sábado, 31 de marzo de 2012

Cultural Stereotypes

The relationship between people of different cultures can sometimes create problems, one of the most commons being Stereotypes. A stereotype is when you relation a determined culture to a group of values, ideas or way of living (commonly bad things), and generalize them to all the people of that culture. This may bring you huge problems, because although people from the same culture can share ideas or a way of living, all persons are different.
Violator, a Thrash Metal band from Brazil.

Personally, I have never felt discriminated or treated different because of my culture, but I have known a very strong stereotype, and this is against Heavy Metal Fans. Some people of our society think that if you wear black or like heavy music or have long hair your are crazy, alcoholic or satanic. I'm sure that good or bad actions come from inside, and that the way you dress doesn't change your values or aptitudes.

Other common stereotypes are against Arabs, Peruvians, Americans, and many other cultures. In fact, most of the cultures of the world are stereotyped with some bad things.


lunes, 26 de marzo de 2012

What is Culture?

Language is strictly ligated to Culture, as culture determines the way we are and the way we live. Therefore, it's quite hard to describe culture. Different persons have postulates theories about what is culture, and I will present them below.

Matthew Arnold thinks that culture is something we aspire to, as he says "The noble aspiration to leave the world better and happier than we find it". He states that culture is something we want to achieve for a better world.

Other scientists think that culture is something outside of us that we learn or we are born into. Claude Levi-Strauss says "(Culture) is made up of rules of conduct, which are not invented and whose function is generally not understood by people who obey them". Also, Edward Tyler states that "(Culture) is acquired by a man as a member of a society"

But there are others that think that culture is something developed by humans. Raymond Williams, for example, says that "The growing society is there, yet it is also made and remade in every individual mind". Finally, Clifford Geertz thinks that humans are suspended in culture as spiders are suspended in webs, and that we build culture every day as spiders spin their webs.

Language and Thought: What comes first?

Language and thoughts have a strong relationship. It seems that one wouldn't exist without the other, but one must have come first. Different scientists and investigators have tried to answer this query, and I will present some of them in this entry.

Ferdinand de Saussure stated that language and thought cannot be easily separated and that they were like the two faces of a sheet of paper: you can't cut one face without cutting the other. He described language as Langue (abstract system of sings and rules that make up language structure) and Parole (Langue being used). He also said that there can't be a detailed thought without speech, nor meaningful words without thought, so both need of the other to exist.

Elizabeth Spelke, a professor of psychology at Harvard, said that "Infants are born with a language-independent system for thinking about objects. These concepts give meaning to the words they learn later." This means she believes that thought came first, because young children can think in objects without language.

Steven Pinker also has an opinion in this topic, which is showed in the following video.


Pinker thinks that we think in images, and that language is the just the way we communicate our thoughts to others. This means that he clearly separates thought and language, and that he is sure that thought comes before language.

Sources:
http://www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/2004/07.22/21-think.html
http://www.williamjames.com/transcripts/pinker1.htm

viernes, 16 de marzo de 2012

Saint Patrick's Day!

Tomorrow, Saturday the 17th of march, we celebrate the Saint Patrick's Day! I invite you all to wear green clothes, celebrate the shamrock and, why not, search for some gold at the end of a rainbow!

But before we celebrate anything, we must know the history of Saint Patrick. Saint Patrick is the Saint Patron of Ireland and he lived between the years 387-461 (Years can vary, as there are different versions). The story tells that at the age of sixteen he was kidnapped from his native land of the Roman British Isles by a band pirates, and sold into slavery in Ireland. Saint Patrick worked as a shepherd and turned to religion for solace. After six years of slavery he escaped to the Irish coast and fled home to Britain. Then, he felt that he must go back to Ireland and turn Irish to christianity. Therefore, he studied for several years and then went to Ireland, where he converted a lot of people to christianity. Also, Saint Patrick is credited for bringing written words to Ireland, and also there is a myth that says that he banished the snakes from Ireland!



One interesting fact about Saint Patrick's Day is the Shamrock, on of the most common symbols of this celebration. This is because Irish think that Saint Patrick used the shamrock to explain the Holy Trinity.  Many other myths and legends about Saint Patrick's Day enrich this celebration.



Happy Saint Patrick's Day!

Mind Map: How do we acquire language?

If we think about language, another question that we will probably ask is about how does language come in our brains, or "How do we acquire Language?". In this sense, there are different theories that try to explain this phenomenon, and I'll present them in a mind map.

(Click on the image to expand it)


Personally, I think that we born with the ability to talk, because we have "something" in our heads that animals don't have, and that's why only humans can talk. But also, I think that we learn many things about language as we grow, specially because there are different languages, so persons from all the world can learn and talk different languages, but we all have the same ability.

miércoles, 14 de marzo de 2012

Videos: The History of Language

Language has different aspects to be analyzed. One aspect that really catches my attention is how language raised in the first communities of humans that lived in our world.  In this entry, we will be trying to learn more about the history of language, by watching two videos and answering some questions about them.


Video 1:


1. Why is it said that people in East Africa developed more than the rest?
This is said because investigations prove that people that lived in early Africa had a better language than other communities around the world.

2. What happened to the earlier languages on Earth?
Most of them disappeared and their traces were lost.

3. According to Dr Johanna Nichols, what were the first utterances made by Humans?
The first utterances were calls, as people needed to call each other for basic activities. These "calls" evolved and turned into words over time.



Video 2:
       

1. What is the biblical story of "the Tower of Babel"?
The story tells that people tried to build a very high tower that will reach the sky. In response to this, God changed their languages and spread them all over the world, and of course, they couldn't finish building the tower.


2. What does historical evidence tell us of this biblical event?
Historical evidence explains the evolution of different languages by saying that when people started to move to new places around the world, the language started to change and resulted in different languages over time, because each community changes their language. This is why we have a lot of languages in the world, and not only one.


3. What's the relationship between genes and language?
They have a very strong relationship. People with similar genes are more likely to speak the same language.

4. Why do languages constantly change?
Because language is learn by generations, and each one of this generations makes slight changes in their language. Over time, greater changes will be seen.

Mind Map: What is Language?


In one of my first entries I explained what is Language. Now, I made a mind map to explain what is language in a different way.


(Click on the image to expand it)