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Title: Language and Cultural Meaning


1
Language and Cultural Meaning
A man who waits for a roast duck to fly into his
mouth must wait a very, very long time.
2
Proverbs Reflect Culture
Chinese Proverbs A camel standing amidst a flock
of sheep. A man who says it cannot be done
should not interrupt a man doing it. Give a man
a fish, and he will live a day give him a net,
and he will live a lifetime. Butcher the donkey
after it has finished the job
What do these proverbs tell us about Chinese
culture and its values?
3
North American Proverbs
  • Blow your own horn
  • if you want a job done right do it yourself
  • Keep your eye on the ball
  • Work before pleasure.
  • God helps those who help themselves,
  • stand on your own two feet.
  • If at first you dont succeed, try, try again.
  • The early bird gets the worm.
  • It is not from the benevolence of the butcher,
    the brewer, or the baker that we expect our
    dinner, but from their regard to their own
    interest.

What do these sayings and proverbs say about N.
American culture?
4
High and Low Context Cultures
  • High-context cultures (Japan, China, and Arab
    countries) tend to be relational, collectivist,
    intuitive, and contemplative.
  • In a high context culture, many things are left
    unsaid, letting the culture explain.
  • Cultures where the group is valued over the
    individual promote in-groups and group reliance
  • High-context cultures prefer group values,
    duties, and group decisions.
  • prefer more formality.
  • Communication style High-context cultures rely
    on nonverbal cues and the total picture to
    communicate. Meanings are embedded at many social
    levels.
  • Time Orientation Time is unlimited and
    never-ending in some cultures. Relaxed attitude
    toward time.

5
Low Context Cultures
  • Low-context cultures (North America, Scandinavia,
    and Germany) tend to be logical, linear, and
    action-oriented.
  • In a low context culture, similar experiences and
    expectations, are to a lesser extent used to
    communicate.
  • Much more is explained through words, instead of
    the context.
  • Less emphasis on tradition, ceremony, and social
    rules - Dont stand on tradition (formality)
  • Communication style emphasize words,
    straightforwardness, openness. People tend to be
    informal, impatient, literal.
  • Time Orientation Time is precious to North
    Americans. It correlates with productivity,
    efficiency, and money.

6
High-Context and Low-Context Cultures
7
  • Different cultures have different attitudes,
    ideas, and emotions towards peoples rights and
    obligations and about the world is in general
  • A cultural model A construction of reality that
    is created, shared and transmitted by members of
    a group
  • cultural models provide a unique world view,
    providing both an understanding of the world as
    it is thought to be and a blueprint for the way
    one ought to behave
  • These models are encoded in different words and
    grammatical forms
  • The process of encoding the values, ideas and
    emotions in language is universal, although what
    is encoded is culturally relative 
  • Proverbs, sayings, stories, myths guide human
    thought and behaviour by providing moral lessons

Pandoras box
8
  • More often cultural models are expressed more
    subtly
  • In the metaphoric and symbolic meaning of the
    vocabulary we use
  • The world is full of meaning and shape our
    perception and experience of reality
  • To what extent due the words in a language
    influence peoples perceptions of their world?

9
Which word seems to go with each picture?
taketa naluma
Which one is Masculine and which one Feminine?
10
Sound Symbolism The vast majority of people pair
taketa with the angular illustration and naluma
with the curved one.
taketa Because the consonants are hard it is
perceived as harder and more masculine
naluma consonants are sonorants perceived as
softer and more feminine
Clorox, a hard-working laundry product
Chanel, a perfume
11
Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
'Human beings do not live in the objective world
alone, nor alone in the world of social activity
as ordinarily understood, but are very much at
the mercy of the particular language which has
become the medium of expression for their
society. It is quite an illusion to imagine that
one adjusts to reality essentially without the
use of language and that language is merely an
incidental means of solving specific problems of
communication and reflection. The fact of the
matter is that the "real world" is to a large
extent unconsciously built up on the language
habits of the group.' 1929
Benjamin Lee Whorf Edward Sapir
(1897-1941)
(1884-1939)
12
linguistic relativity
  • According to Sapir, The complex vocabulary of a
    language may indeed be looked upon as a complex
    inventory of all the ideas, interests and
    occupations that take up the attention of the
    community
  • People label things, forces, and events in both
    their physical and social world only if they are
    important to them , i.e. have cultural
    significance.
  • The more words, the more significant, and the
    more noticed and experienced
  • Through this process unique cultural models are
    created and reinforced
  • People give specific names for details of their
    environment when it is important for their
    survival
  • Other languages have to be more descriptive
  • conclusions can be drawn about cultural attitudes
    from the degree of specialization within sectors
    of vocabulary

