi/Sengoi] (Aslian) 272, 304t, 315 Semaq Beri (Aslian) 304t, 315 Semelai (Aslian) 272–273, 304t, 315 Sengoi see Semai Senoi see Semai Sentani family 240f, 249 Sepik Hill family 240f, 247, 252 Seri (Hokan) 167t, 172t Serrano (Uto-Aztecan) 449 Serui (Malayo-Polynesian) 276–277 Sgaw (Karenic) 329 Shan [Musur] (Angkuic) 311
i n d e x o f l a n g uag e s a n d l a n g uag e fa m i l i e s Shasta (Shastan) 418, 449 Shastan family 444 She (Miao-Yao) 313 Shebayo (possibly Arawak) 184 Shizunai dialect (Ainu) 381–382 Shuri dialect (Ryukyuan) 363, 364 Shuswap (Salishan) 419f, 422t, 431t Siassi trading language 126 Sibe (Tungusic) 389–391 Sibe-Manchu (Tungusic) 389–390 Siberian Yupik [Central Siberian Yupik] (Eskimo-Aleut) 408t, 414, 415 Sierra Popoluca (Mixe-Zoque) 168t Sila [Sida/Kha Pai] (Southern Ngwi) 306t, 328 Siliput (Torricelli) 259 Singapore English 81 Singhpho [Jinghpaw] (Baric) 331 Sinitic dialects 343n, 345, 345n, 346 see also Chinese dialects Sinkyone (Athabaskan) 449 Sino-Tibetan languages 303, 307, 309 Sinsali [Phunoi/Pisu/Phongku/Lawseng] (Southern Ngwi) 306t, 325–326, 327 Siouan family xivn Sipakapeño (Mayan) 169t Siraya (Austronesian) 287, 294 Siuslaw (isolate) 419f, 423t, 432t Skou (Skou) 251 Skou family 247, 251, 252, 253, 256 So (West Katuic) 316 Sok (West Bahnaric) 316–317 Solomon Islands Pijin [Solomon Islands Pidgin/Solomon Pijin] (creole) 84, 128, 134, 243, 270, 278 Solon (Tungusic) 389–390 Song [Kasong/Chong of Trat] (Pearic) 305t, 320–321 South Bahnaric languages 316, 317 South Barbacoan languages 188 South Chin languages [Sho/Asho] 332 South-East Sakhalin dialect (Nivkh) 376–377 South Halmahera-West New Guinea subgroup (Malayo-Polynesian) 244–245, 269, 277 South Nuaulu 274 South-Western Tai languages 308, 311, 312 Southeastern Pomo (Pomoan) 449 Southern Arapesh (Urat) 258, 259 Southern Chimú 190n Southern Embera dialects (Embera dialect continuum) 186–187 Southern Itelmen 395 Southern Karen languages 329 Southern Lowland Maya (Mayan) 169t Southern Maidu see Nissenan Southern Min [Minnanhua/Taiwanese] (Sinitic, Sino-Tibetan) 80, 271, 272, 286, 346 Southern Paiute (Uto-Aztecan) 94
527
Southern Pomo (Pomoan) 448 Southern Sierra Miwok [Moquelumne] 448 Southern Tepehuan (Uto-Aztecan) 167t Southern Tiwa (Kiowa-Tanoan) 461, 463, 466t(b) Southern Tsimshian (Tsimshianic) 419f, 421t, 423n, 430t Southern Uto-Aztecan 167t Southern Wakashan (Wakashan) 421t Sowa [Seke] (Malayo-Polynesian) 278 Souy see Su’ung Spanish pidgins and creoles 128, 137 Spanish (Romance, Indo-European) 87, 171–172, 177–178, 188, 189, 191, 192, 200 Spokane-Kalispel-Flathead (Salishan) 419f, 422t, 424n, 431t Squamish (Salishan) 419f, 421t, 430t Stieng (South Bahnaric) 317 Su (West Bahnaric) 316 Suai see Juk Suau (Austronesian) 241 Subtiaba (Otomanguean) 168t Sugpiaq [Alutiiq] (Eskimo-Aleut) 408t, 414, 415 Sulka (non-Austronesian) 250, 253 Sumu (Misumalpan) 61, 170t Sundanese (Malayo-Polynesian) 273 Susuami (Angan) 257 Su’ung [Souy] (Vietic) 305t Swahili (Bantoid) 12 Swoeng [Lavi] (Bahnaric) 305t, 317 Ta-ang [Gold Palaung] (Palaungic) 317 Tacana family 184 Tachi Yokuts (Yokutsan) 450 Tagalog (Malayo-Polynesian) 83, 280 Tahitian (Malayo-Polynesian) xii Tai Daeng [Red Tai] (Thai) 304t, 311, 312 Tai Hat see Iduh Tai Khaw [White Tai] (South-Western Tai) 311 Tai languages (Thai-Kadai) 310–312 Tai Loi see Mok Tai Neua [North Tai] (Thai) 304t, 311, 312 Taiap (non-Austronesian) 257 Taino (Arawak) 184 Tairong (Thai) 311 Taivoan (Austronesian) 287 Taiwanese see Southern Min Taj Boi 127 Takelma (Takelman) 94, 419f, 422t, 429, 431t Takelman family 422t Takia (Oceanic) 32, 245 Takua (North Bahnaric) 317 Tallan see Atalán Taloki (Malayo-Polynesian) 274 Tama family 240f, 247 Taman (Luish) 306t, 331 Tambotalo (Malayo-Polynesian) 278 Tanacross (Athabaskan) 408t, 413
528
i n d e x o f l a n g uag e s a n d l a n g uag e fa m i l i e s
Tanaina [Dena’ina] (Athabaskan) 408t, 411, 413 Inland dialect 413 Tanana [Lower Tanana] (Athabaskan) 408t, 413 Chena and Salcha-Goodpaster dialects 413 Tanema (Malayo-Polynesian) 277 Tangsa [Rangpan] (Baric) 330 Tanimbili (Malayo-Polynesian) 277 Tanoan languages 461, 463, 466t(b), 471 Ta’oih (East Katuic) 316 Taokas (Austronesian) 287 Taos 461, 463, 466t(b) see also Northern Tiwa Tapachultec (Mixe-Zoque) 168t Taracaitan (Uto-Aztecan) 167t Tarahumara [Rarámuri] (Uto-Aztecan) 167t Tarahumaran subfamily (Uto-Aztecan) 167t Tarascan languages 170 Tarasco [Purepecha] (Tarascan) 167t, 170, 173 Tarieng [Dakchueng] (North-West Bahnaric) 317 Taroan [Tayin/Tain] (Digarish ‘Mishmi’) 322 Taruang [Taraung/Darang Deng] (Digarish ‘Mishmi’) 322 Tasmanian languages 225 Tataviam (Uto-Aztecan) 449 Taulil (non-Austronesian) 250 Taungyo (Burmish) 324 Tavoyan [Dawe] (Burmish) 324 Tayo (creole) 135 Teanu (Malayo-Polynesian) 277 Tektiteko (Mayan) 169t Temiar (Aslian) 304t, 315 Temuan (Malayo-Polynesian) 272 Ten’en see Maniq Tepecano (Uto-Aztecan) 167t Tepehua (Totonacan) 167t, 170 Tepehuan [Odami/Odame] (UtoAztecan) 167t Tepiman (Pimic) 167t Térraba (Chibchan) 176 Terribe (Terraba) 170 Tetun (Malayo-Polynesian) 83 Tewa (Kiowan-Tanoan) 461, 466t(b) Texistepec Popoluca (Mixe-Zoque) 168t Thai (Thai-Kadai) xii, 82, 334 Thai Dam [Black Thai] (South-Western Thai) 311, 312, 334 Thai-Kadai family [Tai-Kadai] xii, 303, 304t, 307, 308, 309, 310–313, 314, 334–335 Thai Pidgin English 125 Thai Then (Khumic) 319 Thao (Austronesian) 287, 290, 297 Thavung [Ahlao/Ahao] (Vietic) 305t, 321, 334 Thet see Sak Thompson (Salishan) 419f, 422t, 431t Tibetan (Tibeto-Burman) 348–349
Tibeto-Burman languages xii, 306t, 307, 321, 322–332, 334–335, 338f Tiddim (North Chin) 331 ‘tiger language’ see Rama Tillamook (Salishan) 419f, 422t, 431t Timba (isolate) 191 Tinrin (Malayo-Polynesian) 278–279 Tipai [Southern Diegueño] (Yuman) 446, 449 Tiwa (Kiowa-Tanoan) 461 Tiwi (isolate) 224, 225 Tlapanec (Subtiaba-Tlapanec) 168t Tlingit (Athabaskan-Eyak-Tlingit) 406, 408t, 410, 412, 418 Tobati (Malayo-Polynesian) 276 Todrah (North Bahnaric) 317 Tohono O’odham (Uto-Aztecan) 461, 463, 465, 