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Endangered Languages
You’ve come too late to learn our language, you
should have come earlier. Nowadays we are a
numbered people.

~ Marta Kongarayeva (born 1930), Tofa speaker
       Harrison, K. David. 2007. When Languages Die. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Pat Gabori
• One of the last 8
  speakers of Kayardild
• Passed away in 2009




                   Evans, Nicholas. 2010. Dying Words.
                      Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
Boa Sr
• Last speaker of Aka-Bo
• Passed away in 2010,
  at age ~85
Great Andamanese Languages

•   Aka-Bo              •   Extinct
•   Aka-Bea             •   Extinct
•   Akar-Bale           •   Extinct
•   Aka-Kede            •   Extinct
•   Aka-Kol             •   Extinct
•   Oko-Juwoi           •   Extinct
•   A-Pucikwar          •   Extinct
•   Aka-Cari            •   Extinct
•   Aka-Kora            •   Extinct
•   Aka-Jeru            •   7 speakers (2006)
More Endangered Languages
•   Language            # of speakers
•   Abenaki-Penobscot   20
•   Ainu                0
•   Coeur d’Alene       20
•   Eyak                2
•   Iowa                5
•   Mandan              6
•   Menomini            50
•   Osage               5
•   Sirenikski Eskimo   2
•   Tuscarora           30
•   Ubykh               1
•   Yokuts              10
The Last Speakers of Chitimacha




          Photos courtesy of the National
            Anthropological Archives
Overview
1.   State of Languages Today
2.   History of the Causes
3.   History of the Responses
4.   Language Profile: Chitimacha
5.   Language Profile: Navajo
How Many Languages?
• Depends on how you define language.
• Ruhlen (1987) estimates around 5,000.
• Grimes (1988) estimates between 6,000-
  6,500.
• For our purposes, lets assume that there are
  about 6,000 languages in the world.
The Distribution of Languages in the
                   World
•   Region               # of languages
•   Asia + Pacific       3,000 (50%)
•   Africa               1,900 (30%)
•   Americas             900 (15%)
•   Europe + Mid. East   275 (4%)
Countries by Number of Languages
          Image courtesy of Worldmapper.com
Endangered Languages by Region
       Region        # Extinct   % Extinct
•   Siberia/Alaska   45/50            90
•   USA/Canada       149/187          80
•   Mesoamerica      50/300           17
•   South America    110/400          27
•   Australia        225/250          90
•   Russia           45/65            70
Critically Endangered Languages




       UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger
Languages by Vitality




            UNESCO Atlas of the World's
               Languages in Danger
• Smallest
                 languages
                                                    • 8 million
3,586                                 0.2%            speakers



          • Mid-sized
            languages
                                                              • 1,200 million
2,935                                20.4%                      speakers



      • Biggest languages

                                                                  • 4,500
 83                                  79.5%                          million
                                                                    speakers
                             Harrison, K. David. 2007. When
                                     Languages Die.
Moribund Languages

• Are children learning the language?
• “The question for us here is this: how
  many languages still spoken today are no
  longer being learning by children? This is
  a key question, as such languages are no
  longer viable, and can be defined as
  moribund, thus to become extinct during
  the *next+ century…” (Krauss, 1992)
Moribund Analysis
• Krauss (1992) estimates, based largely on
  demographic information, that roughly half
  the world’s languages will be extinct by the
  close of the next century.
• 3,000/6,000
A Another Analysis:
• Consider the conditions where the
  concentration of languages is the highest.
• 9 countries with over 200 languages
• How stable are these countries?
• How likely are minority language likely to be
  protected?
The Top Nine Countries
• Papua New Gunea            850
• Indonesia                  670
• Nigeria                    410
• India                      380
• Cameroon                   270
• Australia                  250
• Mexico                     240
• Zaire                      210
• Brazil                     210
(another 13 have 160-100 each)
Top 22 countries = 5,000 languages
What leads to language mortality?