Dinka cattle camp
13
  • The colour spectrum, is a continuum, each colour
    blends gradually into the next
  • But we impose boundaries and talk of red,
    orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet.
  • these discriminations are arbitrary and are
    different in other languages

14
Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
  • The physiology of our eyes is essentially the
    same.
  • All normal humans share similar sense perceptions
    of color despite differences in color terminology
    from one language to another.   
  • People can see subtle gradations of color and can
    comprehend other ways of dividing up the spectrum
    of visible light. 
  • However, as a society's economy and technology
    increase in complexity, the number of color terms
    usually also increases. 
  • i.e. the spectrum of visible light gets
    subdivided into more categories. 
  • As the environment changes, culture and language
    typically respond by creating new terminology to
    describe it.
  • Culture and language are in a constant state of
    interaction and association
  • Because cultures change more rapidly than
    languages the forms of language will in course of
    time cease to symbolize those of culture.

15
  • Colour Terms
  • Dani (New Guinea) have only two colour categories
  • mili which means dark, cold colours such as black
  • mola which means warm, bright colours such as
    white
  • languages with three colour terms add Red
  • those with four add yellow
  • English has 11

(red, yellow, black, white, green, blue, purple,
pink, brown, orange, grey)
16
Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
  • Sapir Whorf says habitual thought might be
    influenced, if not determined, by linguistic
    structures.
  • We perceive the world through language - the
    colors we see is predetermined by what our
    culture prepares us to see
  • do we see blue and green colours because our
    language has two different names for these two
    neighbouring parts of the colour spectrum?
  • Can the Tiv perceive or distinguish between Red
    and yellow?

17
EMPTY
  • Whorf believed that language influenced peoples
    thoughts and behaviours
  • noticed that fires were often caused by a
    persons inappropriate behaviour motivated by
    labels given to objects
  • Workmen often threw matches and cigarette butts
    into empty gasoline drums even though the drums
    contained vapours and invisible traces of
    gasoline
  • Whorf concluded that the mens behaviour resulted
    from the misinterpretation of the word empty
  •  

18
  • Whorf concluded that Hopi and English have
    different conceptions of time, number and
    duration
  • Hopi emphasizes continuity, cyclcity and
    intensity of events
  • English emphasize the boundedness and
    objectification of entities
  • e.g. English uses terms like summer and morning
  • Hopi they are more like adverbs e.g. morning
    becomes while morning phase is occurring
  • English tenses divide time into three distinct
    units of past, present and future
  • Hopi do not indicate the time of an event but
    focus on the manner or duration of an event.

Whorf concluded that concepts of time and matter
are not given in substantially the same form by
experience to all people but depend on the nature
of the language or languages through which the
use of which they have been developed
19
Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
  • linguistic determinism
  • the language we use to some extent determines
    the way in which we view and think about the
    world
  • Strong determinism
  • language actually determines thought, that
    language and thought are identical.
  • Weak determinism
  • thought and behaviour are merely affected by or
    influenced by our language

20
Language and Gender Concept
  • do children learn to recognize themselves as boys
    or girls when their language emphasizes gender?
  • Alexander Guiora looked at children in Hebrew
    speaking homes, Finnish, speaking homes and
    English speaking homes
  • Hebrew has the most gender emphasis of the three
    languages - nouns are either masculine or
    feminine and even second person and plurals are
    differentiated by gender