467t Tojolabal (Mayan) 169t Tok Pisin (creole) vii, xi, 84, 121–122, 122n, 125, 128, 131, 134, 139, 241, 257–260, 270, 280 Tokyo Japanese 358, 359 Tol [Jicaque] (isolate) 169t, 170, 176 Tolai see Kuanua Tolowa (Athabaskan) 418, 449, 456 Tomadino (Malayo-Polynesian) 274 Tonga’ see Maniq Tongan (Malayo-Polynesian) xii Tongva [Gabrielino] (Uto-Aztecan) 449 Tonkin Lolo see Ngwi languages [Loloish] Topoiyo (Malayo-Polynesian) 274 Torres Straits Broken (creole) 135, 136 Torricelli family 240f, 247, 251, 253, 254, 256, 258, 259 Totonac (Totonacan) 167t, 175 Totonacan languages 171 Totoró (Barbacoan) 188, 188n, 189, 189n Towa [Jemez] (Kiowa-Tanoan) 461, 463, 466t(b) Trade Dobu 126 Trans New Guinea languages 248–249, 252, 253, 255–256 Trique (Otomanguean) 168t Triw (East Katuic) 304t, 316 Trobiawan (Austronesian) 287 Tsafiki [Colorado] (Barbacoan) 188–189, 194, 196–197, 197–199 Tsaiwa see Zaiwa Tsamosan Salish (Salishan) 422t Tsat [Huihui-hua] (Malayo-Polynesian) 271– 272, 303, 309–310 Tsimshianic family 406, 408t, 411, 418–434 Tsou (Austronesian) 287, 290, 297 Tualatin-Yamhill (Takelman) 419f, 422t, 431t Tubar (Uto-Aztecan) 167t Tubatulabal [Pakanil] (Uto-Aztecan) 449 Tucanoan family 184, 194, 195 Tudu see Gelao languages Tule see Cuna
i n d e x o f l a n g uag e s a n d l a n g uag e fa m i l i e s Tum (Vietic) 321, 322 Tundra Yukaghir (Yukaghir) 393, 397–400 Tungusic languages xiii, 79, 371–372, 387–392, 393 Tupí family 184 Tututni (Athabaskan) 419f, 423t, 432t Turkic languages 371, 387, 393 Tuzantec (Mayan) 169t, 172t Twana (Salishan) 419f, 422t, 431t Tzeltal (Mayan) 169t Tzeltalan subfamily (Mayan) 169t Tzotzil (Mayan) 175 Tz’utujil (Mayan) 169t U [Puman] (Mon-Khmer) 318 Udehe (Tungusic) 389–392 Ugong (Tibeto-Burman) 324, 334 Uilta [Orok] (Tungusic) 372, 389–390, 392 Ulcha/Olcha (Tungusic) 389–390 Ulithian (Malayo-Polynesian) 275 Ulwa (Misumalpan) 176 Undro/Andro (Sal Luish) 331 Unserdeutsch (creole) 136 Upper Chehalis (Salishan) 419f, 422t, 431t Upper Chinook (Chinookan) 422t see also Lower Chinook Upper Kuskokwim (Athabaskan) 408t, 413 Upper Tanana (Athabaskan) 408t, 412, 413 Upper Umpqua (Athabaskan) 419f, 423t, 432t Ura (Malayo-Polynesian) 278 Urak Lawoi (Malayic) 304t, 310 Uralic languages 371–372, 393, 397 Urat (Southern Arapesh, Arapesh, Torricelli) 258, 259 Uripiv (Malayo-Polynesian) 278 Uru-Chipaya family 190, 192n Usan (Numugenan) 256 Uspanteco (Mayan) 169t Uto-Aztecan family 444, 460, 461, 463, 463–464, 467t Uvean (Malayo-Polynesian) 278 Valley Miwok see Plains Miwok Vano (Malayo-Polynesian) 277 Ventureño (Chumashan) 446 Veracruz Mixe (Mixe-Zoque) 168t Veracruz Zoque (Mixe-Zoque) 168t Viceita (Chibchan) 170t Viet (Austro-Asiatic) 79 Vietic languages 305t, 321–322 Vietnamese (Mon-Khmer) xii, 314–315, 321 Vinmavis [Neve’ei] (Malayo-Polynesian) 278 Wa/Va (Waic) 318 Waamwang (Malayo-Polynesian) 279 Washo (isolate) 445, 449, 457 Waic languages 305t, 318 Wailaki (Athabaskan) 449 Wakashan family 418–434
529
