This book puts forward a different approach to language change, the punctuated equilibrium model. This is based on the premise that during most of the 100,000 or more years that humans have had language, states of equilibrium have existed during which linguistic features diffused across the languages in a given area so that they gradually converged on a common prototype. From time to time, the state of equilibrium would be punctuated, with expansion and split of peoples and of languages, most recently, as a result of European colonisation and the globalisation of communication which are likely to result in the extinction, within the next hundred years, of 90% of the languages currently spoken. Professor Dixon suggests that every linguist should assume a responsibility for documenting some of these languages before they disappear.
Contributes to the 'language evolution' debate, with an alternative model for long-term language change, the punctuated equilibrium model
Challenges speculation concerning the reconstruction of the 'proto-languages' of humankind
Points to the limited usefulness of the 'family tree' model and 'comparative method' of reconstruction in historical linguistics
Author(s): R. M. W. Dixon
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Year: 1997
Acknowledgements
1. Introduction
2. Preliminaries
3. Linguistic Areas and Diffusion
4. The Family Tree Model
5. Modes of change
6. The Punctuated Equilibrium Model
7. More on proto-languages
8. Recent history
9. Today's priorities
10. Summary and prospects
Appendix - where the comparative method discovery procedure fails
References
Index