Post on 03-Jan-2016
description
Leonard Bloomfield: Founder of American Linguistic Science
Prepared by
Mariam Bedraoui and Jihad Bachiri
OutlineI- The Intellectual Scene in America in early 20th Century
1. Structuralism2. Behaviourism3. Structuralism
II- Bloomfield: A Behaviourist Theory and Empiricist Methods4. Academic Career5. A Behaviourist Approach to Language6. Empiricist Methods in Language study
III- Influence Areas7. Phonology8. Morphology
9. Post-Bloomfieldians’ Contributions
IV- Conclusion
I- The Intellectual Scene in America in Early 20th Century
Structuralism (De Saussure)
(Sapir)
Behaviourism
(Watson)
Anthropology
(Boas)(Sapir)
1- Structuralism American linguists like Bloomfield and Sapir spent a considerable
time in their early academic career in European universities, where they got acquainted with the seminal work of De Saussure.
De Saussure opposes Neogrammarians who assume that linguistics must necessarily be historical. He contrasted ‘langue’ with ‘parole’ to show the abstract system of structural relationships inherent in language.
De Saussure’s approach focuses on examining how the elements of language relate to one another in the present, that is, ‘synchronically’ rather than ‘diachronically’.
2- Anthropology Frantz Boas (1858- 1942), the founder of American
anthropology, made a breakthrough in the study of cultures and societies by applying scientific methods to the human phenomena, a field which was based largely on anecdotal knowledge.
Boas was credited with establishing the basis of what would become the distributional method for the analysis of languages, which is one of the core principles in structural linguistics.
Edward Sapir(1884- 1939) is considered as the greatest fieldworker in the history of linguistics and anthropology. He worked on the analysis of a number of American Indian languages.
3- Behaviourism
Behaviourism is a psychological theory that focuses on objectively observable behaviours and discounts mental activities.
Watson(1878-1958), a prominent behaviourist, was convinced that by investigating stimuli leading to responses, behaviorism would provide a basis for predicting human behaviour.
According to Watson, the integrated social responses are completely in no way the consequence of consciousness or mind or soul. “Order in the universe is merely a matter of conditioning.”
3- Behaviourism: Types of Conditioning
Experiments by behaviourists identify conditioning as a universal learning process.
There are two types of conditioning, each one leads to a different behavioural pattern.
Classic conditioning occurs when a natural reflex responds to a stimulus.
Operant conditioning occurs when a response to a stimulus is reinforced.
Conditioning
Classic Conditioning
Operant Conditioning
II- Bloomfield: A Behaviourist Theory and Empiricist Methods
Bloomfield: Academic Career
1887- 1949
1906 -1914
• 1909: He completed his doctoral dissertation on Germanic historical linguistics at Chicago University.
• 1909-1914: He undertook further studies on Indo- European languages at German universities.
1914 - 1933
• 1914: He turned to larger considerations of language science in An Introduction to Language Study.
• 1924: He was one of the founding members of the Linguistic Society of America.
• During this period, he pioneered descriptive studies of one of the Austronesia languages, and began his classic work on North American Indian languages.
1933-1949
• 1933: He published his influential textbook, Language, which became an essential reference for all specialists.
• 1935: He was President of the Society.
• 1938- 1941: He taught in the Society’s summer Linguistic Institute.
Language: Theoretical FrameworkThe book is a statement of principles that have become axiomatic in the structural linguistic tradition.
“The speech-utterance [...] is important because it has meaning: The meaning consists of the important things with which the speech- utterance is connected, namely the practical events.” [p. 27]
“The statement of meanings is [...] the weak point in language study and will remain so until human knowledge advances very far beyond its present state. In practice, we define the meaning of a linguistic form [...] in terms of other sciences. ”[p. 27]
“The only useful generalizations of meanings are inductive generalizations.” [p. 20]
“In order to describe a language, one needs no historical knowledge whatever; in fact, the observer who allows such knowledge to affect this description is bound to distort his data.”
[pp.21-22]
Bloomfield’s canonical textbook, Language, has a profound influence on modern linguistics. The book is referred to as ‘the Bible of American linguistics’.
1- Bloomfield: A Behaviourist Approach to Language
An act of speech is one form of bodily behaviour.
It is explained in terms of patterns of stimulus and response
Speech utterances are responses to external stimuli, and are also substitute stimuli for other substitute responses.
Jack and Jill’s Story
Jill is hungry; some of her muscles are contracting and some fluids are secreted. She sees a red apple on a tree(the light waves reflected from the red apple strike her eyes). She asks Jack to fetch the apple for her.
