LINGUIST List 20.3235
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Thu Sep 24 2009
Sum: Language Maps
Editor for this issue: Elyssa Winzeler
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1. Candice
Luebbering,
Language Maps
Message 1: Language Maps
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Date: 21-Sep-2009
From: Candice Luebbering <candice vt.edu>
Subject: Language Maps
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Query for this summary posted in LINGUIST Issue: 20.3100 As is customary, below I have listed the responses I received to my query about language maps. Posting my query as a timid geography student in your midst, I have been pleasantly overwhelmed by the number of responses and genuine interest in my research. It is very encouraging and I greatly appreciate it. For those of you who showed interest in having an on-going conversation about my research ideas, I know I am delinquent in responding, but I will get back to you once I've had the time to pursue the sources provided below. Summary of Responses The LL MAP project (http://llmap.org/about-llmap.html) which has links to the original images and source information of the maps used in their work (Thanks to Elyssa Winzeler, Jennifer Culbertson, Jessica Boynton) MultiTree (http://multitree.linguistlist.org) (Thanks to Elyssa Winzeler) Ethnologue (www.ethnologue.com) (Thanks to Elyssa Winzeler, Nadine Borchardt, Dr. Pete Unseth, Frank Seifart, Geoffrey Hooker, Antoine Guillaume, Dr. Michael Cahill) National Geographic's Enduring Voices project (www.nationalgeographic.com/mission/enduringvoices/) (Thanks to Danny Hieber, Myles Dakan) UNESCO Interactive Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger (www.unesco.org/culture/ich/index.php?pg=00206) (Thanks to Danny Hieber) Interesting map showing the distribution of terms for carbonated drinks (http://popvssoda.com:2998/countystats/total-county.html) (Thanks to Dr. Susan Burt) Atlas linguistique de France from ca. 1900 (Thanks to Peter T. Daniels and Jennifer Culbertson) Linguistic Atlas of New England (Thanks to Peter T. Daniels) Maps in the Dictionary of American Regional English (Thanks to Peter T. Daniels) Atlas of the World's Languages published by Routledge (Thanks to Peter T. Daniels) First Peoples Heritage Language Culture Council, British Columbia - fphlcc.ca - (Thanks to Dr. Terry Klokeid) World Atlas of Language Structures; http://wals.info/ (Thanks to Amanda Linerode, Jennifer Culbertson, Martin Haspelmath, Sebastian Sauppe, Tyko Dirksmeyer, Todd Hughes, Michael Arbib, Rafael Fischer, Tommaso Caselli) Korjakov, Ju. B. 2006. Atlas kavkazskikh jazykov s prilozheniem polnogo reestra jazykov. Moskva: Piligrim (76 str.). for a great collection of maps displaying the languages of the Caucasus (Thanks to Dr. Wolfgang Schulze who also noted maps available for downloading on his homepage) Basic map for Aboriginal language/dialect/tribal groups of Australia (http://www.aiatsis.gov.au/asp/map.html) (Thanks to Jessica Boynton) Sutton, Peter. 1995. Country : Aboriginal boundaries and land ownership in Australia. Canberra: Aboriginal History. This article has a good discussion concerning the presentation and possible interpretations of a different map of Aboriginal Australian territories (Thanks to Jessica Boynton) A. K. Ramanujan & Colin Masica's 'Towards a Phonological Typology of the Indian Linguistic Area' in Current Trends in Linguistics Vol 5. The Hague 1969, pp. 543-577. (Thanks to Magdalena Zoeppritz) Recommendation to look at reference grammars such as Dixon 1972: The Dyirbal language of North Queensland and he also mentioned Nichols 1998: The Eurasian spread zone and the Indo-European dispersal (in Archaeology and Language II) (Thanks to Sebastian Sauppe) Nichols 1998: The Eurasian spread zone and the Indo-European dispersal (in Archaeology and Language II) (Thanks to Sebastian Sauppe) SIL (Summer Institute of Linguistics) (Thanks to Nadine Borchardt) A set of maps covering the entire Amazon: Queixalós, Francisco, and Odile Renault-Lescure, eds. 2000. As línguas amazônicas hoje. São Paulo: IRD/ISA/MPEG. (Thanks to Frank Seifart) The Altas of the World's Languages (2nd ed.), Asher & Moseley (eds.). 2007. (Thanks to Dr. James Stanford) Thanks to Taylor Roberts for describing a map of indigenous language families on the west coast of Canada and the US that I hope to track back down both for myself and him! MLA Language Map, http://www.mla.org/census_main (Thanks to Karin Ryding) Mission organization web sites sometimes have maps that refer to people groups but whose distinctions are actually based on language (http://gowestafrica.org/peoplegroups/allpeoplegroups.php) (Thanks to Todd Hughes) Interesting application of maps in the study of folk linguistics can be found in Niedzielski, Nancy -- Dennis Preston. 1999. Folk linguistics. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. (Thanks to Jarek Weckwerth) http://www.ling.pdx.edu/childs/DKB_Web/dkb-map.htm (Thanks to Tucker Childs) Online source of maps at Wikimedia Commons (http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Linguistc_maps) Other language maps available in other categories as well. & links to his own work http://lingvarium.org/maps.shtml http://toolserver.org/~daniel/WikiSense/Gallery.php?wikifam=commons.wikimedia.org&img_user_text=Koryakov%20Yuri (Thanks to Yuri Koryakov) French language reference, L'Atlas des langues du monde by Breton and Mazoyer (http://www.amazon.fr/Atlas-langues-monde-pluralit%C3%A9-fragile/dp/2746704005) (Thanks to Ghislain Potriquet) Consortium for Language Policy and Planning has a webpage (with work in progress) with a number of ethnolinguistic maps at http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/plc/clpp/images/langmaps/index.html (Thanks to Dr. Harold Schiffman) Short, clear discussion about creation of first dialectological maps in Chambers J. K. & Trudgill, P. Dialectology, CUP, Series: Cambridge Textbooks in Linguistics, 2nd Ed. http://www.cambridge.org/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=0521596467 (Thanks to Sylvain Loiseau) Cree dialects www.eastcree.org and www.atlas-ling.ca, http://www.innu-aimun.ca/modules.php?name=map, and http://www.innu-aimun.ca/modules.php?name=papers&p=MM (Thanks to Dr. Marguerite MacKenzie) Thank you also to Dr. Terry J. Klokeid, Nadine Borchardt, Dr. Stephen Anderson, Tyko Dirksmeyer, Pete Unseth, Tucker Childs, Ljuba Veselinova, and Mikael Parkvall who provided me with other potential contacts, discussed their ideas, or provided me glimpses of their own work. If I overlooked acknowledging someone, I sincerely apologize. Thank you again for the amazing response and validation to my research. Please do not hesitate to contact me in the future if you have anything to share or discuss. Sincerely, Candice Luebbering PhD Candidate, Geospatial & Environmental Analysis Department of Geography Virginia Tech Linguistic Field(s): Anthropological Linguistics General Linguistics Language Documentation
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