•   Some factors we might expect:
•   war
•   genocide
•   social or economic upheaval
•   displacement
•   forced assimilation
Some factors which we might not
                  expect
•   nation state
•   universal education
•   television
•   radio
•   newspaper
•   globalization
What about “safe” languages?
• Does official state support protect languages?
• About 200 sovereign states
•    English (45)
•    French (30)
•    Spanish (20)
•    Arabic (20)
•    Portuguese (6)
Does number of speakers protect
            languages?
• languages with one million speakers
  – between 200-250 (with a lot of overlap with
    previous category)
• languages with .5 million speakers
  – about 300
• languages with .1 million speakers
  – about 600
Number of speakers may not be
        enough protection
• Breton had one million speakers in living
  memory, but now has few children learning it.
• Navajo had .1 million a generation ago, but
  now has a very uncertain future.
Outcome of Analysis
• The conclusion is that perhaps as much as
  90% of the world’s languages could be extinct
  in one hundred years.
Compare to biological diversity
• Mammals
  – about 4,400 species.
  – 326 endangered + threatened.
  – 7.4% worst case scenario.
Compare to biological diversity
• -Birds
  – about 8,600 species.
  – 231 endangered and threatened.
  – 2.7% worst case scenario.
Reasons to be alarmed
• Scientific reasons
• linguistic diversity
• UG
   – Ubykh (Northwest Caucasian language)
   – Has over 80 consonants.
Loss of Culture
• “Of supreme significance in relation to
  linguistic diversity, and to local languages in
  particular, is the simple truth that language—
  in the general, multifaceted sense—embodies
  the intellectual wealth of the people who use
  it.” (Krauss, 1992)
Loss of Culture
• “Some forms of verbal art—verse, song, or
  chant—depend crucially on morphological
  and phonological, even syntactic, properties of
  the language in which it is formed. In such
  cases the art could not exist without the
  language, quite literally.” (Krauss, 1992)
Cultural reasons

• classifiers
• kinship systems
• space
What to do?

• Documentation of endangered languages
  before they disappear.
  – Grammar
  – Lexicon
  – Corpus of texts
  – Audio/video of native speakers
For ‘unsafe’ languages
• Children still learning the language
• Change language policy to support the
  language and culture of minority language.
• Produce pedagogical materials in the
  endangered language.
Responses to threats to linguistic diversity
• Do nothing


• Document endangered languages

• Engage in revitalization activities
1.   The Spanish Missionaries
2.   Colonial Explorations
3.   The Boasian Linguists
4.   The Rise of Generativism
5.   Revitalization


RESPONSES & REVITALIZATION
The Spanish Missionaries
                        1500s – 1700s
• Alonso de Molina – Nahuatl
• Franciscans, Dominicans, Augustinians each wanted
  their own Nahuatl grammar
• Tradition continued in S. America (Quechua), N.
  America (Guale, Timucua; Florida), and Brazil
• Jesuits were excellent field linguists
     – Numerous manuscripts lost when they were expelled from
       Paraguay
• By 1700, 21 grammars were published
• Missionary work was (and is – SIL) common globally


Shobhana L. Chelliah & Willem J. de Reuse. 2011. Handbook of Descriptive Linguistic Fieldwork. Dodrecht: Springer.
Colonial Explorations
                1700 – 1900
• Jefferson lists
  (Unkechaug)
• Bureau of American
  Ethnology
• Roger Williams –
  Narragansett (Rhode
  Island)
• Intense interest in
  comparative linguistics
The Boasian Linguists
                1900s – 1950s
• Franz Boas – describing each language and
  culture in its own terms
• Sparked a whole cadre of field linguists
  –   Mary Haas
  –   Morris Swadesh
  –   Edward Sapir
  –   Benjamin Lee Whorf
  –   J. P. Harrington
  –   Margaret Mead
  –   Ruth Benedict
The Rise of Generativism
              1950s – 1980s
• Leonard Bloomfield, Language (1933)
  – Structuralist linguistics
  – Comprehensive description of N. American languages
  – Meaning is irrelevant to understanding how language
    operates
• Noam Chomsky, Syntactic Structures (1959)
  – Transformational grammar
  – Universal Grammar (later works)
  – Introspection as a method
Revitalization
                1990s – 2010s
• 1992 – Language publishes seminal article
  – Ken Hale – On endangered languages and the
    safeguarding of diversity
  – Ken Hale – Language endangerment and the human
    value of linguistic diversity
  – Krauss – The world’s languages in crisis
• Training indigenous speakers as linguists (Hale)
• Journals (LD&C), Conferences (LD&D, SILS, SSILA),
  Organizations (FEL, ELF)
• Recognition and support from the field
PROFILE OF AN ENDANGERED
LANGUAGE: CHITIMACHA
Prehistory – 1940
•   Lived in the Louisiana area for 2,500 – 6,000 years
•   Language isolate – possibly the first inhabitants
•   1700 – diseases halved the population
•   ca. 1706 – 1718 – French colonists actively enslaved tribe
•   1727 – Chitimacha rediscovered west of Mississippi
•   1802 – Jefferson list collected by Martin Duralde
•   1881 – 1882 – Documented by Albert S. Gatschet
•   1907 – 1920 – Documented by John R. Swanton
•   1917 – sold tribal land to the government
•   1930 – population dropped to 51 people
•   1930 – 1934 – Language documented by Morris Swadesh
•   1934 – Chief Benjamin Paul, last expertly fluent speaker, dies
•   1940 – Delphine Ducloux, last proficient speaker, dies

