Linguistic Fieldwork

Front Cover
Paul Newman, Martha Susan Ratliff
Cambridge University Press, Jun 21, 2001 - Language Arts & Disciplines - 288 pages
This book is a collection of original essays on the practice of linguistic fieldwork and language documentation. Twelve of the leading field linguists in the world have written personal essays about the study of languages in a natural setting. Drawing on extensive research experience, they pass on the lessons they have learnt, review the techniques that they found worked best in practice, and discuss a variety of relevant topics, including the attitude of the linguist, the structure and content of the work session, the varied roles of native speakers, and the practical and personal challenges of doing research in an unfamiliar environment. Covering a wide range of field areas, and written in an accessible manner, the book will be indispensable to fieldworkers in linguistics, anthropology, folklore and oral history.
 

Contents

Fieldwork as a state of mind
15
Who shapes the record the speaker and the linguist
34
Places and people field sites and informants
55
Ulwa Southern Sumu the beginnings of a language research project
76
Escaping Eurocentrism fieldwork as a process of unlearning
102
Surprises in Sutherland linguistic variability amidst social uniformity
133
The role of text collection and elicitation in linguistic fieldwork
152
Monolingual field research
166
The give and take of fieldwork noun classes and other concerns in Fatick Senegal
189
Phonetic fieldwork
211
Learning as one goes
230
The last speaker is dead long live the last speaker
250
Index
282
Copyright

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Page x - He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the National Academy of Sciences, and a fellow of the American Nuclear Society and the American Physics Society.
Page 281 - Languages, linguistic groups and status relations at Doomadgee, an Aboriginal settlement in north-west Queensland, Australia.
Page 281 - Walsh, Michael 1991 Conversational styles and intercultural communication: An example from northern Australia. Australian Journal of Communication 18(1): 1-12.

About the author (2001)

Paul Newman is Professor in the Department of Linguistics and Director of the West African Languages Institute at Indiana University.

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