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American Indian languages and American linguistics - Papers of the 2nd Golden anniversary symposium of the Linguistic society of America held at the University of California, Berkeley, on November 8 and 9, 1974 (Hardcover, Reprint 2019)
Wallace L. Chafe, Linguistic Society of America. Washington, University Of California (Berkeley), Golden Anniversary Symposium of the Linguistic Society of America, 2 <1974, Berkeley, Calif.>
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R3,363
Discovery Miles 33 630
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The extent to which language is inseparable from thought has long
been a major subject of debate across linguistics, psychology,
philosophy and other disciplines. In this study, Wallace Chafe
presents a thought-based theory of language that goes beyond
traditional views that semantics, syntax, and sounds are sufficient
to account for language design. Language begins with thoughts in
the mind of a speaker and ends by affecting thoughts in the mind of
a listener. This obvious observation is seldom incorporated in
descriptions of language design for two major reasons. First, the
role of thought is usually usurped by semantics. But semantic
structures are imposed on thought by languages and differ from one
language to another. Second, thought does not lend itself to
familiar methods of linguistic analysis. Chafe suggests ways of
describing thoughts, traces the path languages follow from thoughts
to sounds, and explores ways in which thoughts are oriented in
time, memory, imagination, reality, and emotions.
Wallace Chafe demonstrates how the study of language and
consciousness together can provide an unexpectedly broad
understanding of the way the mind works. Relying on analyses of
conversational speech, written fiction and nonfiction, the North
American Indian language Seneca, and the music of Mozart and of the
Seneca people, he investigates both the flow of ideas through
consciousness and the displacement of consciousness by way of
memory and imagination. Chafe draws on several decades of research
to demonstrate that understanding the nature of consciousness is
essential to understanding many topics of linguistic importance,
such as anaphora, tense, clause structure, and intonation, as well
as stylistic usages such as the historical present and free
indirect style. This book offers a comprehensive picture of the
dynamic natures of language and consciousness for linguists,
psychologists, literary scholars, computer scientists,
anthropologists, and philosophers.
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