Colonisation, Globalisation, and the Future of Languages in the Twenty-first Century
Organisation: Department of Linguistics University of Chicago USA
Publish Date: 2002
Country: Global
Sector: Globalisation
Method: Foresight
Theme: Futures
Type: Article
Language: English
Tags: Language endangerment, European colonisation, Ancestral languages, Indigenous languages, Globalisation, Global economy, Language preservation
The typical academic discourse on language endangerment has presented languages as anthropomorphic organisms with lives independent of their speakers and capable of negotiating on their own the terms of their coexistence. Not surprisingly it has become commonplace to read about killer languages in the same vein as language wars, language murders and linguicides. I argue below that languages are parasitic species whose vitality depends on the communicative behaviours of their speakers, who in turn respond adaptively to changes in their socio-economic ecologies. Language shift, attrition, endangerment and death are all consequences of these adaptations. We must develop a better understanding of the ways in which one ecology differs from another and how these dissimilarities can account for variation in the vitality of individual languages.
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