1- Language: A Behaviourist Approach
Hunger= S
Speech utterance= r
Speech utterance= s
Jack fetches the apple= R
Jill is hungry=
Stimulus
Jill fetches the apple
=Response
1- Language: A Behaviourist Approach Language enables one person to make a reaction in response to
another person’ s stimulus.
The speech event has the meaning it has by virtue of its connection
with the surrounding practical events.
To study the meaning of utterances entails a scientific analysis of all the external events that are involved in the situation of speech production.
On the basis that human knowledge is still limited, Bloomfield discards the domain of meaning as lying beyond human knowledge at present.
For Bloomfield, language is a set of signals whose structure can be studied without commitment to any theory about what there is to signal, or how it is possible for human beings to signal.
2- Empiricist Methods in Language Study
meanings of language can not be studied because they are
interrelated with external factors.
The inner structure of language can be
observed, described and analysed.
2- Empiricist Methods in Language Study
•is based on direct observation of the linguistic phenomena under investigation, and
•employs a set of mechanical procedures to come up with inductive generalisations about the observable linguistic data.
Linguistics is a science
that
•is a richly patterned category of observable output and input.
•is patterned along different levels: Phonology, morphology, and syntax.
Linguistics is the study of
speech, which
III- Influence Areas
2- Areas of influence: Phonology/Phoneme
In his Language Bloomfield defines:
Phonology as “ the study of significant speech sounds.” p. 78 The phoneme as “ a minimum unit of distinctive sound- features.” p.79
Bloomfield distinguishes two kinds of phonemes:
Primary phonemes : segmental sounds ( the basic stock). Secondary phonemes : stress and tone ( appear only in combinations).
2- Areas of influence: Phonology/Phoneme
Bloomfield considers the phonemes of a language as the
only relevant elements to its structure.
According to Bloomfield the linguist should proceed by “making up a list or table of the phonemes of a language.”
The phonemes are discovered by experimenting, namely by altering any one of the parts of the word. Each replacable part must constitute a phoneme.
1- Phonology: Minimal Pair Test
/pɪn/ /pɪn/
/fɪn/ begin with different sounds /pɪg/ end with different sounds /sɪn/ /pɪl/ /tɪn/ /pɪt/
/pɪn/ /pɪn/ /mæn/ end with the same sound /pæt/ begin with the same sound and
end /sʌn/ /pʊʃ/ with different sounds
/hen/ /peg/
/pɪn/ /pɪn/ /pen/ the middle part is different /dɪg/ the middle part is the same /pæn/ /mɪl/ /pʌn/ /fɪʃ/
1- Phonology: Distinctive Features Bloomfield made the difference between two types of
features:
Distinctive features: When a feature distinguishes one phoneme from another.
eg: seal/zeal
bat/mat
rack/rock
The distinctive feature [voice] tells [s] from [z]. The two are
contrasting phonemes. The only difference is the distinctive
feature [voicing].
1- Phonology: Non-distinctive Features:
Non-distinctive features are identical phonemes, no different meanings, but just allophones.
Allophones are the members of the phone classes, which are actual phonetic segments produced by a speaker.
Example 1: nasality bean/ bead
Example 2: aspiration
pill/ till/ kill
2- Areas of Influence: Morphology Bloomfield defines morphology
as the study which deals with “the constructions in which bound forms appear among the constituents.”
He thinks that the study of morphology is complex and not conclusive.
Bloomfield devised a detailed analytical taxonomy to separate out and categorise the elements that make up words (discovery tools).
Derivational/ inflectional morphemes
Bound/free morphemes
Morpheme/morphs/allomorphs
2- Morphology: Morpheme A morpheme: A recurrent meaningful form
which can not be analysed into smaller recurrent forms.
It is the minimal unit of linguistic meaning: Examples:watched= 2 morphemes watch + simple
pastPens= 2 morphemes pen+ pluralUnhelpful=3 morphemes negative+ help+
adjective
2- Morphology: Morphemes/ Morphs
Negative, plural and adjective morphemes are abstract categories that are represented by real forms.
Morphs are physical forms representing a morpheme in a language.
words morphs morphemes
watched Watch- ed watch+ past tense
pens Pen- s pen+ plural
unhelpful Un-help-ful negative+ help+ adjective
2-Morphology: Morphs/Allomorphs Sometimes different morphs represent the same
morpheme. They are called allomorphs of that morpheme.
The negative morpheme in English has different morphs/ allomorphso In-capableo Il-logicalo Ir-relevanto Im-probable
Allomorphs are morphs in complementary distribution; i.e. they are never found in identical contexts.
The choice of allomorph used in a given context is normally based on the properties of the neighboring sounds.