"Land" is feminine, but "field" is masculine
"mountain" is masculine, but "hill" is feminine
"bed" is feminine, but "table" and "chair" are
masculine "month" is masculine, but "year" is
feminine "lamp" is masculine, but "lampstand" is
feminine.
21
English emphasizes gender less, only in third
person singular his and hers
Finish emphasizes gender least, only man and
woman convey gender
Consistent with the idea that language may
influence thought Hebrew speaking children
acquired the concept of gender identity the
earliest on the average and Finnish speaking
children the latest
This comparative approach to discourse provides a
way to understand the interrelationships of
linguistic and cultural factors
22
  • language can also influence memory and
    classifying tasks
  • The plural of English nouns referring to animate
    beings (animals, humans) and most inanimate
    objects requires a plural marker
  • amorphous substances such as sugar, mud, water
    etc. Do not require the marker they cannot be
    counted
  •  Mayan language Yucatec requires plural marking
    only for animate objects
  • In recalling and sorting tasks speakers of
    English paid attention to number for animate
    beings and objects but ignored number for
    substances while Yucatec paid attention to number
    but only for animate beings, ignoring number for
    everything else

23
Which belong together? The green things and the
blue things Or the circles and the bars ?
24
  • Carroll and Casagrande looked at Navaho Indians
  • they place great stress on form and shape,
    rigidity and material from which an object is
    constructed
  • they gave three groups of children
  • one Navaho speaking
  • one English speaking
  • one bilingual
  • showed them a green stick, a green rope and a
    blue rope and a blue stick
  • asked them which objects went together
  • Navaho speakers said objects with the same form
    i.e. ropes went together
  • English speakers categorize by colour rather
    than form put green stick and green rope together
  • Other languages (e.g. Yucatec in Mexico) sort
    objects on the basis of material because the
    words in their language emphasize the material
    rather than the shape.

25
  •  Issues of language and perception can also be
    addressed by examining differences in
    conversational style favoured by speakers of
    different languages
  • When people interact with one another verbally
    they continually interpret and evaluate the
    others speech in order to ascertain not only its
    meaning but also its intention.
  • speakers respond to what they perceive as the
    other persons meaning
  • when people learn second and third languages they
    may learn to properly use the pronunciations,
    words and grammatical patterns but may
    unconsciously transfer the conversational
    inferences they learned in their native language
  • they therefore misinterpret the meanings and
    intentions of their coparticipants regardless of
    the fact that they may understand the literal
    meaning of the words spoken to them.

26
  • communicative practices considered appropriate
    within a particular community foster feelings of
    identity and group membership
  • Features signalling group membership include
    intonation (pitch, rhythm, velocity), pausing,
    and stylistic and rhetorical choices
  • People therefore are unaware of making
    particular interpretations and evaluations of
    other peoples speaking styles assuming that
    their reactions are normal and natural as well
  • People with different cultural backgrounds may
    assume that different styles of speaking are
    appropriate in particular settings, resulting in
    miscommunication

lucky bastards
people thinking differently about what is going
on in their interaction
27
  • Semantic Domains
  • A set or aggregate of words, all sharing a core
    meaning related to a specific topic
  • e.g. kinship terms, body-part words, animals,
    colours
  • words within a domain all share common meaning
    in that they refer to the same type of object or
    event,
  • but each word in the set and labels a specific
    and distinct entity i.e. It contrasts with
    others.
  • What are the principles upon which these
    similarities and distinctions are made?
  • When we know this we can make inferences about
    how speakers experience their world.
  • The number of distinctions made within a domain
    reflects the degree of cultural interest.

28
  • English animal names
  • Age and sex of horses and cows are culturally
    important we have separate names for them
  • We also have names for different breeds of these
    animals
  • other animals we treat more generally e.g.
    chipmunk, otter moose etc.
  • Foal
  • Filly
  • colt

Mare Stallion
29
(No Transcript)
30
  • In some domains of vocabulary, cross-cultural
    comparisons uncover basic differences in the ways
    people perceive their universe
  • e.g. kinship terms can reveal peoples perception
    of their social relations
  • Three sets of contrasts generation, sex of
    relative and lineality
  • Define the features of our kin that we consider
    meaningful
  • Some cultures, e.g. Iroquois make distinctions
    based on relatative age of sibling

