Um novo centro de pesquisa na Australia: Cairns, JCU

Golda Gorb goldagorb at YAHOO.COM
Thu Jan 15 07:27:48 UTC 2009


It gives us pleasure to announce the establishment of the Language and Culture Research Group within the Cairns Institute at James Cook University.   
 
The Language and Culture Research Group (LCRG) brings together linguists, anthropologists, social scientists and those working in the humanities, under the leadership of Professor Alexandra Y. Aikhenvald and Adjunct Professor R. M. W. Dixon. The primary aim of the LCRG is to investigate the relationship between language and the cultural behaviour of those who speak it, and the relations between human biology, cognition studies and linguistics.
            
The LCRGis concerned with the fundamental business of linguistics and especially anthropological linguistics — our faculty and research students undertake intensive studies of previously undescribed (or barely described) languages, with a primary focus on the languages of the Pacific (especially the Papuan languages of New Guinea), the languages of Amazonia, and of Aboriginal Australia. We also concentrate on studying minority languages, including languages of immigrants, within the context of the majority populations. We work in terms of basic linguistic theory, the cumulative framework which is employed in most linguistic description, providing anthropologically informed grammars and analyses of languages and language areas. Our work has a sound empirical basis but also shows a firm theoretical orientation, seeking for explanation hand-in-hand with description.
 
Building on reliable descriptive studies, the LCRGalso puts forward inductive generalizations about human languages, cultural practices and cognition. We enquire how a language reflects the environment in which people live, their system of social organization, food production techniques, and the ways in which people view the world. For instance, groups living in mountainous terrain often have to specify, for any object, whether it is uphill, downhill or at the same level as the speaker. And if there is a chiefly system, a special term of address may be required for speaking a high chief, and a different term for a minor chief. Why are languages the way they are? We seek scientific explanation and motivation, combining the expertise of linguists, anthropologists and social scientists from other domains.
 
Another focus of study concerns the ways in which languages influence each other. What kind of words, and meanings, are likely to be borrowed between two languages spoken next to each other, and under what social circumstances? Are some kinds of systems particularly open to diffusion, so that they are likely to spread over all the languages in a geographical area, and are other kinds of systems less likely to be diffused?
 
The Group comprises a number of students and research staff. Its scope includes work within a number of projects funded by the Australian Research Council — including 'Are some languages better than others?' and 'The world through the prism of language: a cross-linguistic view of genders, noun classes, and classifiers'. Each year, we plan to attract PhD students and Post-doctoral Fellows, and invite leading national and international scholars as Visiting Fellows and Honorary Visiting Fellows, to spend their sabbatical in the vibrant intellectual atmosphere of the Cairns Institute at JCU.
 
The LCRG organises international workshops on topics in ethnolinguistics and linguistic typology, continuing the tradition laid by A. Y. Aikhenvald and R. M. W. Dixon since 1997. 
 
The Cairns Institute is an exciting new initiative which aims to establish JCU as the world's leading research university in the area of peoples, societies and cultures of the tropics.Our mission is consistent with that of the Cairns Institute as a whole — to enhance human life in the tropics, with particular focus on Australia, the Pacific and South America, so as to materially contribute to a brighter, more enriching future for tropical peoples. This will be achieved by assisting them with linguistic and cultural maintenance and understanding of their identity and heritage, and through globally-informed scholarship, research excellence, and a mobilising commitment to social justice. We envisage working in close collaboration with colleagues from the Department of Anthropology, Archaeology and Sociology, in particular, Associate Professor Rosita Henry, Dr Mike Wood, Dr Nigel Chang, and Professor Bruce Kapferer, the Cairns Institute's International
 Strategic Advisor.
 
Cairnsis a vibrant town — a centre for numerous Aboriginal and Torres Straits Islanders communities, and a multiplicity of immigrant groups. It is strategically located with respect to the Pacific Islands and to New Guinea — a real gateway to the world of tropical people.
 
            The LCRG is jointly coordinated by Professor Alexandra Y. Aikhenvald and  Adjunct Professor R. M. W. Dixon. 
            Alexandra Aikhenvald 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), plusA Grammar of Tariana, from Northwest Amazonia (Cambridge University Press, 2003; paperback 2007), in addition to essays on various typological and areal features of South American languages. Her comprehensive grammar, The Manambu language from East Sepik, Papua New Guinea, was published by Oxford University Press in 2008. Other monographs with OUP are Classifiers: a Typology of Noun Categorization Devices (2000, paperback 2003), Language Contact in Amazonia (2002), Evidentiality (2004, paperback 2006) and Imperatives and commands (due in 2010). 
            R.M.W. Dixon has published grammars of a number of Australian languages (including Dyirbal and Yidiñ, both spoken in the Cairns area), in addition to A Grammar of Boumaa Fijian (University of Chicago Press, 1988), The Jarawara language of southern Amazonia (Oxford University Press, 2004) and A Semantic Approach to English Grammar (Oxford University Press, 2005). His works on typological theory include Where have all the Adjectives Gone? and other Essays in Semantics and Syntax (Mouton, 1982) and Ergativity (Cambridge University Press, 1994). The Rise and Fall of languages (Cambridge UP,1997) expounded a punctuated equilibrium model for language development; this is the basis for his detailed case study Australian Languages: their Nature and Development (Cambridge UP, 2002). The first two volumes of his seminal study, Basic Linguistic Theory,  will be published by OUP in late 2009.
 
For further information, research opportunities and visits, contact us at Sasha.Aikhenvald at jcu.edu.au or nyamamayratakw at gmail.com
 
 Alexandra Y. Aikhenvald, PhD, DLitt, FAHA
Professor and Research Leader (Peoples and Societies of the Tropics)
Cairns Institute James Cook University
PO Box 6811
Cairns
Queensland 4870
Australia 


mobile 0400 305315 




________________________________
From: eduardo_rivail <kariri at gmail.com>
To: etnolinguistica at yahoogrupos.com.br
Sent: Thursday, 15 January, 2009 9:21:01 AM
Subject: [etnolinguistica] Um catecismo Purí


Prezados,

Publiquei recentemente, nos Cadernos de Etnolingüística, uma nota de
pesquisa bibliográfica sobre a possível existência de um catecismo
Purí inédito e de paradeiro desconhecido, escrito pelo Pe. Francisco
das Chagas Lima (1757-1832). A família lingüística Purí (cujos membros
estão todos extintos) é muito pouco conhecida; a documentação
atualmente disponível limita-se a algumas poucas listas de palavras.
Por isso, caso encontrado, o catecismo poderia ter enorme relevância
para o nosso conhecimento da família Purí e de sua posição dentro do
tronco Macro-Jê.

Quaisquer sugestões são muito bem vindas. O artigo pode ser lido no
endereço http://www.etnoling uistica.org/ vol1:1

Abraços,

Eduardo

 


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