Este libro parte del presupuesto de que la antropología lingüística es una disciplina con entidad propia, que merece estudiarse tanto por sus logros pasados como por las perspectivas de futuro que se vislumbran en el trabajo de un grupo activo de investigadores interdisciplinares. Sus contribuciones sobre la naturaleza del lenguaje como instrumento social, y del habla como práctica cultural, han establecido un campo de investigación que imprime un nuevo sesgo a las tradiciones del pasado y a las actuales dentro de las humanidades y las ciencias sociales, y nos invita a todos a pensar de nuevo la relación entre lenguaje y cultura.
It's a decently written textbook, but it has the dry density of an intro textbook trying to cover a lot of ground in not very deep detail.
As a writer, it has a lot of interesting perspective of the role of conversation in society, and the social ramifications of saying certain sorts of things. It gave me a lot of interesting perspectives of language as action, and that's neat. But it still took me 6 months to get through it.
What a funtastic linguistic anthropology textbook. A thrill a minute. Actually, I'm not being sarcastic; I just really love the topic. The chapter on theories of culture was particularly interesting. He kind of has to phone in the chapter on ethnographic methods, so if you aren't in school and looking for that, I recommend Bernard's "Research Methods in Anthropology." That's what we read here.
Muito bom. Uma pena que quem estuda texto, interação e discurso no Brasil geralmente ignora as contribuições da antropologia linguística, as convergências são assustadoras.
This book was not written for the layman. Of course it wasn't, it's a textbook. I still found it worth reading. After about the third chapter I began getting a sense of what was going on. This was research for me as I'm making the protagonist of the novel I'm now writing a linguistic anthropologist. As such, boy was it informative! I haven't looked up the definition of this many words since reading the early (Tennessee) works of Cormac McCarthy. So, if you're up for a challenge and are interested in the subject, I recommend this work.
This is my introduction to linguistic anthropology, the sub-discipline that studies what people use language for. It collects articles published over the last forty years, organized around four concepts: speech communities, "ways of speaking," language socialization, and language ideologies. I'm guessing that the concepts don't exhaust the discipline, but are only a few of the most important ones that could have been chosen. I particularly liked the sections on ways of speaking and language ideologies. In particular, Judith Irvine's article "Formality and Informality in Communicative Events" is a model of unambiguous word choice that I wish was more typical of writing in the social sciences and humanities. There is a good mix of abstract concepts and detailed examples, often within the same article.
A reader of Linguistic Anthropology constructed for Linguistic Anthropologists. wrongly I picked this up looking for an 'introduction to...' - also quite United States centred.