Language and History in Africa

Language and History in Africa
Author: David Dalby
Publsiher: Frank Cass Publishers
Total Pages: 184
Release: 1970
Genre: Foreign Language Study
ISBN: UOM:39015046390582

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Language History and Linguistic Description in Africa

Language History and Linguistic Description in Africa
Author: Ian Maddieson,Thomas J. Hinnebusch
Publsiher: Africa World Press
Total Pages: 334
Release: 1998
Genre: Foreign Language Study
ISBN: 0865436320

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For more than a quarter of a century the Annual conference on African Linguistics (ACAL) has provided a lively forum for the confrontation of ideas on theoretical linguistics with descriptive data on African languages.

A History of African Linguistics

A History of African Linguistics
Author: H. Ekkehard Wolff
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 377
Release: 2019-06-13
Genre: Foreign Language Study
ISBN: 9781108417976

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The first global history of African linguistics as an emerging autonomous academic discipline, covering Africa, the Americas, Asia, Australia, and Europe.

The Social and Political History of Southern Africa s Languages

The Social and Political History of Southern Africa s Languages
Author: Tomasz Kamusella,Finex Ndhlovu
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 372
Release: 2017-11-21
Genre: Foreign Language Study
ISBN: 9781137015938

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This book is the first to offer an interdisciplinary and comprehensive reference work on the often-marginalised languages of southern Africa. The authors analyse a range of different concepts and questions, including language and sociality, social and political history, multilingual government, and educational policies. In doing so, they present significant original research, ensuring that the work will remain a key reference point for the subject. This ambitious and wide-ranging edited collection will appeal to students and scholars of southern African languages, sociolinguistics, history and politics.

Tracing Language Movement in Africa

Tracing Language Movement in Africa
Author: Ericka A. Albaugh,Kathryn M. de Luna
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 400
Release: 2018-01-10
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9780190657550

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The great diversity of ethnicities and languages in Africa encourages a vision of Africa as a fragmented continent, with language maps only perpetuating this vision by drawing discrete language groups. In reality, however, most people can communicate with most others within and across linguistic boundaries, even if not in languages taught or learned in schools. Many disciplines have looked carefully at language movement and change on the continent, but their lack of interaction has prevented the emergence of a cohesive picture of African languages. Tracing Language Movement in Africa gathers eighteen scholars together to offer a truly multidisciplinary representation of language in Africa, combining insights from history, archaeology, religion, linguistics, political science, and philosophy. The resulting volume illuminates commonalities and distinctions in these disciplines' understanding of language change and movement in Africa. The volume is empirical -- aiming to represent language more accurately on the continent -- as well as theoretical. It identifies the theories that each discipline uses to make sense of language movement in Africa in plain terms and highlights the themes that cut across all disciplines: how scholars use data, understand boundaries, represent change, and conceptualize power. The volume is organized to reflect differing conceptions of language that arise from its discipline-specific contributions: that is, tendencies to study changes that consolidate language or those that splinter it, viewing languages as whole or in part. Each contribution includes a short explanation of a discipline's theoretical and methodological approaches to language movement and change to ensure that the chapters are accessible to non-specialists, followed by an illustrative empirical case study. This volume will inspire multidisciplinary conversations around the study of language change in Africa, opening new interdisciplinary dialogue and spurring scholars to adapt the questions, data, and method of other disciplines to the problems that animate their own fields.

The Swahili

The Swahili
Author: Derek Nurse,Thomas Spear
Publsiher: University of Pennsylvania Press
Total Pages: 145
Release: 2017-06-10
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781512821666

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"As an introduction to how the history of an African society can be reconstructed from largely nonliterate sources, and to the Swahili in particular, . . . a model work."—International Journal of African Historical Studies

Speaking with Substance

Speaking with Substance
Author: Kathryn M. de Luna,Jeffrey B. Fleisher
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 172
Release: 2018-06-27
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9783319910369

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This volume proposes a supplemental approach to interdisciplinary historical reconstructions that draw on archaeological and linguistic data. The introduction lays out the supplemental approach, situating it in the broader context of similar interdisciplinary research methods in other world regions. Reflecting the arguments of the volume and its goal to document the process rather than the outcome of interdisciplinary collaboration, the volume is organized into two two-chapter case studies. Within each case study, the non-specialist develops an historical interpretation using their own research findings and published data from the other discipline.This chapter is followed by critical commentary from the specialist, a dialogue clarifying the commentary and specialists’ methods, and a second short historical interpretation that deploys insights from the supplemental approach. The conclusion reflects on the challenges of disciplinary conventions to interdisciplinary research and the contribution of the supplemental approach to efforts to know the history of oral societies in Africa and beyond

The Languages and Linguistics of Africa

The Languages and Linguistics of Africa
Author: Tom Güldemann
Publsiher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages: 1032
Release: 2018-09-10
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9783110421668

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This innovative handbook takes a fresh look at the currently underestimated linguistic diversity of Africa, the continent with the largest number of languages in the world. It covers the major domains of linguistics, offering both a representative picture of Africa’s linguistic landscape as well as new and at times unconventional perspectives. The focus is not so much on exhaustiveness as on the fruitful relationship between African and general linguistics and the contributions the two domains can make to each other. This volume is thus intended for readers with a specific interest in African languages and also for students and scholars within the greater discipline of linguistics.