Anything Can Happen: The Verb Lexicon and Interdisciplinary Fieldwork
| dc.contributor.author | Evans, Nicholas | |
| dc.contributor.editor | Nicholas Thieberger | |
| dc.date.accessioned | 2015-12-08T22:16:43Z | |
| dc.date.issued | 2012 | |
| dc.date.updated | 2020-12-13T07:24:38Z | |
| dc.description.abstract | The centrality of language in human life means we cannot document any language without understanding all the spheres of knowledge it is used to talk about. Equally, undocumented languages contain too much information to be wasted on linguists alone. As the medium through which the whole fabric of traditional knowledge about everything in the world is transmitted, the importance of these languages stretches out in the direction of many fields of enquiry, from ethnoecology to comparative jurisprudence to deep history to the study of musical and verbal art. Linguists, then, have a responsibility not just to their own field but to all areas of scholarship concerned with the almost infinite varieties of human creativity, and we abrogate this responsibility if we do not seek to follow our documentation of the languages we study down all these lanes and by ways of orally transmitted lore. One of the appeals of fieldwork is that we get the opportunity to develop interests in many new subjects, from botany through ethnography to thatch-making. But few linguists reach the point where we are able to really penetrate to the heart of all these fields, and in practice the best way to extend our documentary coverage is through some form of interdisciplinary fieldwork. The advantages of interdisciplinary fieldwork are most obvious in the way it can extend the detailed lexicon of targeted areas � botanical terms with the botanist, rock types with the geologist, terms for spear or personal adornment types with the material culture specialist, and so forth. | |
| dc.identifier.isbn | 9780199571888 | |
| dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/1885/30802 | |
| dc.publisher | Oxford University Press | |
| dc.relation.ispartof | The Oxford Handbook of Linguistic Fieldwork | |
| dc.relation.isversionof | 1st Edition | |
| dc.rights | https://global.oup.com/academic/rights/permissions/autperm/?cc=gb&lang=en..."one chapter or up to 10% of the total of your single author or co-authored book; posting on the your own personal website or in an institutional or subject based repository after a 12 month period for Science and Medical titles and a 24 month period for Academic, Trade and Reference titles" from the publisher site (as at 25/10/16). | |
| dc.subject | Keywords: Ethnoecology; Ethnography; Interdisciplinary fieldwork; Musical art; Orally transmitted lore; Thatch-making; Verb lexicon; Verbal art | |
| dc.title | Anything Can Happen: The Verb Lexicon and Interdisciplinary Fieldwork | |
| dc.type | Book chapter | |
| dcterms.accessRights | Open Access | |
| local.bibliographicCitation.lastpage | 208 | |
| local.bibliographicCitation.placeofpublication | Oxford | |
| local.bibliographicCitation.startpage | 183 | |
| local.contributor.affiliation | Evans, Nicholas, College of Asia and the Pacific, ANU | |
| local.contributor.authoruid | Evans, Nicholas, u1454988 | |
| local.description.notes | Imported from ARIES | |
| local.identifier.absfor | 200408 - Linguistic Structures (incl. Grammar, Phonology, Lexicon, Semantics) | |
| local.identifier.absseo | 950202 - Languages and Literacy | |
| local.identifier.ariespublication | u4264204xPUB77 | |
| local.identifier.doi | 10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199571888.013.0009 | |
| local.identifier.scopusID | 2-s2.0-84924589278 | |
| local.type.status | Published Version |
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