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The Transition to Language Alison Wray (Senior Research Fellow, Centre for Language and Communication Research, Cardiff University)

The Transition to Language By Alison Wray (Senior Research Fellow, Centre for Language and Communication Research, Cardiff University)

Summary

Explores the origins and early evolution of phonology, syntax, and semantics. This work considers the nature of pre- and proto-linguistic communication, the internal and external triggers that led to its transformation into language, and whether and how language may be considered to have evolved after its inception.

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The Transition to Language Summary

The Transition to Language by Alison Wray (Senior Research Fellow, Centre for Language and Communication Research, Cardiff University)

The evolutionary emergence of each facet of human language can be viewed as a 'transition'. This book explores how different transitions took place, their preconditions, and their consequences. Among the questions it addresses are: what physiological and psychological differences between us and other animals lie at the heart of our superior capacity for language? Was the pre-linguistic period of humankind characterized by words without syntax, syntax without meaning, gesture without speech, or all, or none, of these? Once a community is ready and able to develop language, what internal and external factors trigger its emergence? How are we to interpret the archaeological evidence of early tool-making abilities, relative to the presence, or absence, of language? In what social circumstances could language have avoided being immediately harnessed for deception, so that it became too dangerous and unreliable to be of value? Was the universal form of language determined by pre-existing psychological capabilities, or by natural constraints in communication? Has language finished evolving? If not, how different were linguistic structures used by our early ancestors from those that we use today? This investigation into one of the enduring mysteries of humankind brings together original contributions from linguists, archaeologists, anthropologists, psychologists, biologists, primatologists, and researchers in artificial intelligence. They offer the reader up-to-the-minute debates in the field of language evolution.

The Transition to Language Reviews

... a thought-provoking volume, with implications not just for language evolution but for how we conceptualise language acquisition, language structure and language change. * Journal of Linguistics *

About Alison Wray (Senior Research Fellow, Centre for Language and Communication Research, Cardiff University)

Alison Wray gained her BA and D.Phil. degrees from the University of York. She has worked in departments of music, linguistics, and communication, and her research focuses on three major areas: historical pronunciation for early music, formulaic language, and language evolution. She has published papers and chapters on all three areas, and her books include: The Focusing Hypothesis (1992), Projects in Linguistics (1998, with Trott and Bloomer) and Formulaic Language and the Lexicon (2002).

Table of Contents

PART I: MAKING READY FOR LANGUAGE: NECESSARY, BUT NOT SUFFICIENT ; PART II: INTERNAL TRIGGERS TO TRANSITION: GENES, PROCESSING, CULTURE, GESTURE, AND TECHNOLOGY ; PART III: EXTERNAL TRIGGERS TO TRANSITION: ENVIRONMENT, POPULATION, AND SOCIAL CONTEXT ; PART IV: THE ONWARD JOURNEY: DETERMINING THE SHAPE OF LANGUAGE

Additional information

CIN0199250669G
9780199250660
0199250669
The Transition to Language by Alison Wray (Senior Research Fellow, Centre for Language and Communication Research, Cardiff University)
Used - Good
Paperback
Oxford University Press
20020321
424
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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