Mickayla’s Reviews > Kisisi (Our Language): The Story of Colin and Sadiki > Status Update

Mickayla
Mickayla is on page 42 of 192
Chapter 2 discusses previous work in language acquisition and the development of new languages. Feral children studies have typically been short-lived, with researchers giving up on their subjects after not being satisfied with their speed of progress. Before Colin and Sadiki, nobody had documented children creating a pidgin rather than learning it from their parents.
Feb 12, 2023 06:05PM
Kisisi (Our Language): The Story of Colin and Sadiki (New Directions in Ethnography)

flag

Mickayla’s Previous Updates

Mickayla
Mickayla is on page 46 of 192
I'm not convinced that "pupu" is a sign of creativity though, because that hinges on assuming Colin somehow didn't know how the same thing is used in the same context in English, which I don't believe. Perry should have honed in on him making the connection between Sadiki's onomatopoeia and the English word.
Feb 18, 2023 11:13AM
Kisisi (Our Language): The Story of Colin and Sadiki (New Directions in Ethnography)


Mickayla
Mickayla is on page 46 of 192
Chapter 3 - Perry tells stories and analyzes some data showing how the boys use language creatively. Colin is aware that he is "allowed" to make up words for "potty talk" because he's aware his mother studies this. In a way, then, she might have been correct in thinking her made-up language influenced Colin in making a language with Sadiki - she unwittingly let him know it was possible and that it was good.
Feb 18, 2023 11:04AM
Kisisi (Our Language): The Story of Colin and Sadiki (New Directions in Ethnography)


Mickayla
Mickayla is on page 42 of 192
I was surprised to learn that linguists until very recently believed that children only mimic language; that they just repeat what adults say to them with no creativity or understanding of social rules. This is why the author at first doesn't believe the boys have created a language even though the people living there immediately recognize the language for what it is and think it's a miracle.
Feb 08, 2023 10:36PM
Kisisi (Our Language): The Story of Colin and Sadiki (New Directions in Ethnography)


Mickayla
Mickayla is on page 42 of 192
Chapter 1 establishes the background for how the author, her husband, and their child ended up in Kenya and also how the two boys meet. It's an "everything happened to fall into place for this rare thing to occur" situation, a set of circumstances impossible to replicate. She then describes how the language first began to develop, how it related the boys' other languages, etc. . . .
Feb 08, 2023 10:33PM
Kisisi (Our Language): The Story of Colin and Sadiki (New Directions in Ethnography)


Mickayla
Mickayla is starting
We can see why this is: this isn't just an ethnography to the author, but a personal story, that, in telling us about it, is helping the author to cope with the deaths of her son and husband who were central to the "ethnography."
Feb 08, 2023 11:36AM
Kisisi (Our Language): The Story of Colin and Sadiki (New Directions in Ethnography)


Mickayla
Mickayla is starting
I'm reading this for a linguistics class, so there will be ample notes. Reading the prologue, the author starts by comparing her compulsion to tell this story to the Ancient Mariner of Samuel Coleridge's poem "Rime of the Ancient Mariner." Although I haven't read the poem, the extended allusion lends some depth to the prologue, so that it does feel like a story unwinding rather than a dry ethnography.
Feb 08, 2023 11:35AM
Kisisi (Our Language): The Story of Colin and Sadiki (New Directions in Ethnography)


No comments have been added yet.