Walmajarri (Pama-Nyungan) 224 Wancho (Baric) 330 Wantoat (Finisterre) 254 Wappo (Yukian) 444, 445, 449 Waris (Waris subfamily, Border) 253, 254–255 Waris subfamily (Border) 249, 251 Warlpiri (Pama-Nyungan) 224 Waru (Malayo-Polynesian) 274 Washo (isolate) 444, 449, 457 Wasi (non-Austronesian) [Ata/Pele-Ata] 244, 250 Waskia (Isumrud branch, Pihom-IsumrudMihil) 32, 245 Watam (Lower Ramu, Lower SepikRamu) 252, 258, 259, 260 Waunana (Choco) 186–187, 194–195 Welsh (Celtic, Indo-European) 28–32, 33, 34, 88 West African languages 33 West Bahnaric languages 317 West Katuic languages 316 West Papuan linguistic area 249–250 Western Apache (Apachean, Athabaskan) 461, 466t(a) Western Dani (Dani) 242 Western Desert languages (PamaNyungan) 224 Western Highland Maya (Mayan) 169t Western Itelmen (ChukchiKamchatkan) 394n, 395 Western Malayo-Polynesian languages 269, 271, 275 Western Mixe (Mixe-Zoque) 168t Whilkut (Athabaskan) 450 White Gelao see Gelao languages (Thai-Kadai) Wik Mungkan (Pama-Nyungan) 224 Wintu (Wintuan) 450 Wintuan family 445 Wintun see Patwin Wishram Chinook (Chinookan) 94 Wissel Lakes family 249 Wiyot (Algic) 450 Wogamusin (Papuan) 247 Wom (Torricelli) 258 Wosera (Ndu) 252 Wukchumne (Yokutsan) 450, 457 Xa Pho see Laghuu Xaracuu (Malayo-Polynesian) 279 Xinca 169t, 170 Yabêm (Malayo-Polynesian) 280 Yaeh (North-West Bahnaric) 317 Yahgan [Yamana] (isolate) 206, 211, 213–218 Ukika Yahgan 213, 216n Yahi (Yanan) 45, 101n, 450 Yakut (Turkic) 397–399 Yamana see Yahgan
530
i n d e x o f l a n g uag e s a n d l a n g uag e fa m i l i e s
Yami (Malayo-Polynesian) 286–287, 293, 297 Yanan family 445, 450 Yang (Lao) 310–311 Yankunytjatjara (Pama-Nyungan) 224 Yanomami family 184 Yao (Miao-Yao) 313 Yapese (Malayo-Polynesian) 275, 279 Yaqui (Uto-Aztecan) 165n, 167t, 419f, 423t, 431t, 461, 467t Yaquina (Alsean) 419f, 423t, 431t Yava (Papuan) 276 Yavapai (Yuman) 461, 463, 464, 467, 469t, 470 Yaw (Burmic Burmish) 306t, 324 Yi languages 343 Yi [Lolo] (Tibeto-Burman) 323, 325, 326, 328–329, 343, 345 Yidiny (Pama-Nyungan) 228 Yimas (Lower Sepik-Ramu) 251, 252, 253, 256, 257, 258 Yimchungru (Chin) 332 Yintale (Karenic) 306t, 329 Yir (East Katuic) 316 Yokuts(an) family 445, 450 Yolngu subfamily (Pama-Nyungan) 224 Yolo (isolate) 191 Yoncalla (Takelman) 419f, 423t, 431t Yonggom (Ok) 254
Yorta Yorta (Pama-Nyungan) 231–232 Yotafa (Malayo-Polynesian) 276 Yowlumni Yokuts (Yokutsan) 450 Yucatec (Mayan) 169t, 173 Yukaghir (language isolate) xiii, 387–388, 393, 397–400 see also Paleosiberian Yuki (Yukian) 444, 450 Yukian family 444 Yulparija (Pama-Nyungan) 224 Yuma see Quechan Yuman family 167t, 445, 460, 461, 463–467, 469t, 470, 472 Yunga see Quingnam Yup’ik, Central (Eskimo-Aleut) xiii, 21, 22–23, 156n, 414 Yurok (Algic) 450, 457 Yurumangui (isolate) 190–191, 195 Zaiwa (Burmic) 324 Zapotecan (Otomanguean) 165n, 168t, 170, 173, 175 Zazao (Malayo-Polynesian) 277 Zhuang (Zhuang-Dong/Thai-Kadai) 345 Zhuang-Dong see Thai-Kadai family Zi [Tsaiwa] see Zaiwa Zinacantan see Tzotzil Zoquean (Mixe-Zoque) 168t Zuni (isolate) 461, 463, 466t(b)