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"Why do some languages wither and die, while others prosper and spread? Around the turn of the millennium a number of archaeologists such as Colin Renfrew and Peter Bellwood made the controversial claim that many of the world's major language families owe their dispersal to the adoption of agriculture by their early speakers. In this volume, their proposal is reassessed by linguists, investigating to what extent the economic dependence on plant cultivation really impacted language spread in various parts of the world. Special attention is paid to "tricky" language families such as Eskimo-Aleut, Quechua, Aymara, Bantu, Indo-European, Transeurasian, Turkic, Japano-Koreanic, Hmong-Mien and Trans-New Guinea, that cannot unequivocally be regarded as instances of Farming/Language Dispersal, even if subsistence played a role in their expansion"--
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"Why do some languages wither and die, while others prosper and spread? Around the turn of the millennium a number of archaeologists such as Colin Renfrew and Peter Bellwood made the controversial claim that many of the world's major language families owe their dispersal to the adoption of agriculture by their early speakers. In this volume, their proposal is reassessed by linguists, investigating to what extent the economic dependence on plant cultivation really impacted language spread in various parts of the world. Special attention is paid to "tricky" language families such as Eskimo-Aleut, Quechua, Aymara, Bantu, Indo-European, Transeurasian, Turkic, Japano-Koreanic, Hmong-Mien and Trans-New Guinea, that cannot unequivocally be regarded as instances of Farming/Language Dispersal, even if subsistence played a role in their expansion"--
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"Why do some languages wither and die, while others prosper and spread? Around the turn of the millennium a number of archaeologists such as Colin Renfrew and Peter Bellwood made the controversial claim that many of the world's major language families owe their dispersal to the adoption of agriculture by their early speakers. In this volume, their proposal is reassessed by linguists, investigating to what extent the economic dependence on plant cultivation really impacted language spread in various parts of the world. Special attention is paid to "tricky" language families such as Eskimo-Aleut, Quechua, Aymara, Bantu, Indo-European, Transeurasian, Turkic, Japano-Koreanic, Hmong-Mien and Trans-New Guinea, that cannot unequivocally be regarded as instances of Farming/Language Dispersal, even if subsistence played a role in their expansion"--
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"Reimagines the vernacular as a critical concept for rethinking world literatures"
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La langue maternelle en tant que la première langue entendue - oubliée ou perdue - est celle dans laquelle a baigné le petit d'homme à sa naissance. Elle joue un rôle fondamental pour l'avènement de la parole et pour la construction du rapport de chaque être humain au monde. La langue maternelle ne coïncide pas nécessairement avec la langue nationale, ni d'ailleurs avec la langue de la mère, elle peut-être une ou plusieurs ; c'est une langue qui habite le corps. Au passage de la langue maternelle à la langue étrangère s'expérimente quelque chose de l'ordre de l'origine qui sollicite, à travers un reste intraduisible et ses destins, le plus intime des capacités créatives du psychisme. Les particularités et les ratages linguistiques qui apparaissent au passage d'une langue à l'autre ne peuvent être totalement circonscrits par la linguistique ; ils ne peuvent non plus être compris comme un défaut d'apprentissage de langues. Ces ratages portent la marque de la poéticité de chaque langue ainsi que la manière dont chaque être parlant s'en débrouille. Cet ouvrage collectif envisage la question de la langue maternelle dans une approche interdisciplinaire et transversale. À partir de la psychologie, la psychanalyse, la psycholinguistique, la psychologie interculturelle et transculturelle, les sciences de l'éducation et la littérature, nous interrogerons ce que les ratés de la langue nous apprennent sur elle.
Langue maternelle --- Langage --- Psychologie. --- Native language --- Multilingualism
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