The Songlines 2

In this marvellous book, Bruce Chatwin does more than describe the Australian songlines. See last blog. What follows are my words, not his.

He suggests that human beings have been nomadic hunter gatherers for two million years and settled farmers for only eight thousand years. Our brains are therefore wired up to a life like that of the Australian aborigines (before the white man destroyed it). We struggle with our settled existence: we are designed to walk, not to sit or to labour. This idea resonates very strongly in me, as I was passionate about walking, both on my own and with my rambling club and felt completely at home and fulfilled when walking. Chatwin quotes the Buddha: “You cannot travel on the path before you have become the path itself.” That is exactly what it felt like. Continue reading

The Songlines

Bruce Chatwin (1987) republished Vintage 1998 (out of print but obtained, through Amazon, from Oxfam Walthamstow for £0.01 plus postage).

I read this many years ago, but wanted to re-read it after reading the description of the illiterate stone  age people speaking hundreds of different languages in Papua New Guinea (Vanishing Voices). It is hard to imagine a society, until recently without writing, largely isolated in their mountain villages and trading with people speaking non-cognate languages. I remembered The Songlines about the Australian aborigines, which describes the life of nomadic hunter gatherers, whose languages are embedded in a culture utterly different from ours. Continue reading

Writing and abstract language

The strength of “Vanishing Voices” is that it sees language, not as something abstract and isolated, but always embodied in, and a part of, social practice.

In his book on the salt trade* the historian, Samuel Adshead, relates the development of the state to the written language needed for administration. He writes:

“Both politics and bureaucracy required the new higher literacy of classical languages embodied in canonical texts: Homer, the Zeud Avista, the Vedas and Upanishads, and the five Confucian classics.

“Pre-classical language, mainly unwritten, was confined to the spatial, the specific, the objective, the human and the concrete. Classical language, essentially written, provided concepts for the temporal, the generic, the subjective, the divine and the abstract.

“The new classical languages everywhere widened horizons, but they created deep social division between those who possessed the new literacy, the aristocracy and urban males with a minimum degree of leisure, and those who did not, women and country people – farmers, fishermen and miners.”

This describes very well the gap between the concrete language of everyday life which everyone has access to without going to school, and the abstract language of learning and power.

The gap between those that have abstract language and those who have not remains. The success of Breakthrough to Learning showed that appropriate teaching can close that gap.

* S.A.M. Adshead: Salt and Civilisation (1992)

Vanishing Voices

Daniel Nettle and Suzanne Romaine (2002) “Vanishing Voices: The Extinction of the World’s Languages”, OUP, USA

This is a wonderful read. First, the authors’ evocation of the pre-literate, fluid world of hundreds of languages co-existing in a limited area, such as Papua New Guinea. These are the languages which are endangered by the modern world.

Second, the authors pull no punches in describing economic reasons for the death of languages, namely colonialism by the European powers (and now the United States), which robs tribal peoples of their resources in the search for raw materials.

Third, they make an interesting case for bi-lingualism as a way of saving the hundreds of languages currently under threat, giving Denmark as an example. Here Danish remains the language of home and give s people their identity, but resources are poured into schools to make sure that Danes also have an excellent command of the world language, English.

The effect of the written language is mentioned, but it would be interesting to read more about the impact of literacy in saving endangered languages.

My New Website

With a book, page 40 is always the same.
But the internet fidgets and won’t stay still:
It challenges me with crashes and scares -
Computer fifty: Mary nil.

Whose voice is this on my very own site?
It sounds like Eric the Red, not me.
I am digitally launched in search of grapes
In a cockleshell boat on a cosmic sea!

But my site is clear and easy to read,
It does what it says, its buttons are nifty.
I glimpse the grail o’er the wine-dark sea –
Computer nil and Mary fifty!

The Language of Learning

Featured

Welcome to the website of Mary Mason, the author of Breakthrough to Learning. This is a linguistics – based course for secondary schools, which teaches the language needed for academic success. When used systematically in Wigan 1984-91, the program had the effect of doubling the percentage of pupils gaining five or more GCSE’s grades A-C across the curriculum. (See Mason, Mason and Quayle 1992 under downloads.) Continue reading