"Culture:" Say it with grammar! The Expression of Notions Related to "Culture" in Amerindian Languages

IF 0.8 3区 社会学 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Anthropological Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-06-01 DOI:10.1353/anq.2022.0033
Valentina Vapnarsky, Cédric Yvinec, Cédric Becquey
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Abstract

ABSTRACT:Amerindian languages have often borrowed the lexical terms of colonial languages that refer to "culture," "tradition," or "heritage," or else created neologisms for them. Amerindian languages, however, express related notions through grammatical forms, rather than with lexical terms. In contrast to lexical terms, grammatical elements are normally more constrained, less open to reflexivity for the speaker but nonetheless manipulable while also being the product of recurrent verbal and interactional practices. This article focuses on three grammatical domains: temporal configurations, expressions of person and agency, and epistemicity. For each of these, we study the contextual use of relevant linguistic constructions, especially in situations in which speakers can resort to different expressions to refer to "cultural" practices, each of which implies different attitudes towards "culture." The study is based on three languages—two Mayan languages from Mexico (Yucatec and Chol), and one Tupian from Brazil (Suruí of Rondônia)—whose speakers experience very different situations regarding the definition of their "culture," by themselves and by others.
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文化:“用语法说!”美洲印第安人语言中“文化”概念的表达
摘要:美洲印第安人的语言经常借用殖民地语言中涉及“文化”、“传统”或“遗产”的词汇,或者为它们创造新词。然而,美洲印第安人语言通过语法形式而不是词汇来表达相关的概念。与词汇术语相比,语法元素通常更受约束,对说话者来说不太容易产生反身性,但仍然是可操纵的,同时也是反复出现的口头和互动实践的产物。本文主要讨论了三个语法领域:时间结构、人与能动的表达和认识性。对于每一种情况,我们都研究了相关语言结构的语境使用,特别是在说话者可以使用不同的表达来指代“文化”实践的情况下,每一种表达都意味着对“文化”的不同态度。这项研究基于三种语言——两种来自墨西哥的玛雅语(尤卡泰克语和乔尔语)和一种来自巴西的图皮安语(Rondônia的Suruí)——这三种语言的使用者在自己和他人对“文化”的定义方面经历了非常不同的情况。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
11.10%
发文量
30
期刊介绍: Since 1921, Anthropological Quarterly has published scholarly articles, review articles, book reviews, and lists of recently published books in all areas of sociocultural anthropology. Its goal is the rapid dissemination of articles that blend precision with humanism, and scrupulous analysis with meticulous description.
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