Music related to Linguistics & Lx-Anthro?

Alexander King a.king at ABDN.AC.UK
Wed Feb 3 09:41:56 UTC 2010


Richard and List,

Nice query. I think that Gorillaz's song "Clint Eastwood" (on self-titled album) is a bit Whorfian. "Rhythm, you got it or you don't, that's a fallacy, every sprouting tree [grows and develops in a context of learning]" You don't perceive with your eyes, you perceive with your mind, etc. It was in the charts a while back, so students may recognise it. 

looking forward to other song suggestions.

Alex

On 3 Feb 2010, at 1:50 am, Richard J Senghas wrote:

> Hey LingAnthers,
> 
> I am looking for music (popular, obscure, whatever) that plays with linguistic (& especially anthropological) topics.
> 
> I am now teaching a somewhat large (~70 students) undergraduate, lower division Introduction to Linguistic Anthropology course.  It hits us at that just-before-and-going-into dinner hour, when students, even those interested in the topics, begin to fade as their blood sugar-levels drop, and the daylight begins to fade (especially now).  When I taught my Intro to Cultural Anthro course, I found that playing relevant, especially upbeat, music just before class started helped up the energy for the class session, and I would like to use this trick again in this course.  I also found that many of the students started to pick up on the anthropological themes I planted in these selections.  By the end of the semester, students started asking me for my sources, often asking me if they had indeed figured out the thematic connections.  (In a very real sense, this became a not-grade-related extra credit opportunity.)
> 
> I plan to start with some more obvious choices (e.g., Laurie Anderson's "Language is a Virus" from her "Home of the Brave" album), but I'm looking for other pieces for later this semester.  Do you have any tracks you'd recommend?  If the topic is obscure, I wouldn't mind being given hints at the reason for your choices, though we could make it a game for this list if you choose to respond on-list.  And energetic music is preferred; we're looking to juice them up!
> 
> Best regards,
> 
> -RJS
> ======================================================================
> Richard J. Senghas, Professor            | Sonoma State University
> Department of Anthropology               | 1801 East Cotati Avenue
> Human Development Program                | Rohnert Park, CA 94928-3609
> Richard.Senghas[at]sonoma.edu            | 707-664-3920 (fax)

- tel:+44(1224)27 2732, fax:+44(1224)27 2552 - http://www.koryaks.net - http://www.abdn.ac.uk/anthropology



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