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Alessandro Duranti. Linguistic Anthropology.pdf
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6.9 Conclusions

the outcome of the cultural differences embedded in language use (see section 1.3).

6.9Conclusions

If we try to understand how phrases and sentences can tell us something about relationships among people, objects, and events in the world, we must get down to analyze their constitutive parts, that is, words, morphemes, and even phonemes. As native speakers of a language, we do this most of the time intuitively, but as researchers, we need to be systematic, which means that we need sophisticated analytical tools; we need procedures that can be shown to yield the same results under the same conditions. The distinction between relations of oppositions and relations of contiguity illustrated at the beginning of this chapter is a first important step toward systematicity. In the discussion of some of the basic aspects of grammar as described by linguists in the last few decades, I have been mostly concerned with giving readers a sense of the logic of argumentation and representation followed by those who have been studying linguistic forms and their relationships. By no means have I done justice to the wealth of empirical data and theoretical discussion that characterizes the field of grammatical analysis. Those pursuing these topics further can choose among a number of useful introductions to linguistics and to its many subfields including discourse analysis, pragmatics, semantics, language typology, syntax, morphology, phonology, phonetics.

I have spent more pages on morphology than on any of the other aspects of linguistic structure. I believe that an understanding of morphology (especially in those languages that have a rich morphology!) is crucial for developing a systematic approach to the formulaic as well as creative aspects of language use, a theme that is an important part of many linguistic anthropological studies.

Although a large part of grammar is made out of components and principles that are quite frozen and not easily traced to functional contextual explanations, many grammatical phenomena have their motivation or explanation in domains that are larger than or of a different nature from grammar per se. I have tried to illustrate this point by discussing the marking of agency, transitivity, and the use of personal pronouns in conversation. In other words, although grammars have partly a logic of their own, it is important to uncover how much of that logic is intrinsic in the grammatical phenomena and how much of it is a product of other kinds of factors. This is particularly evident in the study of language acquisition and language socialization. It is only with a mind open to the interface between structure and use on the one hand and grammatical versus social and cultural units on the other that linguistic anthropologists can hope to establish language as a rich object of inquiry within the larger field of anthropology while contributing to the field of both descriptive and theoretical linguistics.

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