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Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5
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Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Jan 03, 2016

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Page 1: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Ch a 5

Language

Chapter 5

Page 2: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Maps: great but do they tell us everything?

• Maps can hide the complexities of life.• Look at maps with a questioning eye• Look at a European map of language, and

zero in on Belgium. • Neat line divides Flemish speakers

(Germanic Language) in the north region (Flanders) and French (Romance language) in the south (Wallonia)

Page 3: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Belgium Language Map

Fig. 5-1: English is the official language in 42 countries, including some in which it is not the most widely spoken language. It is also used and understood in many others.

Page 4: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Divisive Issue: Language

Fig. 5-2: The groups that brought what became English to England included Jutes, Angles, Saxons, and Vikings. The Normans later brought French vocabulary to English.

During the 19th century, French speakers controlled the industrial economy and government of the country.

The French-speaking elite in Brussels and other Flemish cities began a process of “Frechification”

By the 20th Century, the majority of the people in Brussels spoke French, although people in the surrounding Brussels area continued to speak Flemish

By the 1960’s, a fixed partition scheme came in to being—dividing he country into Flemish-speaking Flanders in the north and French-speaking Wallonia in the south.

The government recognizes Brussels as a distinct region, a bilingual capital, but places strict limits on the use of French in the rest of northern Belgium

Page 5: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Language Issues

Fig. 5-3: The main dialect regions of Old English before the Norman invasion persisted to some extent in the Middle English dialects through the 1400s.

Tied in with politics

Socioeconomic status

Page 6: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

What are languages, and what role do they play in cultures?

Le Big Mac

Page 7: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

The French GovernmentPassed a law in 1975 banning the use of foreign words in advertisements, television, and radio broadcasts, and official documents, unless no French Equivalent could be found.

Americans may think this odd…if we can communicate, what is the need for laws?

Answer is more complex, language is an integral part of culture, reflecting and shaping it.

Page 8: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

To understand the role of language in culture—look at those who have lost their languages—

American

Canadian

Australian

Russian

New Zealand

Governments who forced indigenous people to speak another language

Page 9: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Example: Native Americans

“No one was allowed to speak the language-the Dena’ina language. They (the American Government) didn’t allow it in schools, and a lot of the women had married non-native men, and the men said, “ You’re American now so you can’t speak the language.” So, we became invisible in the community. Invisible to each other. And, then, because we couldn’t speak the language—what happens when you can’t speak your own language is you have to think with someone else’s words, and that’s a dreadful kind of isolation.

Clare Swan, an elder in the Kenaitze band of the Dena’ina Indians in Alaska.

Page 10: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Official Language Policies in The US

Spanish-speaking people are growing

Some Spanish speakers and their advocates are demanding the use of Spanish in public affairs

In response, some people are opposed to the use of Spanish in the United States, and are leading counter-movements to promote “Official English” policies

More than 25 States today have declared English the official language of the State, either by statute or by amending the State constitution

Page 11: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Canada: A country of two languages

Quebec has a focus of passing laws that promote the use of the French language

They have even periodically, called for independence from Canada!

In 1993, the Quebec government passed a law requiring the use of French in advertising.

The Quebec law allows the inclusion of both French and English translations on signs, as long as the French letters are twice the size of the other language’s letters, or the French appears first.

Page 12: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.
Page 13: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Standard Language

o One that is published, widely distributed, and purposefully taught.

o In some countries, the standard language is sustained through official state examinations for teachers and civil servants.

o Ireland promotes the use of the Irish (Celtic) language by requiring all government employees to pass an Irish-language examination before they can be hired.

Page 14: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Dialects Variant of a standard language along regional or ethnic lines are called dialects.

Differences in vocabulary, syntax, pronunciation, cadence (the rhythm of the speech, and even the pace of speech all mark a speaker’s dialect.

To people in the southern US, the word “Horse” spoken by a New Englander sounds like “Hahse”

To New Englanders, the word “oil” spoken by a southerner sounds like “all”

An isogloss is a geographic boundary within which a particular linguistic feature occurs, but such a boundary is rarely a simple line.

Page 15: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Dialects in the Eastern U.S.

Fig. 5-4: Hans Kurath divided the eastern U.S. into three dialect regions, whose distribution is similar to that of house types (Fig. 4-9).

Page 16: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Why are languages distributed the way they are?

