Английская Википедия:Ghil'ad Zuckermann

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Ghil'ad Zuckermann (Шаблон:Lang-he, Шаблон:IPA-he; Шаблон:Birth date) is an Israeli-born language revivalist[1] and linguist who works in contact linguistics, lexicology and the study of language, culture and identity.[2]

Overview

Zuckermann was awarded the Rubinlicht Prize (2023) "for his research on the profound influence of Yiddish on modern Hebrew",[3][4] and listed among Australia's top 30 "living legends of research" (2024) by The Australian.[5]

He was born in Tel Aviv in 1971, was raised in Eilat, and attended the United World College (UWC) of the Adriatic in 1987–1989.[6][7] In 1997 he received an M.A. in Linguistics from the Adi Lautman Program at Tel Aviv University. In 1997–2000 he was Scatcherd European Scholar of the University of Oxford and Denise Skinner Graduate Scholar at St Hugh's College, receiving a DPhil (Oxon.) in 2000.[8][9][10] While at Oxford, he served as president of the Jewish student group L'Chaim Society. As Gulbenkian research fellow at Churchill College (2000–2004), he was affiliated with the Department of Linguistics, Faculty of Modern and Medieval Studies, University of Cambridge. He received a titular Ph.D. (Cantab.) in 2003.[8] Zuckermann is a hyperpolyglot,[11] with his past professorships ranging across universities in England, China, Australia, Singapore, Slovakia, Israel, and the United States.[6] In 2010–2015 he was China's Ivy League Project 211 "Distinguished Visiting Professor", and "Shanghai Oriental Scholar" professorial fellow, at Shanghai International Studies University.[12]

He was Australian Research Council (ARC) Discovery Fellow in 2007–2011, and National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) grant holder in 2017–2021, studying the effects of Indigenous language reclamation on wellbeing.[13][14][15] He was awarded a British Academy Research Grant, Memorial Foundation of Jewish Culture Postdoctoral Fellowship, Harold Hyam Wingate Scholarship[16] and Chevening Scholarship.[17][6]

He is elected member of the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS) and the Foundation for Endangered Languages.[18] He serves as editorial board member of the Journal of Language Contact (Brill),[19], International Academic Board Advisor of the Institute for the Study of Global Antisemitism and Policy,[20] board member of the Online Museum of Jewish Theatre,[21] and expert witness in trademarks[22] and forensic linguistics.[23][18]

Since February 2011 Zuckermann has been Professor of Linguistics and Chair of Endangered Languages at the University of Adelaide[6] and since February 2017 he has been President of the Australian Association for Jewish Studies (AAJS).[24] In 2013–2015 he was President of the Australasian Association of Lexicography (AustraLex).[25]

Research

Zuckermann applies insights from the Hebrew revival to the revitalization of Aboriginal languages in Australia.[26][27][28] According to Yuval Rotem, the Israeli Ambassador to Australia, Zuckermann's "passion for the reclamation, maintenance and empowerment of Aboriginal languages and culture inspired [him] and was indeed the driving motivator of" the establishment of the Allira Aboriginal Knowledge IT Centre in Dubbo, New South Wales, Australia, on 2 September 2010.[29]

He proposes Native Tongue Title, compensation for language loss, because "linguicide"[30][31] results in "loss of cultural autonomy, loss of spiritual and intellectual sovereignty,[32] loss of soul".[33] He uses the term sleeping beauty to refer to a no-longer spoken language[11][34] and urges Australia "to define the 330 Aboriginal languages, most of them sleeping beauties, as the official languages of their region", and to introduce bilingual signs and thus change the linguistic landscape of the country. "So, for example, Port Lincoln should also be referred to as Galinyala, which is its original Barngarla name."[35]

Zuckermann proposes a controversial hybrid theory of the emergence of Israeli Hebrew according to which Hebrew and Yiddish "acted equally" as the "primary contributors" to Modern Hebrew.[36][37] Scholars including Yiddish linguist Dovid Katz (who refers to Zuckermann as a "fresh-thinking Israeli scholar"), adopt Zuckermann's term "Israeli" and accept his notion of hybridity.[38] Others, for example author and translator Hillel Halkin, oppose Zuckermann's model. In an article published on 24 December 2004 in The Jewish Daily Forward, pseudonymous column "Philologos", Halkin accused Zuckermann of a political agenda.[36] Zuckermann's response was published on 28 December 2004 in The Mendele Review: Yiddish Literature and Language.[39]

