Forward to the past : modernizing linguistic typology by returning to its roots

The comparative study of unrelated languages did not begin with Joseph Greenberg in the 1960’s, but began more than 150 years earlier in Europe with scholars of the Romanticist movement. The most prominent of these scholars was the German scholar Wilhelm von Humboldt, whose goal in studying 75 diffe...

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Main Author: LaPolla, Randy J.
Other Authors: School of Humanities
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/152669
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1526692023-03-11T20:06:01Z Forward to the past : modernizing linguistic typology by returning to its roots LaPolla, Randy J. School of Humanities Humanities::Language::Linguistics History of Linguistics Wilhelm von Humboldt Linguistic Typology Romanticism The comparative study of unrelated languages did not begin with Joseph Greenberg in the 1960’s, but began more than 150 years earlier in Europe with scholars of the Romanticist movement. The most prominent of these scholars was the German scholar Wilhelm von Humboldt, whose goal in studying 75 different languages was to understand the construal of the world (Weltansicht) of the speakers of the different languages, what we now think of as the cognitive categories manifested by the languages of the speakers, as each language manifests a unique set of cognitive categories. Until Humboldt’s time, most comparison was just of lexical items, but Humboldt argued for more comprehensive language documentation, including full grammars and extensive natural texts, as he argued that it is only in connected discourse that the cognitive categories can be discovered. So he saw language documentation and typology as intimately connected. After full documentation individual categories could be compared across languages. Following in this tradition later in the 19th century we have Franz Boas, and in the early 20th century, his student Edward Sapir, and Sapir’s student Benjamin Lee Whorf. Due to political and philosophical fads, this approach was neglected for many years after the deaths of Sapir and Whorf, but a Structuralist approach was championed by Joseph Greenberg in the mid 1960’s, reigniting interest in linguistic typology, though one with a focus only on structural patterns. Accepted version 2021-09-09T01:22:07Z 2021-09-09T01:22:07Z 2020 Journal Article LaPolla, R. J. (2020). Forward to the past : modernizing linguistic typology by returning to its roots. Asian Languages and Linguistics, 1(1), 147-167. https://dx.doi.org/10.1075/alal.00005.lap 2665-9336 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/152669 10.1075/alal.00005.lap 1 1 147 167 en Asian Languages and Linguistics © 2020 John Benjamins Publishing Company. All rights reserved. This paper was published in Asian Languages and Linguistics and is made available with permission of John Benjamins Publishing Company. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Humanities::Language::Linguistics
History of Linguistics
Wilhelm von Humboldt
Linguistic Typology
Romanticism
spellingShingle Humanities::Language::Linguistics
History of Linguistics
Wilhelm von Humboldt
Linguistic Typology
Romanticism
LaPolla, Randy J.
Forward to the past : modernizing linguistic typology by returning to its roots
description The comparative study of unrelated languages did not begin with Joseph Greenberg in the 1960’s, but began more than 150 years earlier in Europe with scholars of the Romanticist movement. The most prominent of these scholars was the German scholar Wilhelm von Humboldt, whose goal in studying 75 different languages was to understand the construal of the world (Weltansicht) of the speakers of the different languages, what we now think of as the cognitive categories manifested by the languages of the speakers, as each language manifests a unique set of cognitive categories. Until Humboldt’s time, most comparison was just of lexical items, but Humboldt argued for more comprehensive language documentation, including full grammars and extensive natural texts, as he argued that it is only in connected discourse that the cognitive categories can be discovered. So he saw language documentation and typology as intimately connected. After full documentation individual categories could be compared across languages. Following in this tradition later in the 19th century we have Franz Boas, and in the early 20th century, his student Edward Sapir, and Sapir’s student Benjamin Lee Whorf. Due to political and philosophical fads, this approach was neglected for many years after the deaths of Sapir and Whorf, but a Structuralist approach was championed by Joseph Greenberg in the mid 1960’s, reigniting interest in linguistic typology, though one with a focus only on structural patterns.
author2 School of Humanities
author_facet School of Humanities
LaPolla, Randy J.
format Article
author LaPolla, Randy J.
author_sort LaPolla, Randy J.
title Forward to the past : modernizing linguistic typology by returning to its roots
title_short Forward to the past : modernizing linguistic typology by returning to its roots
title_full Forward to the past : modernizing linguistic typology by returning to its roots
title_fullStr Forward to the past : modernizing linguistic typology by returning to its roots
title_full_unstemmed Forward to the past : modernizing linguistic typology by returning to its roots
title_sort forward to the past : modernizing linguistic typology by returning to its roots
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/152669
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