•   Documentation
Revitalization
                    1990? - 2011
•   2000 census – 720 registered Chitimacha
•   3 beginner – intermediate speakers
•   1995 – Revitalization program begins
•   2008 – Chitimacha Rosetta Stone begins
    – Constructed from Swadesh’s documentation
• 2010 – Chitimacha Rosetta Stone released
    – Being learned by every student in school
• 2010 – Preschool immersion program begins
• In progress – Chitimacha dictionary and grammar
PROFILE OF AN ENDANGERED
LANGUAGE: NAVAJO
Navajo Today
• Most widely spoken American Indian language
• 1970 – 90% of BIA boarding school children
  spoke Navajo
• 1992 – 18% of preschoolers knew Navajo
• 2011 – Less than 5% of school-aged children
• 2006 – Navajo Language Renaissance
• 2010 – Rosetta Stone released
• In progress – Navajo workbooks
• It is unfortunately true that very few people
  (including most of their own speakers) care
  about the impending demise of small
  languages.

 Joshua Fishman 1995. On the limits of ethnolinguistic democracy.
  p. 60.
Let them die?

• What if half the world's languages are
  on the verge of extinction? Let them
  die in peace.

 Kenan Malik 2000. Let them die. Prospect.
 November.

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Endangered languages

  • 2. You’ve come too late to learn our language, you should have come earlier. Nowadays we are a numbered people. ~ Marta Kongarayeva (born 1930), Tofa speaker Harrison, K. David. 2007. When Languages Die. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • 3. Pat Gabori • One of the last 8 speakers of Kayardild • Passed away in 2009 Evans, Nicholas. 2010. Dying Words. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
  • 4. Boa Sr • Last speaker of Aka-Bo • Passed away in 2010, at age ~85
  • 5. Great Andamanese Languages • Aka-Bo • Extinct • Aka-Bea • Extinct • Akar-Bale • Extinct • Aka-Kede • Extinct • Aka-Kol • Extinct • Oko-Juwoi • Extinct • A-Pucikwar • Extinct • Aka-Cari • Extinct • Aka-Kora • Extinct • Aka-Jeru • 7 speakers (2006)
  • 6. More Endangered Languages • Language # of speakers • Abenaki-Penobscot 20 • Ainu 0 • Coeur d’Alene 20 • Eyak 2 • Iowa 5 • Mandan 6 • Menomini 50 • Osage 5 • Sirenikski Eskimo 2 • Tuscarora 30 • Ubykh 1 • Yokuts 10
  • 7. The Last Speakers of Chitimacha Photos courtesy of the National Anthropological Archives
  • 8. Overview 1. State of Languages Today 2. History of the Causes 3. History of the Responses 4. Language Profile: Chitimacha 5. Language Profile: Navajo
  • 9. How Many Languages? • Depends on how you define language. • Ruhlen (1987) estimates around 5,000. • Grimes (1988) estimates between 6,000- 6,500. • For our purposes, lets assume that there are about 6,000 languages in the world.
  • 10. The Distribution of Languages in the World • Region # of languages • Asia + Pacific 3,000 (50%) • Africa 1,900 (30%) • Americas 900 (15%) • Europe + Mid. East 275 (4%)
  • 11.
  • 12. Countries by Number of Languages Image courtesy of Worldmapper.com
  • 13. Endangered Languages by Region Region # Extinct % Extinct • Siberia/Alaska 45/50 90 • USA/Canada 149/187 80 • Mesoamerica 50/300 17 • South America 110/400 27 • Australia 225/250 90 • Russia 45/65 70
  • 14. Critically Endangered Languages UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger
  • 15. Languages by Vitality UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger
  • 16. • Smallest languages • 8 million 3,586 0.2% speakers • Mid-sized languages • 1,200 million 2,935 20.4% speakers • Biggest languages • 4,500 83 79.5% million speakers Harrison, K. David. 2007. When Languages Die.
  • 17. Moribund Languages • Are children learning the language? • “The question for us here is this: how many languages still spoken today are no longer being learning by children? This is a key question, as such languages are no longer viable, and can be defined as moribund, thus to become extinct during the *next+ century…” (Krauss, 1992)