Reclamation of the Barngarla language

In 2012[11] Zuckermann started working with the Barngarla community to reclaim the Barngarla language,[40][41] based on the work of a German Lutheran pastor Clamor Wilhelm Schürmann, who had worked at a mission in 1844 and created a Barngarla dictionary.[42] This led to ongoing language revival workshops being held in Port Augusta, Whyalla, and Port Lincoln several times each year, with funding from the federal government's Indigenous Languages Support program.[11][43][44]

Zuckermann co-authored a Barngarla trilogy:[45] Barngarlidhi Manoo ("Speaking Barngarla Together": Barngarla Alphabet & Picture Book; with the Barngarla community, 2019); Mangiri Yarda ("Healthy Country": Barngarla Wellbeing and Nature; with Barngarla woman Emmalene Richards, 2021); and Wardlada Mardinidhi ("Bush Healing": Barngarla Plant Medicines; with Barngarla woman Evelyn Walker, 2023).[46][47]

He has been involved in the revival of other Aboriginal languages such as Bayoongoo,[48] and has been the founder and convener of the Adelaide Language Festival.[49][50]

Contributions to linguistics

Zuckermann's research focuses on contact linguistics, lexicology, revivalistics, Jewish languages, and the study of language, culture and identity.

Zuckermann argues that Israeli Hebrew, which he calls "Israeli", is a hybrid language that is genetically both Indo-European (Germanic, Slavic and Romance) and Afro-Asiatic (Semitic). He suggests that "Israeli" is the continuation not only of literary Hebrew(s) but also of Yiddish, as well as Polish, Russian, German, English, Ladino, Arabic and other languages spoken by Hebrew revivalists.[51]

His hybridic synthesis is in contrast to both the traditional revival thesis (i.e. that "Israeli" is Hebrew) and the relexification antithesis (i.e. that "Israeli" is Yiddish with Hebrew words). While both the thesis and the antithesis are mono-parental, Zuckermann's synthesis is multi-parental.[37][52]

Zuckermann introduces revivalistics as a new transdisciplinary field of enquiry surrounding language reclamation (e.g. Barngarla), revitalization (e.g. Adnyamathanha) and reinvigoration (e.g. Irish).

Complementing documentary linguistics, revivalistics aims to provide a systematic analysis especially of attempts to resurrect no-longer spoken languages (reclamation) but also of initiatives to reverse language shift (revitalization and reinvigoration).[28]

His analysis of multisourced neologization (the coinage of words deriving from two or more sources at the same time)[53] challenges Einar Haugen's classic typology of lexical borrowing.[54] Whereas Haugen categorizes borrowing into either substitution or importation, Zuckermann explores cases of "simultaneous substitution and importation" in the form of camouflaged borrowing. He proposes a new classification of multisourced neologisms such as phono-semantic matching.

Zuckermann's exploration of phono-semantic matching in Standard Mandarin and Meiji period Japanese concludes that the Chinese writing system is multifunctional: pleremic ("full" of meaning, e.g. logographic), cenemic ("empty" of meaning, e.g. phonographic – like a syllabary) and simultaneously cenemic and pleremic (phono-logographic). He argues that Leonard Bloomfield's assertion that "a language is the same no matter what system of writing may be used"[55] is inaccurate. "If Chinese had been written using roman letters, thousands of Chinese words would not have been coined, or would have been coined with completely different forms".[53]

Selected publications

Zuckermann has published in English, Hebrew, Italian, Yiddish, Spanish, German, Russian, Arabic, Korean and Chinese.

