What Viewing Language as a Substance Might Tell Us about Vaupes Mulitilingualism
Qué viendo un idioma como una sustancia pueda decirnos del plurilingüismo del Vaupés
Object Details
Subject Language | Barasana Makuna |
Language PID(s) | ailla:119786 ailla:119764 |
Title [Indigenous] | |
Language of Indigenous Title | |
Title | What Viewing Language as a Substance Might Tell Us about Vaupes Mulitilingualism |
Language Community | |
Country(ies) | |
Place Created | |
Date Created | 2021-06-25 |
Description [Indigenous] | |
Language of Indigenous Description | |
Description | Presentation abstract: Our understanding of Vaupés multilingualism is sometimes clouded by reliance on outdated kinship theory in which pre-existing descent groups ‘own’ reified ‘languages’ that serve as ‘emblems' or ‘badges’ to which people owe ‘loyalty’. An alternative is to view language as a kind of substance that is constitutive of the individuals and groups involved. But what kind of substance? To answer this question requires shifting attention from a diversity of languages to a diversity of -lects, including shamanic spells and flute music. This opens the way to examining the relation between speech, breath, semen and soul, and to viewing language, music and tobacco smoke as devices that give added substance to breath. In the Vaupés context, in its role as a substance constitutive of persons, language is something that is smeared on the body, trapped in the ears and eaten through the mouth. |
Genres | Presentation |
Source Note | |
References | |
Contributor(s) Individual / Role | Hugh-Jones, Stephen (Author) |
Contributor(s) Corporate / Role |
Media Files
There are 3 objects in this resourceObject | File Types | Access Level |
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SHJ-SALSA2021-NOcaptions.mp4 | video/mp4 | 1 |
SHJ-SALSA2021-captions.mp4 | video/mp4 | 1 |
SHJ-SALSA2021-captions.srt | text/plain | 1 |