English kin terms
Sudanese kin terms
Hawaiian kin terms
31
componential analysis
e.g. Seneca grandmother and her
sisters grandfather and his brothers mother and
mothers sister father and fathers
brother mothers brother father sister older
sister younger sister older brother younger
brother cousin daughter son niece (female
speaker) niece (male speaker) nephew (female
speaker ) nephew male speaker granddaughter grands
on principles generation and sex of relative
  • the procedure used to determine significant
    contrasts
  • words in a domain are viewed as being composed of
    isolable components of meaning that co-occur
    in different combinations e.g. younger
    generation female lineal daughter
  • comparisons of distinctive components allow us to
    understand better systems of meaning,of a culture
    and its members

32
  • differences in kinship terminologies are not
    merely linguistic but reflect societal attitudes
    towards ones relatives
  • individuals called by each kin term are
    understood by speakers to stand in particular
    social relationships and to have certain rights
    and obligations vis a vis speakers
  • the meanings of words thus reflect ones social
    universe
  •  
  • Within each generation the males of one Yanomamo
    lineage call each other brother and all the women
    sister.
  • Males of lineage X call males of lineage Y
    brother-in-law and are eligible to marry their
    sisters whom they call wife, even though they may
    not marry them.
  • A man must marry a woman of a category called
    wife,

33
A fish or a whale?
  • In order to classify words speakers need to know
    the defining characteristics of each class
  • The mistake of classifying a whale as a fish
    reveals that definitional criteria of category
    membership do not have equal weight
  • Certain traits are considered by speakers to be
    more important than others

34
  •  Criteria for classification are different in
    different languages
  • e.g. some language organize noun categories in
    the basis of gender i.e. masculine or feminine,
    or animate and inanimate

What do a deer and a rock have in common?
  • Algonquian languages (Ojibwa, Cree, Blackfoot,
    Cheyenne) would classify all persons, animals,
    spirits, large trees, tobacco, maize, apple,
    raspberry, calf of leg, stomach, spittle,
    feather, birds tail, horn, kettle, pip, snowshoe
    together
  • The principle of classification is personhood
  • In Algonquian, personhood in religious contexts,
    can include stones which can have a spirit and
    thus have agency and perform actions or they are
    spiritually relevant
  • embodies several important aspects of Algonquian
    worldview
  • Thinking not in dichotomies

35
Ethnoscience
  • How different languages classify the world
  • Different cultures have different underlying
    assumptions that can be used to group entities

How would you classify these creatures?
  • Papago (Arizona) divide birds into those that
    rarely fly (quail, chicken road runner) and
    those that often fly eagle, crow dove
  • The fact that some birds are more likely than
    others to fly is considered important by Papago
    speakers and is directly expressed in their
    language
  • plants contain 5 classes trees, cacti,
    cultivated seasonal (things planted from seeds)
    wild seasonal (growing by itself) and unlabeled (
    wild perennials that are neither cacti, trees nor
    bushes)
  • The Papago system of plant science highlights
    their interests in environment and economy
  • The class of cacti is singled out no doubt
    because if the preponderance of cacti in the
    environment
  • Seasonal plants are distinguished on the basis of
    their origins

36
Focal meaning and Prototypes
Which square provides the best example of blue?
  • The focal meaning of a word is its central sense
    within the whole reange of meanings that it has
    - the best example
  • in colour terminology each word covers a graded
    range of different hues along a continuum, rather
    than a discrete and absolute quality
  • speakers in a community generally agree on the
    focal meaning of a word,
  • Berlin and Kay found that focal meanings of basic
    color terms were substantially similar in all
    languages suggesting a universal color system
    based on physical stimuli

37
Prototypes
  •  
  • An idealized internalized conceptualization of an
    object, quality, or activity
  • Real-life objects and activities are measured
    against these internalized concepts and are named
    according to how well they approximate the ideal.
  • speakers in our culture agree that robin is
    closest to the prototype or idealization

Which is the best example of a bird?
38
  • a man above the age of majority who has never
    been married
  • What would be some poor examples?