Books authored

Books edited

Journal articles and book chapters

Other publications

Filmography

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:Authority control

  1. Alex Rawlings, March 22, 2019, BBC Future, The man bringing dead languages back to life ("Ghil'ad Zuckermann has found that resurrecting lost languages may bring many benefits to indigenous populations – with knock-on effects for their health and happiness"), accessed May 5, 2019.
  2. Шаблон:Cite web
  3. Rubinlicht Awards and Performance by Evgeny Kissin, Preservation of Yiddish Culture and Heritage.
  4. Linguist Ghil’ad Zuckermann and Leivik House volunteer Shoshana Kroitero win Rubinlicht Prize, The Forward
  5. RESEARCH 2024: Australia’s living legends of research, The Australian.
  6. 6,0 6,1 6,2 6,3 Sarah Robinson, March 11, 2019, The LINGUIST List, Featured Linguist
  7. Five outstandingly successful stories, UWC of the Adriatic, 2018.
  8. 8,0 8,1 Zuckermann's D.Phil (Oxon.) and Ph.D. (Cantab.)
  9. p. 43 of St Hugh's College Chronicle, 2015-2016.
  10. p. 45 of St Hugh's College Chronicle, 2016-2017.
  11. 11,0 11,1 11,2 11,3 Dr Anna Goldsworthy on the Barngarla language reclamation, The Monthly, September 2014
  12. Ошибка цитирования Неверный тег <ref>; для сносок SYSU не указан текст
  13. NITV/SBS News by Claudianna Blanco: Could language revival cure diabetes?, 21 February 2017.
  14. NHMRC Grants.
  15. Grant awarded for research into the link between language revival and well-being.
  16. Шаблон:Cite web
  17. The Weizmann International Magazine of Science and People 8, pp. 16-17
  18. 18,0 18,1 Report of Prof G Zuckermann, Board of Deputies of British Jews
  19. Шаблон:Cite web
  20. ISGAP
  21. Online Museum of Jewish Theatre (מוזיאון און-ליין של התיאטרון היהודי)
  22. Federal Court of Australia
  23. Damning new evidence undermines BBC’s Oxford Street racist slur claim, Jonathan Sacerdoti, The Jewish Chronicle, December 30, 2021
  24. AAJS, accessed November 26, 2020.
  25. Australasian Association of Lexicography (AustraLex)
  26. Шаблон:Cite news
  27. Шаблон:Cite book
  28. 28,0 28,1 Шаблон:Cite journal
  29. Ambassador Yuval Rotem - Address for the opening of the Allira Aboriginal Knowledge IT Centre, Dubbo, NSW, Australia, September 2, 2010, accessed August 24, 2016.
  30. Zuckermann, Ghil'ad, "Stop, revive and survive", The Australian Higher Education, June 6, 2012.
  31. "Australia's first chair of endangered languages, Professor Ghil'ad Zuckermann from the University of Adelaide puts it bluntly: Those policies have resulted in 'linguicide'", Shyamla Eswaran, Aboriginal languages a source of strength, Green Left Weekly, 6 December 2013.
  32. "As put by Professor Ghil'ad Zuckermann, language is part of the 'Intellectual Sovereignty' of Indigenous people", p. 2 in Priest, Terry (2011) Submission to the Standing Committee on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs, Language Learning in Indigenous Communities, Research Unit, Jumbunna Indigenous House of Learning, August 2011.
  33. Arnold, Lynn (2016), Lingua Nullius: A Retrospect and Prospect about Australia's First Languages (Transcript), Lowitja O'Donoghue Oration, May 31, 2016.
  34. See pp. 57 & 60 in Zuckermann's A New Vision for "Israeli Hebrew": Theoretical and Practical Implications of Analysing Israel's Main Language as a Semi-Engineered Semito-European Hybrid Language, Journal of Modern Jewish Studies 5: 57–71 (2006).
  35. Sophie Verass (NITV) Indigenous meanings of Australian town names, 10 August 2016.
  36. 36,0 36,1 Шаблон:Cite news
  37. 37,0 37,1 John-Paul Davidson (2011), Planet Word, Penguin. pp. 125-126.
  38. Шаблон:Cite book
  39. Шаблон:Cite journal
  40. John Power, June 29, 2018, Al Jazeera: Starting from scratch: Aboriginal group reclaims lost language, "With the help of a linguistics professor, Barngarla, which has not been spoken for 60 years, is being pieced together", accessed May 5, 2019.
  41. See Section 282 in FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA: Croft on behalf of the Barngarla Native Title Claim Group v State of South Australia (2015, FCA 9), File number: SAD 6011 of 1998; John Mansfield (judge).
  42. Шаблон:Cite web
  43. The Dictionary I Read for Fun, John McWhorter, New York Times, March 2, 2023.
  44. Bringing dead languages back to life, BBC
  45. Zuckermann continues to rebuild Barngarla, Shane Desiatnik, The Australian Jewish News, August 9, 2023
  46. Barngarla: Additional Resources
  47. Шаблон:Cite web
  48. Inspired by Hebrew, scholar helps revive dying aboriginal Australian languages, Avi Kumar, JNS
  49. Шаблон:Cite web
  50. Шаблон:Cite web
  51. Israeli Hebrew didn’t kill Yiddish. As a new exhibit in NYC shows, it gave it a new nest to live in., Jewish Telegraphic Agency, September 6, 2023.
  52. Шаблон:Cite book
  53. 53,0 53,1 Шаблон:Cite book
  54. Шаблон:Cite journal
  55. Bloomfield, Leonard (1933), Language, New York: Henry Holt, p. 21.
  56. Dead Languages and the Man Trying to Revive Them, By Nuno Marques, February 21, 2018: "Prof. Ghil’ad Zuckermann is a renowned linguist and scholar originally from Israel and currently based in Australia. He talked to Babbel about strategies for linguistic revitalization and the political issues surrounding linguistic change and preservation."