Atjaunināt sīkdatņu piekrišanu

E-grāmata: Social Origins of Language [Oxford Scholarship Online E-books]

Edited by (Senior Lecturer in Communication, Tel Aviv University), Edited by , Edited by (Lecturer in Social Anthropology, University College London)
  • Oxford Scholarship Online E-books
  • Cena pašlaik nav zināma
This book offers an exciting new perspective on the origins of language. Language is conceptualized as a collective invention, on the model of writing or the wheel, and the book places social and cultural dynamics at the centre of its evolution: language emerged and further developed in human communities already suffused with meaning and communication, mimesis, ritual, song and dance, alloparenting, new divisions of labour and revolutionary changes in social relations. The book thus challenges assumptions about the causal relations between genes, capacities, social communication and innovation: the biological capacities are taken to evolve incrementally on the basis of cognitive plasticity, in a process that recruits previous adaptations and fine-tunes them to serve novel communicative ends. Topics include the ability brought about by language to tell lies, that must have confronted our ancestors with new problems of public trust; the dynamics of social-cognitive co-evolution; the role of gesture and mimesis in linguistic communication; studies of how monkeys and apes express their feelings or thoughts; play, laughter, dance, song, ritual and other social displays among extant hunter-gatherers; the social nature of language acquisition and innovation; normativity and the emergence of linguistic norms; the interaction of language and emotions; and novel perspectives on the time-frame for language evolution. The contributors are leading international scholars from linguistics, anthropology, palaeontology, primatology, psychology, evolutionary biology, artificial intelligence, archaeology, and cognitive science.
Acknowledgements viii
List of Figures
ix
List of Tables
x
Notes on the Contributors xi
1 Introduction: a social perspective on how language began
1(14)
Daniel Dor
Chris Knight
Jerome Lewis
Part I Theoretical Foundations
2 Why we need to move from gene-culture co-evolution to culturally driven co-evolution
15(16)
Daniel Dor
Eva Jablonka
3 Niche construction and semiosis: biocultural and social dynamics
31(16)
Chris Sinha
4 Signal evolution and the social brain
47(9)
Camilla Power
5 How can a social theory of language evolution be grounded in evidence?
56(11)
Sverker Johansson
Part II Language as a Collective Object
6 The `poly-modalic' nature of utterances and its relevance for inquiring into language origins
67(10)
Adam Kendon
7 BaYaka Pygmy multi-modal and mimetic communication traditions
77(15)
Jerome Lewis
8 Language presupposes an enchronic infrastructure for social interaction
92(13)
N. J. Enfield
Jack Sidnell
9 The instruction of imagination: language and its evolution as a communication technology
105(24)
Daniel Dor
Part III Apes and People, Past and Present
10 Chimpanzee grooming gestures and sounds: what might they tell us about how language evolved?
129(12)
Simone Pika
11 Vocal communication and social awareness in chimpanzees and bonobos
141(16)
Zanna Clay
Klaus Zuberbuhler
12 Why humans and not apes: the social preconditions for the emergence of language
157(14)
Charles Whitehead
13 Language and collective fiction: from children's pretence to social institutions
171(13)
Emily Wyman
14 The time frame of the emergence of modern language and its implications
184(12)
Dan Dediu
Stephen C. Levinson
15 The evolution of ritual as a process of sexual selection
196(12)
Camilla Power
16 The red thread: pigment use and the evolution of collective ritual
208(20)
Ian Watts
17 Language and symbolic culture: an outcome of hunter-gatherer reverse dominance
228(21)
Chris Knight
Part IV Social Theories of Language Evolution
18 The co-evolution of human intersubjectivity, morality, and language
249(18)
Jordan Zlatev
19 Forever united: the co-evolution of language and normativity
267(17)
Ehud Lamm
20 Why talk?
284(13)
Jean-Louis Dessalles
21 Vocal deception, laughter, and the linguistic significance of reverse dominance
297(20)
Chris Knight
Jerome Lewis
Part V The Journey Thereafter
22 Memory, imagination, and the evolution of modern language
317(8)
Simona Ginsburg
Eva Jablonka
23 Transmission biases in the cultural evolution of language: towards an explanatory framework
325(11)
N. J. Enfield
24 Breaking down false barriers to understanding
336(14)
Luc Steels
References 350(71)
Index of Authors 421(4)
Index of Subjects 425
Daniel Dor has a PhD in Linguistics from Stanford University, and is Senior Lecturer in Communication at Tel Aviv University. His main interest lies in the development of a theory of language as a communication technology. Together with Eva Jablonka, he has written extensively on the evolution of language. In a different (but related) domain, Dor has published books and articles on the role of the media, and its language, in the construction of political hegemony. His Intifada Hits the Headlines was chosen as book of the year 2004 in communication by Choice Magazine.



Chris Knight was for many years Professor of Anthropology at the University of East London, although he is now retired. Best known for his 1991 book, Blood Relations: Menstruation and the Origins of Culture, he co-founded the Evolution of Language (EVOLANG) series of international conferences and has published widely on the evolutionary emergence of language and symbolic culture.



Jerome Lewis lectures in Social Anthropology at University College London and co-directs the Hunter-Gatherer Resilience Project, the Extreme Citizen Science Research Group and UCL's Environment Institute. His research focuses on Pygmy hunter-gatherers and former hunter-gatherers in Central Africa. Current research focuses on communication and cultural transmission in egalitarian hunter-gatherer societies.