What is a bachelor
What is a confirmed bachelor?
  • People and activities can also be evaluated with
    reference to prototypical constructs
  • Speakers depend on cultural models consisting of
    expectations for and evaluations of behaviour
  • A man living in a stable conjugal relationship, a
    priest are poor examples
  • The point is that categories like these cannot be
    defined abstractly but, rather are appropriately
    understood only in the context of culturally
    shared expectations background setting

39
What is an argument
  •  Because all communication occurs in cultural
    contexts, speakers understanding of what is
    happening is often measured against prototypical
    constructs
  • What is an argument
  • What is a discussion
  • What is a debate
  • What is a lecture
  • What is an apology
  • We evaluate our own and the behaviour of others
    depending on what type of interaction we think is
    taking place
  • Participants may not agree on the type of
    interaction
  • Lack of consensus may result when participants
    have different goals and are motivated to define
    encounters in particular ways given

40
Concepts of Space and location
How would you describe the relation between the
table and chair?
  • Everyone has perceives space and the relationship
    of objects in space but how it is conceived and
    encoded in language may differ from one culture
    and language to the next
  • languages have lexical and or syntactic devices
    that allow speakers to describe spatial relations
    between objects and grounds
  • The locative case corresponds vaguely to the
    English prepositions "in", "on", "at", and "by".
  • spatial representation must include the encoding
    of objects shapes, dimensions, relationships with
    other objects and background, as well as ideas of
    location, physical motion, etc.

41
  • Three different systems
  • absolute systems describe things in relation to
    is placement according to an orienting axis e.g.
    the points of a compass. the chair is east of
    the table, or uphill/downhill
  • In order to apply such a system, speakers must
    constantly be aware of their absolute orientation
    in space
  • Such speakers have to utilize fundamentally
    different orientations to space and objects than
    do speakers of English
  • relative systems refer to objects relative to
    one another the chair is to the right of table
  • Egocentric systems of spatial reference describe
    objects from the point of view of the speaker the
    chair is to my right
  • Languages differ in their preference and
    frequency of use of the various systems
  • English emphasizes relativistic
  • These relations are encoded in locative or
    directional propositions (at near, away from,
    toward, in front of etc.)

42
  • languages that encode spatial relations
    differently, lead speakers into habitual ways of
    expressing concepts and therefore of thinking
    about underlying relationships
  • Studies in childrens acquisition of spatial
    concepts indicate that the way their language
    structures space and location influences their
    perceptual processes

43
Cultural Presupposition
  • participants in speech interactions come to
    encounters with an array of knowledge and
    understanding (models) of their culture as
    expressed and transmitted through language
  • The vocabulary of a language is not merely an
    inventory of arbitrary labels referring to
    objects, entities or events
  • for conversation to run smoothly much of what
    speakers say depends on their accurate assessment
    of hearers knowledge e.g. about the Stanley cup
  • these presuppositions are collected by people
    during through a lifetime of experience in the
    culture
  • because all human experiences are cultural, a
    tremendous amount of accumulated but unstated
    knowledge is continuously carried with us.

The Stanley Cup
44
  • Other kinds of cultural presuppositions are more
    complex and their incorporation into meanings of
    words more subtle
  • English has many terms expressing various types
    of coercion cause, force, oblige, make, compel,
    order, command, constrain, must, have to, ought
    to
  • Navajo does not contain verbs of this sort
  • Instead of I have to go there a Navajo
    speaker would say it is only good that I should
    go there
  • This construction lacks the force of compelling
    necessity
  • English readily expresses the idea that a person
    has a right to impose her or his will on another
    animate being Navajo does not

45
  • Cultural presuppositions also involve an
    understanding of and assumptions about other
    peoples intentions, desires and goals
  • e.g. Telling a joke, teasing, insulting, or
    swearing.
  • These understandings are often cultural
  • We nay use the same words in telling a joke
    calling some four-eyes, or insluting them
  • Speakers need to choose between options for word,
    tone of voice, and or facial expression to
    provide the right meaning
  • Listeners must rely on social norms to determine
    whether they are the object of a joke or insult.

