Vintage Canada. Toronto, Canada. 2004. — 256 p.
ISBN: 0679311017, 0679311998, 009946022X
Half the world's languages are threatened with extinction over the next century, as English and the rest of the world's top twenty languages drive all before them. What ways of looking at the world will die along with them, what cultural riches, what experiences, histories and memories? And how does it feel to be one of the last remaining speakers of a language that is on its way to extinction? What chance is there of saving any of these languages? Is it feasible in the long term or even worthwhile?
Mark Abley's journeys among the speakers of languages at the brink takes him to aboriginal Australia (where he meets the last surviving fluent male speaker of Mati Ke, who cannot speak to the only other fluent speaker, as she is his sister and in their culture it is forbidden to speak to siblings once one has reached puberty) and to American Indian reservations, as well as to places where the languages are fighting back - Wales, the Faeroe islands, the Isle of Man - whilst also charting the triumphant return of Hebrew.
Contents
Patrick’s Language
Dreamers: Languages in Northern Australia
Constructing the World
Unseen and Unheard: Yuchi
Dont Vori, Bi Khepi
Leaving the Grave: Manx
The Verbs of Boro
The Lion’s Tongue: Provençal
Melting at the Edges
The Words That Come Before All Else: Mohawk
Humboldt’s Parrot
Ways of Escape: Yiddish
Revival
The Iron of Language: Welsh
The Face of All the Earth