Saving Dying Languages In 'The Linguists'
Harold Schiffman
hfsclpp at gmail.com
Fri Feb 27 18:06:09 UTC 2009
Saving Dying Languages In 'The Linguists'
“The people who live there are the experts on the environment they
live in, whether it's Siberia or the Bolivian Andes. They know more
about the ecosystem, the plants and animals, than scientists typically
do.”
Linguist Greg Anderson
Weekend Edition Saturday, February 21, 2009 · There are more than
7,000 languages in the world, and if statistics hold, two weeks from
now, there will be one less. That's the rate at which languages
disappear. And each time a language disappears, a part of history — a
subtle way of thinking — vanishes too. A new documentary called The
Linguists, airing Thursday on PBS, follows ethnographers David
Harrison and Greg Anderson as they race to document endangered
languages in some of the most remote corners of the world.
>>From the plains of Siberia to the mountains of Bolivia to the tribal
lands of India, Harrison and Anderson have hopscotched the globe, but
they sat down for a moment with NPR's Scott Simon to discuss their
race to capture the world's endangered languages.
Harrison, a linguistics professor at Swarthmore College, specializes
in sounds and words; Anderson, who directs Oregon's Living Tongues
Institute, is the verb expert. Together, they speak 25 languages.
Languages are rich in the history and taxonomy of a place, says
Anderson, reflecting subtleties that can be lost in translation. When
the last keepers of a language die off, so does the fluent
understanding of that particular environment. "The people who live
there are the experts on the environment they live in, whether it's
Siberia or the Bolivian Andes," he says. "They know more about the
ecosystem, the plants and animals, than scientists typically do. And
it's not just a list of things they know; it's a hierarchy of
knowledge, how things fit together."
Harrison and Anderson say they have encountered some strange languages
in their travels, including an East Indian dialect called Birhor —
which, in English, sounds a lot like "beer whore.""But all languages
are strange from a certain point of view," says Harrison. "English is
pretty strange." The Linguists follows Harrison and Anderson on their
"adventure science" expeditions — and finds them in some unexpected
situations. "We do encounter inconveniences," says Harrison,
laughing. "Getting to a very remote place, finding people and
convincing them to talk to you on a camera. There are roadblocks, both
literal and figurative." And surprises, like the wedding they were
called to dance at in a remote village in India.
The film also offers context on the question of why languages die out.
"The big umbrella term is globalization, but you need to break that
down. There are economic forces, ideology, social attitudes," says
Harrison. "Many people have been presented with a false choice, that
they have to give up their native language in order to succeed, and
[speak] a global language like English or Spanish exclusively. But
more people are realizing that you can be bilingual, that you have
access to more knowledge by being bilingual. There are these pressures
as we get increasingly urbanized, but people are successfully pushing
back."
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=100874724
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