Past Event! Note: this event has already taken place.

Speaker Series: Dr. John Leavitt

September 22, 2015 at 1:00 PM to 2:30 PM

Location:314 Southam Hall
Cost:Free
Audience:null
Key Contact:Marie-Odile Junker
Contact Email:MarieOdile.Junker@carleton.ca

Thinking about Language Diversity since the Sixteenth Century: From Rabelais to Boroditsky, via Boas and Whorf 

Dr. John Leavitt
(Université de Montréal)

Reading old and sometimes neglected literature suggests that Western debates about the importance of the diversity of human languages, including recent debates in cognitive science, have repeated similar arguments since the sixteenth century. A brief presentation of the major options will lead to the theoretical shift operated by Franz Boas, linguist and anthropologist, at the turn of the twentieth century and elaborated by his student Edward Sapir and Sapir’s student B.L. Whorf under the label “linguistic relativity”. Finally, we will review the more recent history of the suppression of this option and its re-emergence in what is coming to be called a “Whorfian renaissance”.

About the Presenter

Dr. John Leavitt is professor in the anthropology department of the Université de Montréal, specializing in linguistic anthropology. His doctoral research (PhD, U of Chicago) involved the recording and analysis of oral epic and religious literature of the Pahari-speaking Central Himalayan region of northern India, work that is ongoing (volume The Language of the Gods, in progress). He has also published on comparative mythology (special issue of the journal Anthropologie et Sociétés, 2005), spirit possession and its relation to language (edited volume Poetry and Prophecy: The Anthropology of Inspiration, 1997), and the history of ideas about language diversity (Linguistic Relativities: Language Diversity and Modern Thought, 2011).