  • 18. Moribund Analysis • Krauss (1992) estimates, based largely on demographic information, that roughly half the world’s languages will be extinct by the close of the next century. • 3,000/6,000
  • 19. A Another Analysis: • Consider the conditions where the concentration of languages is the highest. • 9 countries with over 200 languages • How stable are these countries? • How likely are minority language likely to be protected?
  • 20. The Top Nine Countries • Papua New Gunea 850 • Indonesia 670 • Nigeria 410 • India 380 • Cameroon 270 • Australia 250 • Mexico 240 • Zaire 210 • Brazil 210 (another 13 have 160-100 each) Top 22 countries = 5,000 languages
  • 21. What leads to language mortality? • Some factors we might expect: • war • genocide • social or economic upheaval • displacement • forced assimilation
  • 22. Some factors which we might not expect • nation state • universal education • television • radio • newspaper • globalization
  • 23. What about “safe” languages? • Does official state support protect languages? • About 200 sovereign states • English (45) • French (30) • Spanish (20) • Arabic (20) • Portuguese (6)
  • 24. Does number of speakers protect languages? • languages with one million speakers – between 200-250 (with a lot of overlap with previous category) • languages with .5 million speakers – about 300 • languages with .1 million speakers – about 600
  • 25. Number of speakers may not be enough protection • Breton had one million speakers in living memory, but now has few children learning it. • Navajo had .1 million a generation ago, but now has a very uncertain future.
  • 26. Outcome of Analysis • The conclusion is that perhaps as much as 90% of the world’s languages could be extinct in one hundred years.
  • 27. Compare to biological diversity • Mammals – about 4,400 species. – 326 endangered + threatened. – 7.4% worst case scenario.
  • 28. Compare to biological diversity • -Birds – about 8,600 species. – 231 endangered and threatened. – 2.7% worst case scenario.
  • 29. Reasons to be alarmed • Scientific reasons • linguistic diversity • UG – Ubykh (Northwest Caucasian language) – Has over 80 consonants.
  • 30. Loss of Culture • “Of supreme significance in relation to linguistic diversity, and to local languages in particular, is the simple truth that language— in the general, multifaceted sense—embodies the intellectual wealth of the people who use it.” (Krauss, 1992)
  • 31. Loss of Culture • “Some forms of verbal art—verse, song, or chant—depend crucially on morphological and phonological, even syntactic, properties of the language in which it is formed. In such cases the art could not exist without the language, quite literally.” (Krauss, 1992)
  • 32. Cultural reasons • classifiers • kinship systems • space
  • 33. What to do? • Documentation of endangered languages before they disappear. – Grammar – Lexicon – Corpus of texts – Audio/video of native speakers
  • 34. For ‘unsafe’ languages • Children still learning the language • Change language policy to support the language and culture of minority language. • Produce pedagogical materials in the endangered language.
  • 35. Responses to threats to linguistic diversity • Do nothing • Document endangered languages • Engage in revitalization activities
  • 36. 1. The Spanish Missionaries 2. Colonial Explorations 3. The Boasian Linguists 4. The Rise of Generativism 5. Revitalization RESPONSES & REVITALIZATION
  • 37. The Spanish Missionaries 1500s – 1700s • Alonso de Molina – Nahuatl • Franciscans, Dominicans, Augustinians each wanted their own Nahuatl grammar • Tradition continued in S. America (Quechua), N. America (Guale, Timucua; Florida), and Brazil • Jesuits were excellent field linguists – Numerous manuscripts lost when they were expelled from Paraguay • By 1700, 21 grammars were published • Missionary work was (and is – SIL) common globally Shobhana L. Chelliah & Willem J. de Reuse. 2011. Handbook of Descriptive Linguistic Fieldwork. Dodrecht: Springer.
