Linguistic Anthropology
Linguistic anthropology - the study of language in
the context of human social and cultural diversity - is central
to the discipline of anthropology as a whole. In contrast to disciplines
like linguistics and sociolinguistics, an anthropological approach
to language emphasizes insights that can be gained only through
keen attention to various forms of language and language use in
social and cultural systems and practices. Language is often considered
crucial to what makes us human: as a capacity that is in part biologically-based,
language is a medium for thought, a vehicle for cultural transmission,
and a means of social action. Language is at the nexus of biology,
history, culture, cognition, and social life. Linguistic anthropologists,
then, study the ways in which people negotiate, contest, and reproduce
cultural forms and social relations through language, and the ways
in which language provides insights into the nature and evolution
of culture, cognition, and human society. The structural aspects
of language-the traditional province of linguists-are for linguistic
anthropologists a starting point for understanding the diverse conditions
of human beings in the world. Special focus is on the way in which
language participates in the formation of social groups and hierarchies.
The
Northern Illinois University linguistic anthropology subfield emphasizes
the integration of the analysis of linguistic form with social theory
and cognitive science.We emphasize ethnography-not necessarily restricted
to international settings-as crucial to our students' training.
Courses for majors and graduate students include training in methods
of analysis of audible and visible dimensions of communication.
Linguistic Anthropology at NIU has the following
emphases:
Ethnographic
Approaches to Language. This means (a) conducting research on
language mainly in a cross-cultural and cross-linguistic manner;
(b) devoting primary attention to the different ways (cross-culturally)
language is embedded in social life and practices; (c) investigating
language use in the field (not necessarily international), through
observation and participation.
Language
and Cognition. The intersection of language and cognition is
both a traditional and an emergent area of inquiry in linguistic
anthropology. New insights from linguistic anthropology and cognitive
psychology have made it possible to reformulate the problem of the
effects of language on category formation (language and thought).
Bennardo has worked on the history of linguistic relativity, conducted
research by collecting empirical ethnographic data, and written
on innovative ways in which relativity can be approached. Cognitive
Studies Initiative at NIU.
Language
and Space, Social Networks, and Cultural Models. The language
of spatial relationships is the starting focus of an interdisciplinary
research project under way in the department and headed by Bennardo.
Findings about linguistic and cognitive preference in representing
spatial relationships are now utilized to hypothesize and investigate
specific linguistic representations of social networks. The general
goal is to discover possible cultural models that people use in
their everyday reasoning and cultural constructions, including belief
systems.
Applied Anthropology. Linguistic
anthropology research contributes to the Applied
Anthropology Certificate Program. Specifically, linguistic anthropology
research contributes an understanding of ways in which specific
knowledge of and about language (linguistic ideology) and thinking
modalities acquired through linguistic analyses can be used to solve
ethnic and other conflicts.
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