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History of Language by Steven Roger Fischer
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History of Language (edition 1999)

by Steven Roger Fischer

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1863145,248 (3.5)None
If the name Steven Roger Fischer sounds vaguely familiar, he's the guy who (claims to have) deciphered Rongo Rongo and the Phaistos Disk.
Be that as it may, he's clearly a smart guy who knows something about languages; unfortunately he's not a very compelling writer.

This book contains a number of different histories of language; for example a history of some language families, a history of writing, a history of linguistics.
All interesting material, but with so many truly great popular linguistics books currently available, it seems foolish to spend time reading one that is merely acceptable, not great. ( )
  name99 | Apr 11, 2007 |
Showing 3 of 3
This is a fascinating introduction to the history of language that requires no previous knowledge of the subject.

Starting with the simplest definition of language as medium of information exchange, Fischer briefly deals with what is known about animal communication before considering present – by now 20 year old – research into language capabilities of early hominids that can be deduced from bones and tools and associated social development. Whereas animal–human communication so far demonstrated is indexial, i.e. associative relationship between object and signed word, human vocal language is symbolic beginning with homo erectus perhaps already 900 000 years ago (44ff).
Discussed then (46ff) are 4 basic language universals (one of these is a minimum of the 3 basic vowels [i], [a], [u] – (comparable to the primary colours); additional vowels will be positioned between these)

About syntax (rules governing the connection of words in phrases) (51): “Before syntax one cannot speak of articulate human language.” This was commencing ca. 1 million years ago, approaching completion ca. 400,000 to 300,000 years ago, and evolving simultaneously with anatomical changes to process complex language and nerves that control breathing and larynx.
By ca. 14,000 years ago Homo sapiens had differentiated thousands of languages grouped into hundreds of language families (Ch. III).

Written language (Ch. IV) can be grouped into three classes: logographic (e.g. Chinese), syllabic and alphabetic; these are not stages in a model of evolution but each one adapted to the needs of a particular language.
It seems at present that scripts (graphic art) reproducing speech have emerged only once, more than 5000 years ago among an Afro-Asiatic people (105).
Writing began with pictograms (the name of the object prompts a pronunciation). From this ‘pre-writing’ a first class of actual writing a logographic script (glyphs stand for objects, ideas or sounds) emerged to reproduce speech more faithfully and efficiently. If in time new needs arise, then syllabic solutions are found. (108) (syllabic: glyphs that have only syllabophonetic value (86); such needs can emerge language-internally (Egypt) or externally when the logographic script is borrowed by an unrelated language (Japanese kana). (108)

“Scripts do not ‘evolve’: they are purposefully changed by human agents to improve the quality of speech reproduction (sound) and semantic transmission (sense).” (108)

Greatest changes seem to occur when an ill-fitting system is adapted by speakers of another language: West Semitic speakers of the Levant modified syllabic glyphs into consonantal symbols to reproduce better the consonantal Semitic languages. (108) The Greeks found the need to introduced vowels into the Phoenician consonantal alphabet and developed a full alphabetic script where the glyphs stand for individual vowels and consonants (letters), this, it seems, the only time in history.

In all classes, script remains inextricably linked to speech: ‘there is no writing that can convey the full range of human thought that is not phonetic’ (109)
There is no ‘primitive language’ and no ‘primitive script’: each script is adequate for a particular language and a given period of time (110). Writing affects speech as much as speech affects writing (110).
All writing systems are imperfect, English particularly so, as it uses an inadequate alphabetic script; e.g. it fails to reproduce pitch, stress, length, …; a single letter like a can stand for 6 different sounds or no sound at all (110).

There follow chapters on Lineages, Linguistics, Society and Language and possible future developments which I only glanced at and to which I may come back.

Like all science, this account of the history of language will be modified and refined in future studies; the author mentions when views are not generally accepted. The writing is clear and concise, going into just enough detail but not overloaded by it, a pleasure to read. (VI-15) ( )
  MeisterPfriem | Jun 16, 2015 |
If the name Steven Roger Fischer sounds vaguely familiar, he's the guy who (claims to have) deciphered Rongo Rongo and the Phaistos Disk.
Be that as it may, he's clearly a smart guy who knows something about languages; unfortunately he's not a very compelling writer.

This book contains a number of different histories of language; for example a history of some language families, a history of writing, a history of linguistics.
All interesting material, but with so many truly great popular linguistics books currently available, it seems foolish to spend time reading one that is merely acceptable, not great. ( )
  name99 | Apr 11, 2007 |
Essays/General/Language Arts / Linguistics / Literacy/Linguistics/Literary Collections/Literature: Classics/Dialectology/Language Arts & Disciplines / General
  Budzul | Jun 1, 2008 |
Showing 3 of 3

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