  • 38. Colonial Explorations 1700 – 1900 • Jefferson lists (Unkechaug) • Bureau of American Ethnology • Roger Williams – Narragansett (Rhode Island) • Intense interest in comparative linguistics
  • 39. The Boasian Linguists 1900s – 1950s • Franz Boas – describing each language and culture in its own terms • Sparked a whole cadre of field linguists – Mary Haas – Morris Swadesh – Edward Sapir – Benjamin Lee Whorf – J. P. Harrington – Margaret Mead – Ruth Benedict
  • 40. The Rise of Generativism 1950s – 1980s • Leonard Bloomfield, Language (1933) – Structuralist linguistics – Comprehensive description of N. American languages – Meaning is irrelevant to understanding how language operates • Noam Chomsky, Syntactic Structures (1959) – Transformational grammar – Universal Grammar (later works) – Introspection as a method
  • 41. Revitalization 1990s – 2010s • 1992 – Language publishes seminal article – Ken Hale – On endangered languages and the safeguarding of diversity – Ken Hale – Language endangerment and the human value of linguistic diversity – Krauss – The world’s languages in crisis • Training indigenous speakers as linguists (Hale) • Journals (LD&C), Conferences (LD&D, SILS, SSILA), Organizations (FEL, ELF) • Recognition and support from the field
  • 42. PROFILE OF AN ENDANGERED LANGUAGE: CHITIMACHA
  • 43. Prehistory – 1940 • Lived in the Louisiana area for 2,500 – 6,000 years • Language isolate – possibly the first inhabitants • 1700 – diseases halved the population • ca. 1706 – 1718 – French colonists actively enslaved tribe • 1727 – Chitimacha rediscovered west of Mississippi • 1802 – Jefferson list collected by Martin Duralde • 1881 – 1882 – Documented by Albert S. Gatschet • 1907 – 1920 – Documented by John R. Swanton • 1917 – sold tribal land to the government • 1930 – population dropped to 51 people • 1930 – 1934 – Language documented by Morris Swadesh • 1934 – Chief Benjamin Paul, last expertly fluent speaker, dies • 1940 – Delphine Ducloux, last proficient speaker, dies • Documentation
  • 44. Revitalization 1990? - 2011 • 2000 census – 720 registered Chitimacha • 3 beginner – intermediate speakers • 1995 – Revitalization program begins • 2008 – Chitimacha Rosetta Stone begins – Constructed from Swadesh’s documentation • 2010 – Chitimacha Rosetta Stone released – Being learned by every student in school • 2010 – Preschool immersion program begins • In progress – Chitimacha dictionary and grammar
  • 45. PROFILE OF AN ENDANGERED LANGUAGE: NAVAJO
  • 46. Navajo Today • Most widely spoken American Indian language • 1970 – 90% of BIA boarding school children spoke Navajo • 1992 – 18% of preschoolers knew Navajo • 2011 – Less than 5% of school-aged children • 2006 – Navajo Language Renaissance • 2010 – Rosetta Stone released • In progress – Navajo workbooks
  • 47. • It is unfortunately true that very few people (including most of their own speakers) care about the impending demise of small languages. Joshua Fishman 1995. On the limits of ethnolinguistic democracy. p. 60.
  • 48. Let them die? • What if half the world's languages are on the verge of extinction? Let them die in peace. Kenan Malik 2000. Let them die. Prospect. November.

Notas del editor

  1. 80% of the world’s population uses only 83 of the world’s languages
  2. Guale and Timucua are now extinctSpanish had to learn the language in order to preach- Established a printing press and cranked out grammars
  3. I see Chomsky as a continuation of structuralismChomsky’s approach makes fieldwork unnecessaryFieldwork was still being carried out, but marginalized