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MAIN
Education
'Status'
Decides If a Language Survives
High
Status Languages Threaten Variety
The Tower
of Babel might get built after all. While thousands of different
languages are spoken around the world, 90 percent of them are
dying and are expected to vanish in the next few decades.
But Cornell
University engineers have come up with a mathematical model that
for the first time quantifies "language death" and may
offer strategies for those who want to preserve an endangered
language.
The key factor
is status, according to Cornell graduate student Daniel Abrams
and Steven Strogatz, Cornell professor of theoretical and applied
mechanics, who described the model a recent issue of the journal
Nature. Others, they say, have used mathematical modeling
to study the evolution of grammar, syntax and other structural
features, but they believe this is the first attempt to quantify
competition between languages.
The "status"
of a language is determined by the social and economic opportunities
it offers its speakers, the researchers say in their paper. In
Wales, for example, "Parents want their kids to speak English
for the opportunity," Abrams explains. "If they only
speak Welsh, they're not going to be able to move to London and
get a good job."
The researchers
tested the model against historical data on the decline of Welsh,
Scots Gaelic and Quechua, among other endangered languages. When
population figures are plugged in, the model produces a family
of curves depending on the value assigned to status, and in each
case one of the curves agreed with the published data on language
decline. Most of the data came from published census figures,
but in the case of Quechua, Abrams traveled through Peru, interviewing
Catholic priests to find out when the last Mass had been celebrated
in the old language.
Quechua, Abrams
notes, is a language that would not be considered endangered by
most measures. It was the common language of the Inca empire and
still has some 10 million speakers scattered over Peru, Ecuador,
Argentina, Bolivia, Colombia and Brazil. "It was once what
English is today, the common language people used to interact
even when they had their own local language, but it's now disappearing
very quickly," Abrams says, being replaced by Spanish.
The model
predicts that when languages are competing for speakers, the balance
always is unstable. "Multilingual" societies, like Switzerland,
really consist of mostly separate monolingual populations living
side by side, the researchers said. Even bilingual individuals
are not truly so, Abrams says. "People almost always have
a mother tongue, or speak one language better," he says.
"We don't
take into account social structure or geographic distribution,"
he adds. "The amazing thing is that it still works very well."
An example
of a situation where the model doesn't work is in the persistence
of Spanish in the United States, which he attributes to a constant
resupply of native speakers.
The conclusion
is that a language can be preserved by boosting its status. In
Quebec, Abrams points out, 20 years ago French was disappearing,
but the provincial government passed laws requiring its use in
certain places, adopted immigration policies that favored French
speakers and even ran an advertising campaign saying, in effect,
"French is cool."
But in a lot
of other places, Abrams says, English has a very high status and,
"This is driving the disappearance of languages around the
world."
The Nature
paper is titled "Modeling the Dynamics of Language Death."
Source: Cornell
University (Newswise)
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