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78 Indigenous Languages Are Being Saved By Optical Scanning Tech (fastcompany.com)

Researchers at UC Berkeley are using futuristic technology to save a piece of the past. From a report: Project IRENE is using cutting-edge optical scan technology to transfer and digitally restore recordings of indigenous languages, many of which no longer have living speakers, Hyperallergic first reported. The recordings were gathered between 1900 and 1938 when UC anthropologists asked native speakers of 78 indigenous languages of California to record their songs, histories, prayers, and vocabulary on wax cylinders. Many of those cylinders are housed at Berkeley's Phoebe A. Hearst Museum of Anthropology, and they are in a state of disrepair, degraded and broken. It's a frustrating state of affairs, as many of the languages recorded on the cylinders have fallen out of use or are no longer spoken at all. The "Documenting Endangered Languages" initiative, which has support from the National Science Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities, is hoping to save this important history.

7 of 75 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Unimportant history by MightyMartian · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This isnt an example of West Germanic turning into Anglo-Saxon. Most indigenous languages were victim to active campaigns to stamp them our.

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  2. More focus should be given to this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Kurdish, a number of Japanese aboriginal languages, and others in Russian, China, Africa and other parts of the world are *STILL* being actively stomped out through forced education only in a national language that regions inhabitants had forced on them for cultural conversion reasons, rather than a choice given over time.

    As a result many other languages are dying out today not because there are no speakers, but because it is illegal for regional schools to teach them and they are instead forcibly taught the nationalist tongue in an effort to separate them from their heritage.

  3. The purpose of language is to communicate by innocent_white_lamb · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The purpose of a language is to communicate.

    If there is nobody left who speaks or writes that language, why is it suddenly important (other than in an abstract way) to preserve it?

    The Canadian government is currently spending $90 million (Canadian, about $70 million USD) to preserve endangered aboriginal languages.

    http://www.cbc.ca/news/indigen...

    The first line of that article says "Indigenous languages in Canada are dying out at an alarming rate and in desperate need of saving".

    My question is why, and what makes it worth spending all of that taxpayer money on?

    If someone is interested in an obscure language to want to preserve it and learn it, I see no problem with doing that as an academic exercise. But I honestly don't see why it's suddenly a responsibility for governments to preserve it.

    Again, a language is intended to facilitate communication. If nobody's communicating in that language any more then it's obsolete.

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    1. Re:The purpose of language is to communicate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Why isn't it worth spending money on? Once those language are gone, they're gone forever. If for some reason knowing the language becomes important, it's too late. Plus, the more we know about one language or another, the more opportunities there are for linguists to understand how languages work.

      This whole attitude about how it needs to be immediately of some commercial value is disgusting and it's literally killing America, why on Earth are you going to let it do the same thing to Canada?

    2. Re:The purpose of language is to communicate by sysrammer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "My question is why, and what makes it worth spending all of that taxpayer money on?"
      "But I honestly don't see why it's suddenly a responsibility for governments to preserve it."

      Maybe a little refund on what they took?

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    3. Re:The purpose of language is to communicate by religionofpeas · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Ancient languages hold the culture, heritage and wisdom of the people

      And how many people are still alive that care about that particular culture, and would actually take the trouble to go listen to the restored recordings and understand what's being said ?

      Looks like it's mostly a hobby project for people who aren't even part of that culture.

  4. Re:Hold on....language evolution. by Kjella · · Score: 4, Insightful

    However, if we the human race are going to finally band together and solve our problems as a species, we are going to need one language.

    Doesn't mean it has to be one and only one language though. Most people are more than capable of being bi-lingual, their native language and the common language.

    It's purpose is for communication.

    Yes - but also from one generation to the next, passing down a heritage. It would be very strange to not speak or write the language of my parents and their generation.

    And as we are seeing in our digital age. English is winning the Darwinian race. It's perfect for representation with computers - unlike languages like Chinese and it has the leg up of being the language of the Creators of the Digital Age.

    English is a cluster fuck of a language and the single reason it's becoming the global language and not yet another regional language like Russian, Chinese or Arabic is the British Empire. It's the only language with reach in Europe (UK), North America (US & Canada), Africa (bunch of former colonies), Asia (India) and Oceania (Australia and New Zealand). And with the Germans losing two World Wars and the French being insufferable they cornered the market as the business language in Europe too. It helps that the Internet was started in the US, but if nobody else spoke English other countries would just make their own enclaves. There's many Russian, Chinese, Spanish etc. speakers that don't know the English-speaking part at all.

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