Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Referring to Space
View through CrossRef
Abstract
The first aim of this anthology is to illustrate the variety of resources that Austronesian and Papuan languages offer their speakers for referring to space. The languages here described are spread from Madagascar to Tonga, and there are many differences between them. They also offer a striking contrast to Indo-European languages, and call into question universalistic claims about human spatial concepts and spatial reference based solely on evidence from Indo-European languages and their speakers. There are, however, striking parallels between the kinds of systems that languages offer and that their speakers employ when referring to space. Understanding the differences in the ways that coordinate systems are used requires not only linguistic, but also cultural, historical, and geographical knowledge. Thus the second aim of the collection is to illustrate the necessity of an interdisciplinary approach to the topic of space if we are to understand the underlying logic of conceptions of space manifest in verbal expressions. The first three papers offer overviews of the conception of space in Austronesian languages and analyse the coordinate systems employed for spatial reference. The seven papers which follow offer anthropological linguistic descriptions of directionals and locatives in Austronesian and Papuan languages, and the last three contributions offer a more structurally-oriented perspective.
Oxford University PressOxford
Title: Referring to Space
Description:
Abstract
The first aim of this anthology is to illustrate the variety of resources that Austronesian and Papuan languages offer their speakers for referring to space.
The languages here described are spread from Madagascar to Tonga, and there are many differences between them.
They also offer a striking contrast to Indo-European languages, and call into question universalistic claims about human spatial concepts and spatial reference based solely on evidence from Indo-European languages and their speakers.
There are, however, striking parallels between the kinds of systems that languages offer and that their speakers employ when referring to space.
Understanding the differences in the ways that coordinate systems are used requires not only linguistic, but also cultural, historical, and geographical knowledge.
Thus the second aim of the collection is to illustrate the necessity of an interdisciplinary approach to the topic of space if we are to understand the underlying logic of conceptions of space manifest in verbal expressions.
The first three papers offer overviews of the conception of space in Austronesian languages and analyse the coordinate systems employed for spatial reference.
The seven papers which follow offer anthropological linguistic descriptions of directionals and locatives in Austronesian and Papuan languages, and the last three contributions offer a more structurally-oriented perspective.
Related Results
Legal Consequences of the Pollution of Outer Space with Space Debris
Legal Consequences of the Pollution of Outer Space with Space Debris
This is an advance summary of a forthcoming article in the Oxford Encyclopedia of Planetary Science. Please check back later for the full article.Space debris has grown to be a sig...
Reference and Quasi‐Reference
Reference and Quasi‐Reference
In De Motu, Berkeley distinguishes between two uses of language, which we may call ‘genuine reference’ and ‘quasi-reference.’ Genuine referring expressions, like ‘red,’ are used to...
Space Technology
Space Technology
Here is a ready-reference guide for the nonspecialist with current information about developments in space technology as well as the present and future social, political, and techn...
A Space with No Place (Straus and Ecstasy)
A Space with No Place (Straus and Ecstasy)
This chapter argues that Erwin Straus assigns dance very definitely to the domain of smooth space. Music is dance’s condition of possibility because it establishes the only space t...
Space, Time and Quantification in the YiChing
Space, Time and Quantification in the YiChing
This book explores linguistic representations and cultural conceptualizations of the relationship between time and space in ancient China, as expressed by the YiChing.
Th...
Islands of Knowledge
Islands of Knowledge
Mythographic texts in the imperial age treat space as discontinuous. This is contrary to our modern idea of space, which is tied intimately to cartographical norms. In modern maps,...
Bradbury on Space
Bradbury on Space
This chapter discusses Ray Bradbury's writings on space. Throughout his career, Bradbury expressed his sense of writing in the Space Age, a time which he felt was characterized by ...