46
How are you?
A greeting or a real concern?
speakers have to know the social purposes of
particular words or utterances Most such
requests are routine and require a routine answer
47
Terrorists versus freedom fighters
  • Words convey symbolic meanings expressing
    cultural values and shared assumptions
  • terrorists expresses strongly negative
    judgement
  • freedom fighter a positive judgement
  • Labelling someone as a terrorist is in part an
    attempt to influence hearers opinions about this
    person because terrorism is an act that is
    socially condemned.
  • The use of words such as new, bigger, and
    improved in advertisements reveal a cultural
    assumption of improvement and change and that
    this is good
  • also connected with ideas of evolution

48
  • Cultural symbols obtain their strength because
    speakers-hearers unconsciously accept their
    indirectly expressed assumptions
  • The power of language to convey social messages
    is recognized, for instance, by many American
    women who object to being called girl or by
    African-American men who object to being called
    boy
  •  In order to gain insights into a peoples
    worldview or system of values, it is necessary to
    ascertain the cultural symbols embedded in their
    words.
  • This is one reason why translation from one
    language into another is never completely
    accurate
  • Words in isolation can be translated
  • The meaning of words in context cannot be easily
    conveyed

boy
49
Metaphor
All the world's a stage, And all the men and
women merely players They have their exits and
their entrances (William Shakespeare, As
You Like It, 2/7)
  • metaphors are unstated comparisons between
    entities or events that share certain features
  • cultural meanings are transferred through
    metaphor
  • Recurring metaphors in a language reveal
    underlying concepts that help construct the
    reality or worldview of the speakers
  • our conceptual system in terms of which we both
    think and act is fundamentally metaphorical in
    nature
  • we experience our world through cultural
    metaphors
  • analysis of metaphor provides insights into
    cultural constructions of reality

50
  • The metaphor "wall" is one of the most commonly
    used metaphors.
  • We think of a "mental wall" or a wall between two
    people, with little thought as to what makes this
    metaphor work.
  • As we think of a new kind of wall, we come up
    with a new metaphor.
  • And with each new metaphor, a new, deeper
    understanding of what a wall really is.

Wall a solid vertical plane that separates one
area and its contents from another area and its
contents.
Metaphor "A dam is a wall to water. It blocks
the (outward) movement of water." Observation
Now we know that a (metaphoric) wall can block
liquids. Metaphor "An artery wall keeps blood
from leaking." Observation Now we also know that
a (metaphoric) wall doesn't need to be
flat. Metaphor "A window is a wall to air but
not to light." Observation A (metaphoric) wall
can block out one thing and not another.
51
Window
an opening in an otherwise solid and opaque
surface that allows the passage of light
52
time is money
  • You dont use your time profitably
  • How do you spend your time these days?
  • This gadget will save you hours
  • Dont waste my time
  • Time in our culture is seen as a valuable
    material resource or commodity that we use to
    accomplish our goals
  • Thus we understand and experience time as the
    kind of thing that can be spent, wasted,
    budgeted, invested wisely or poorly, saved or
    squandered.
  • Other cultures have different concepts of time
    and have different metaphors for time

53
For the Nuer time is associated with social
rhythms and ecological changes From village to
cattle camp Thus it is not the rainy season, it
is time of the cattle camps, and courting
54
Up Down Emotion Youre in high
spirits Hes feeling low today Consciousness Wake
up See sank into a coma (fell
asleep) Health Hes in top shape her health is
declining Control Im on top of the
situation He fell from power Status Shell rise
to the top Hes at the bottom of
society Virtuousness Hes high minded I
wouldnt stoop to that
55
personification
  • the process of attributing animate or human
    qualities to non-living entities or events
  • Common in many languages
  • the window looks out over the mountains
  • an inanimate object, window, is interpreted as
    if it were capable of an action, looking, which
    is inherently possible for animate beings.
  • n other expressions intangible processes are
    likewise treated as thought they were concrete
    animate beings and therefore able to eat or kill
  • My feet are killing me

56
Metonymy
  •  The substitution of one entity for another based
    on their shared occurrence in context rather than
    similarity of their attributes
  • metonymy refers to the use of a single
    characteristic to identify a more complex entity
  • It is common for people to take one
    well-understood or easy-to-perceive aspect of
    something and use that aspect to stand either for
    the thing as a whole or for some other aspect or
    part of it.
  • Take the throne throne royal power
  • She likes to read Shakespeare (where Shakespeare
    stands for all his works)
  • Dont sweat it seat perspiration but
    stands for hard work
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