The first step in mapping the distribution of languages is to classify language.

Linguists and linguistic geographers classify languages in terms that are also used in biology and for the same reasons: like species, some languages are related, and others are not.

At the global scale, we classify languages into language families.

These are then divided more into subfamilies—divisions within a language family

Page 17: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Language Tree

Page 18: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

The Indo-European Language Family

• Branches of Indo-European– Germanic branch– Indo-Iranian branch– Balto-Slavic branch– Romance branch

Page 19: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Indo-European Language Family

Fig. 5-5: The main branches of the Indo-European language family include Germanic, Romance, Balto-Slavic, and Indo-Iranian.

Page 20: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Germanic Branch of Indo-European

Fig. 5-6: The Germanic branch today is divided into North and West Germanic groups. English is in the West Germanic group.

Page 21: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

South Asian Languages and Language Families

Fig. 5-7: Indo-European is the largest of four main language families in South Asia. The country of India has 18 official languages.

Page 22: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Romance Branch of Indo-European

Fig. 5-8: The Romance branch includes three of the world’s 12 most widely spoken languages (Spanish, French, and Portuguese), as well as a number of smaller languages and dialects.

Page 23: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Distribution of Other Language Families

• Classification of languages

• Distribution of language families– Sino-Tibetan language family– Other East and Southeast Asian language

families– Afro-Asiatic language family– Altaic and Uralic language families– African language families

Page 24: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Language Families of the World

Fig. 5-11: Distribution of the world’s main language families. Languages with more than 100 million speakers are named.

Page 25: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Major Language FamiliesPercentage of World Population

Fig. 5-11a: The percentage of world population speaking each of the main language families. Indo-European and Sino-Tibetan together represent almost 75% of the world’s people.

Page 26: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Chinese Ideograms

Fig. 5-13: Chinese language ideograms mostly represent concepts rather than sounds. The two basic characters at the top can be built into more complex words.

Page 27: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Language Families of Africa

Fig. 5-14: The 1,000 or more languages of Africa are divided among five main language families, including Austronesian languages in Madagascar.

Page 28: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Languages of Nigeria

Fig. 5-15: More than 200 languages are spoken in Nigeria, the largest country in Africa (by population). English, considered neutral, is the official language.

Page 29: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Language Diversity and Uniformity

• Preserving language diversity– Hebrew: reviving extinct languages– Celtic: preserving endangered languages– Multilingual states– Isolated languages

• Global dominance of English– English as a lingua franca– Diffusion to other languages

Page 30: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Language Areas in Switzerland

Fig. 5-17: Switzerland remains peaceful with four official languages and a decentralized government structure.

Page 31: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Internet Hosts

Fig. 5-1-1: A large proportion of the world’s internet users and hosts are in the developed countries of North America and western Europe.

Page 32: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Internet Hosts, by Language

Fig 5-1-1a: The large majority of internet hosts in 1999 used English, Chinese, Japanese, or European languages.

Page 33: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Monolingual States

Countries in which only one language is spoken Japan

Uruguay and Venezuela

Iceland

Denmark

Portugal

Poland

Lesotho

Page 34: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

What role does language play in making places?

Toponyms are place names

They can give us a quick glimpses into the history of a place

10 basic types:

Descriptive (Rocky Mountains)

Associative (Mill Valley)

Commemorative (San Francisco)

Commendatory (Paradise Valley)

Incidents (Battle Creek)

Possession (Johnson City)

Folk Culture (Plains, Georgia)

Manufactured (Truth or Consequences, New Mexico)

Mistakes (Lasker, North Carolina) (Named for Alaska)

Shift Names, relocated: Lancaster, Pennsylvania and England

Page 35: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

                                                                                                    

                                                 

Page 36: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Just to clarify since everyone always gets confused!

Page 37: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Language Branch

• A group of languages that share a common origin but have since evolved into individual languages.

Page 38: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

Language Family

• A group of languages that share a common ancestor before recorded history

Page 39: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

When Languages are depicted as leaves on the trees, the roots of the tree below the

surface represent…

• Possible prehistoric superfamilies

Page 40: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

The trunks of the tree represents…..

• Language families

Page 41: Ch a 5 Language Chapter 5. Maps: great but do they tell us everything? Maps can hide the complexities of life. Look at maps with a questioning eye Look.

AAP Human Geography

More fun than a root canal!