Book Chapter10.1093/oso/9780198824978.003.0005
Australian languages and interdisciplinary approaches to the past
Luisa Miceli,Claire Bowern +1 more
- 13 Jun 2023
- pp 37-45
TL;DR: Australian languages can contribute to building an integrated history of the Australian past, but face challenges due to missing information, paucity of sound change, and language contact.
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Abstract: Abstract This chapter discusses the role that Australian languages can play in building an integrated history of the Australian past, and the challenges that must be overcome in order to make genuine progress. We first discuss linguistic-internal issues that have arisen in the course of reconstructing a picture of the linguistic past more specifically—e.g. missing information, paucity of sound change, and the effects of language contact. We then go on to present a case study to illustrate some of the issues encountered in integrating interdisciplinary findings for a broader reconstruction of the past—focussing on linguistics and genetics in the context of Pama-Nyungan—and how these may best be addressed.
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References
Translanguaging and Hybrid Spaces: Boundaries and beyond in North Central Arnhem Land
Jill Vaughan,Jill Vaughan +1 more
- 01 Jan 2018
TL;DR: The authors explored how speakers in Maningrida, a linguistically diverse Indigenous community in northern Australia, negotiate and evaluate their language practices within "hybrid spaces" (i.e. spaces shaped by the interaction of diverse groups, institutions and ways of speaking).
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Same but different: understanding language contact in Queensland Indigenous settlements
Ilana Mushin,Denise Angelo,Jennifer M. Munro +2 more
- 01 Jan 2016
Abstract: In this paper we examine the historical and social factors associated with language contact in three Queensland settlements – Yarrabah, Cherbourg and Woorabinda – and discuss the impact these may have had on the emergence of the English-lexified vernacular languages associated with these communities today. Our focus is on the 20th century and how Queensland Government policies of removal towards Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, including those of the Cape York Peninsula, provided new contexts for sustained language contact in these settlements, not only between traditional languages, but also with pre-existing contact varieties. We show here how each vernacular is different because the sociohistorical circumstances in which they emerged are different. So while the three vernaculars we examine have been labelled as ‘Aboriginal English’, our research demonstrates a much richer picture – one which demands a re-examination of the vernacular of any Aboriginal community today as a product of its own unique history.
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The Biri Dialects and their Neighbours
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Tools and Technology for Language Documentation and Revitalization
Keren Rice,Nick Thieberger +1 more
- 06 Sep 2018
TL;DR: A defining feature of new methods of documenting languages is the advance in technologies for recording, transcribing, annotating, managing, and analyzing language records, which then facilitates delivering that documentation for use in various forms, in particular for language revitalization efforts.
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