2- Morphology: Bound/Free Morphemes
Morpheme
Bound: It can not stand alone
(in- ly- ness)
Prefixes: un-happy re-write
pre- view
Infixes: affixes that occur within the
base
Suffixes: writ-ing
quick-ly, Care-ful
Free: It can stand alone
(love, write, play)
root/base/stem
2- Morphology: Derivation/ Inflection
Bound morphemes can be derivational or inflectional.
Derivational morphemes derive new words from other words. e.g., unhappy un + happy; happiness happy + ness They change part of speech or the meaning of a word.
Inflectional morphemes, on the other hand, do not change meanings or parts of speech, but simply make minor grammatical changes necessary for agreement with other words. e.g., cats cat + s; cooler cool + er There are only eight inflectional morphemes: -s, -ed, -ing, -
en, -s, -'s, -er, -est.
3- Areas of Influence: Post- Bloomfieldians’ Contributions
Bloomfield disseminated his teachings among a group of enthusiastic linguists, who came to be known as Post- Bloomfieldians. He lectured in the Summer Institute of American Society of Linguistics from 1938 to 1941, and inspired these linguists by his empiricist approach to language study.
This went along with a general tendency among American scholars to advance social sciences to the level of pure sciences. They were still unaware of the ethical issues that would be raised by the atomic bomb.
Post- Bloomfieldian structural school was dominant in America in the 1940s and 1950s. Leading Members included:
CharlesHokett Zellig Harris GeorgeTrager Henry Lee Smith
They developed ideas derived from Bloomfield’s work. They were committed to reconstitute linguistic theory along strict empiricist lines.
3- Post- Bloomfieldians’ Contributions Post- Bloomfieldians are also called descriptivist
because they thought of general linguistics more as body of techniques of description than a body of beliefs about the nature of language.
Since the physical record of the flow of speech was the only data considered objective enough to serve as a starting point, it followed that the levels of a grammatical description had to be arrived at in the following order:
1. Phonemics 2. Morphemics3. Syntax4. Discourse
3- Post-Bloomfieldians: Operational Procedures
Stage ThreeStage Two
Stage One
• To group morphemes into syntactic categories.
• To group the phonemes into morphemes, the recurrent sequences of phonemes.• To divide the speech flow into a series of phonemes, the basic units of sounds.
3- Post- Bloomfieldians: Limitations
This approach failed to present a convincing account of suprasegmental phenomena: Stress, pitch and juncture.
Operational analytical procedures may not work for all types of linguistic phenomena. To assign juncture correctly, one has to mix the levels, to do at least part of the grammatical analysis.Even Hocket, a prominent post- Bloomfieldian, had to agree that one could not do an analysis of a language objectively without empathizing with the informants.
IV- Conclusion The downfall of post-Bloomfieldian linguistics was brought about by
dramatic changes in the philosophy of science.
Philosophers of science have realized that even the ‘hardest’ of science contains much that is neither logic nor purely objective observations and data.
Chomsky has come into the scene late 1960s and made some radical
claims.
He believes that the behaviourist rejection of the mind is misguided, and that common sense intuitions about the mind were not necessarily unscientific.
Chomsky’s transformational structuralism was an attempt to bring De Saussure and Bloomfield ideas into a working framework. He adopts De Saussure’s mentalist philosophy and employs Bloomfield’s rigorous methods to come up with a revolutionary linguistic theory.
VI- Conclusion
However, this tremendous analytical work has a very
concrete purpose: To aid the conversion of unbelievers by translating the Bible into their mother- tongues.
The Summer Institute of linguistics provides linguistic training for missionaries of Wycliffe Bible Translators Incorporation, who are working with every vernacular languages of Central and South America.
References
Bloomfield, L. (1914). An Introduction to the Study of Language, by Leonard Bloomfield. London, G. Bell and sons.
Bloomfield, L. (1933). Language. New York, Holt, Rinehart and Winston. Dinneen, F. P. (1967). An Introduction to General Linguistics. New York, Holt, Rinehart
and Winston. Joseph, J. E. (2002). From Whitney to Chomsky: Essays in the History of American
Linguistics. Amsterdam; Philadelphia, PA, John Benjamins Pub. Lepschy, G. C. (1970). A survey of structural linguistics. London: Faber. Malmkjær, K. and J. M. Anderson (1991). The Linguistics Encyclopedia. London; New
York, Routledge. Newmeyer, F. J. (1986). Linguistic Theory in America. Orlando, Academic Press. Sampson, G. (1980). Schools of Linguistics: Competition and Evolution. London,
Hutchinson.
Web References http://www.jastor.org/pss/30157319 http://www.ielanguages.com/linguist.html http://dingo.sbs.arizona.edu/~langendoen/Bloomfield.pdf http://www.hbcse.tifr.res.in/jrmcont/notespart1/node107.html