Afbeelding van de auteur.

Joshua A. Fishman (1926–2015)

Auteur van Handbook of Language and Ethnic Identity, Volume 1

69+ Werken 347 Leden 3 Besprekingen Favoriet van 2 leden

Over de Auteur

Joshua A. Fishman is Distinguished University Research Professor of Social Sciences, Emeritus, at Yeshiva University. Ofelia Garca is Professor of Urban Education at the Graduate Center, The City University of New York.
Fotografie: Joshua Fishman giving a speech about the Gaelic language at the University of Aberdeen.

Reeksen

Werken van Joshua A. Fishman

Reversing Language Shift (1991) 25 exemplaren
The sociology of language (1972) 13 exemplaren
Yiddish: Turning to Life (1991) 10 exemplaren
Advances in the Creation and Revision of Writing Systems (1977) — Redacteur — 9 exemplaren
The Multilingual Apple: Languages in New York City (1997) — Redacteur — 6 exemplaren
Progress in Language Planning: International Perspectives (1983) — Redacteur — 5 exemplaren
Advances in the study of societal multilingualism (1978) — Redacteur — 5 exemplaren
Advances in language planning (1974) 4 exemplaren
Focus on diglossia — Redacteur — 2 exemplaren
The Sociology of Language in Israel — Redacteur — 2 exemplaren
Soukromý život 1 exemplaar
Linguaggio e società — Auteur — 1 exemplaar
Sociolinguistique 1 exemplaar
Festschrift in honor of Charles A. Ferguson — Redacteur — 1 exemplaar
The sociology of Jewish languages — Redacteur — 1 exemplaar
Sociology of Yiddish (1980) — Redacteur — 1 exemplaar

Gerelateerde werken

Language and Social Context: Selected Readings (1972) — Medewerker — 149 exemplaren
Sociolinguistics: Selected Readings (1972) — Medewerker — 48 exemplaren
Language in the USA (1981) — Medewerker — 30 exemplaren
Atlas des langues du monde : Une pluralité fragile (2003) — Préface — 19 exemplaren
Liber amicorum Koen Zondag — Medewerker — 1 exemplaar
Bilingual education : current perspectives — Medewerker — 1 exemplaar
Bilingual education in Friesland : facts & prospects (1993) — Voorwoord — 1 exemplaar

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Officiële naam
Fishman, Joshua Aaron
Geboortedatum
1926-07-18
Overlijdensdatum
2015-03-01
Geslacht
male
Geboorteplaats
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Plaats van overlijden
Bronx, New York, USA

Leden

Besprekingen

Hmmmm, well, I guess Fishman's "double dichotomy" of the linguistic relativity principle (between lexicosemantic and syntactic levels and between effects on linguistic and non-linguistic cognitive processes) is fine as far as it goes, and I've come to the first split in my own work on the eighteenth century, between relativity as conceived by Herder and by Humboldt. But it's hardly the principle as a whole that's being systematized: what about the dichotomy between "influence" and "determination" conceptions of relativism? The one between "universal relativism," where thought is relative to language full stop, and "relative relativism," where that relativity expresses itself differently relative to which specific language is meant (the real point of the thing, as far as I'm concerned).

The idea of a Whorfian "hypothesis" is also one that Fishman would reject later on, as it became clear that Whorf intended no such thing. There is also a summary of experimental work on the "hypothesis" to date, but since it was 1960 that has been superseded by more recent treatments. That's not to say there aren't also some neat connections made by this expansive and brilliant scholar: with Malinowski's "phatic communion," basically grouped unity through typed, idiosyncratic linguistic practice (say a penchant for certain kinds of word games or ways of celebrating verbally) or Freud's "word magic" (basically the ineffable particularity of a language). But overall I'd say Fishman's thinking on this question became more sophisticated later on. (This does clarify why in his later work he needed Whorfianism as a celebration of linguistic particularity and profusion of variation to be Whorfianism of the "third kind" as opposed to Whorfianism full stop, which would have seemed to be more in keeping with his own concerns as well as Whorf's intent: he had already "systematized" it in a way orientated to experimental work.) Behavioral Science 5(4).
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Gemarkeerd
MeditationesMartini | May 18, 2013 |
Fishman's article aligns Benjamin Lee Whorf with a "neo-Herderian" pluralism in language study, one that values multiple linguistic persectives as each contributing in their own way to the human tapestry, with a good look at Whorf's context (where English is the ideal language because we don't have to devote our energies to communication, because it is so magnificently designed, and so instead we can focus on conquest!). Fishman connects this to a broader interplay between an ethnocentric, essentialist but also ethnopluralistic strain in Western culture rooted in the Hebraic and Greek traditions and a liberal, imperial universalism exemplified by Rome, the Catholic Church, and modern Anglo-capitalism. He sees Whorfianism of the third kind (in contrast to the first and second kinds, linguistic relativism and determinism respectively) as having an important role to play mediating between these strains. Those are big ideas, and Fishman's prose isn't really up to the task--he writes about them in a weirdly inspirationless manner. But this is still an important article. Language in Society.… (meer)
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1 stem
Gemarkeerd
MeditationesMartini | May 13, 2013 |
simplistic even for its time. shallow, and not very interesting or informative. By 1972, sociolinguistics was really delving into issues of substance.
 
Gemarkeerd
echaika | Sep 22, 2009 |

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Statistieken

Werken
69
Ook door
25
Leden
347
Populariteit
#68,853
Waardering
3.1
Besprekingen
3
ISBNs
96
Talen
4
Favoriet
2

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