culture v – language domination, preservation, and extinction

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Culture V – Language Domination, Preservation, and Extinction

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Page 1: Culture V – Language Domination, Preservation, and Extinction

Culture V – Language Domination, Preservation, and

Extinction

Page 2: Culture V – Language Domination, Preservation, and Extinction

Language and Ethnicity

• The distribution of language is a direct measure of the fate of an ethnic group– If an ethnic group dies out, usually the

language goes with them– Ethnic groups that can diffuse their

language can ensure the survival of their culture

Page 3: Culture V – Language Domination, Preservation, and Extinction

Language Domination

• The development of alphabets and literary traditions were used to dominate and conquer cultures

• Invention of agricultural societies, alphabets, and record keeping allowed cultures to spread and dominate illiterate cultures

Page 4: Culture V – Language Domination, Preservation, and Extinction

European Imperialism

• European colonial powers colonized Africa and the Americas

• Language was imposed on native populations– Europeans had alphabets– NA’s passed on language through verbal

transmission• One step in the process of cultural

extinction• After decolonization, language remained• Treaty of Tordesillas - 1494

Page 5: Culture V – Language Domination, Preservation, and Extinction

Language Extinction

• No longer spoken by any living person

• Thousands are extinct• Process has accelerated during past

300 years– Imperialism– Globalization– Economic and social acculturation

Page 6: Culture V – Language Domination, Preservation, and Extinction

Language Conflicts• Nigeria

– 493 languages– 3 in widespread use

• Hausa• Yoruba• Igbo

– Ethnic conflict– Political conflict

• Moved capital from Lagos (Yoruba) to Abuja (center of Nigeria)

Page 7: Culture V – Language Domination, Preservation, and Extinction

Reviving Endangered Languages

• Basque• Welsh• Irish Gaelic• Cornish – extinct in

1777• Hebrew – post

WWII

Page 8: Culture V – Language Domination, Preservation, and Extinction

Multilingual States

• Most states contain multiple languages– Divided by

isoglosses• Some states

identify multiple official languages– Canada– Belgium– Israel– Switzerland

• African preservation of languages

Page 9: Culture V – Language Domination, Preservation, and Extinction

Isolated Languages

• Not associated with any other language family– Lack of interaction

• Basque – pre-Indo-European

Page 10: Culture V – Language Domination, Preservation, and Extinction

Lingua Franca

• Common communication for business• Originated with Arab traders in

Europe– English– Russian– Swahili– Indonesian

• Pidgin Language

Page 11: Culture V – Language Domination, Preservation, and Extinction

Global Dominance of English

• ESL– EU – 90%– World – 500 million– Japan – considering added English as a

second official language• Airlines

Page 12: Culture V – Language Domination, Preservation, and Extinction

Diffusion of English• Historically – relocation diffusion through

trade and conquest• Today – expansion diffusion• Expansion diffusion of English

– English is changing through diffusion of new vocab, spelling, and pronunciation

– English words are fusing w/other languages• Usually, diffusion occurs from the elite to

the masses, but today changes in English originate from common usage or ethnic dialects– African Americans – Ebonics – “she be at

home”– Appalachia – “I’m fishing in the crick”, “a-

sitting”

Page 13: Culture V – Language Domination, Preservation, and Extinction

Diffusion of Other Languages

• Franglais• Spanglish

– Chores (shorts), bacuncliner (vacuum cleaner)

– Parquin (instead of estacionameiento)• Denglish

– Cityverbindungen (local call)

Page 14: Culture V – Language Domination, Preservation, and Extinction

Language Manifestations in Landscape

• Cultures name features with a toponym

• In the USA, names reveal the dominate culture of the first inhabitants or the Europeans that conquered them

• Two parts to a toponym– Generic – classifies what is being

described– Specific – modifies the classification

Page 15: Culture V – Language Domination, Preservation, and Extinction

2007 FRQ

• At the same time that English is solidifying its role as the world’s premier lingua franca, lesser-used minority languages (such as Welsh, Basque, and Inuktitut) are undergoing revival.– Discuss three distinct factors promoting

the revival of minority languages in the face of globalization.