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Paperback The Matrix of Language: Contemporary Linguistic Anthropology Book

ISBN: 0813323215

ISBN13: 9780813323213

The Matrix of Language: Contemporary Linguistic Anthropology

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Book Overview

The Matrix of Language introduces students and other readers to recent debates in the study of language and culture. The articles in this anthology, selected for their readability, present a range of methodological approaches and well-known case studies that illustrate the interconnection of language, culture, and social practice. The editors' introductory essays compare and contrast specific approaches in four broad areas: language and socialization,...

Customer Reviews

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Not Even a Mention of Aspirated Ts

I'll be honest from the start: If I could have avoided linguistic classes in college, I would have. Trying to remember the difference between a labial and a slide isn't exactly mind-blowing stuff. But beyond all that work reminiscent of fourth-grade phonics, linguistics might just be where the most interesting work in anthropology is taking place. This book, a collection of papers from sociolingist, shows why on a level you (usually) don't need a Ph.D. to understand. Take, for instance, the believe-it-or-not humorous scholastic paper on gender differences of Malagsy speakers. In the community the author, Elinor Kennan (Ochs), studies, women are seen as blunt and crass, while men are seen as verbal mediators, smoothing over the problems the hot-headed women create. Then there's José E. Limon's purposefully unobjective study of working-class Mexican-Americans that combines male bonding, Marxism and marination. The point isn't whether you believe Limon is doing real science. The point is that these essays breathe life into their subjects in a way that is often lacking from scholastic describtions. These papers allow the reader to see people as they really are: people. Not cultural oddities, not fleshy collections of folklore, not even disenfranchised subjects of pity. These are people being described on a level which we can all related to, because we all use it. And never once did I have to remember what sound the theta symbol stands for.
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