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OverviewLyle Campbell's linguistic fieldwork has taken him to numerous countries, sometimes in challenging circumstances. It has led to exciting discoveries including a new language in southeastern Guatemala, a unique speech sound, unknown in any other language, in the Nivacl language of Paraguay and Argentina, and unusual and unique features in several other languages. Along the way, he has experienced dangers and challenges, the joys and excitement of fieldwork, and encountered first-hand the importance of collaborating with indigenous groups to help document and revitalize their languages. Written with humour, heart, and a clear dedication to endangered languages and their speakers, Lyle's vivid memoir is a lesson not only on life in the field but on the importance of language documentation. With so many of the world's languages being lost at an alarming rate, this remains the most compelling and urgent task for linguists now and into the future. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Lyle Campbell , Wade DavisPublisher: Edinburgh University Press Imprint: Edinburgh University Press Dimensions: Width: 13.80cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.499kg ISBN: 9781474494144ISBN 10: 1474494145 Pages: 304 Publication Date: 22 December 2021 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviews"Campbell presents an entertaining book without the heaviness of linguistic theories that are difficult to grasp for those who have not been trained in linguistics and linguistic anthropology.--Oliver Delto, Technical University of Darmstadt ""Journal of Linguistic Anthropology"" This remarkable book, part fieldwork advice and part fieldwork autobiography, is written by one of the most experienced field linguists in the world. Practical advice on such topics as what to take to the field and how to avoid exotic diseases and political violence is punctuated by sometimes hair-raising personal anecdotes---monkey attacks, an attempted coral snake incursion into the author's bed, clever thieves, and more.--Prof. Sarah G. Thomason, University of Michigan Campbell is an experienced guide to the ""perils, parasites, politics, and violence"" of linguistic fieldwork, as well as its joys. Linguist on the Loose: Adventures and misadventures in fieldwork would be instructive to those embarking on a career in this area of linguistics, as well as would-be explorers and travellers seeking adventure off the beaten track.--Graham Elliott ""The Linguist"" Linguist on the Loose: Adventures and Misadventures in Fieldwork is undoubtedly a splendid publication by Lyle Campbell, a field linguist internationally recognized for his linguistic studies in the field of historical linguistics, but, above all, in the documentation, description and revitalization of endangered languages, having as its central focus the languages and cultures of the Amerindian peoples, who, for the most part, have become minorities within globalizing national societies.The contents carefully presented by Campbell are a clear example that it is possible to do linguistic science without neglecting its social contributions, mainly in those societies that are characterized by ethnic, linguistic and cultural diversity.--Angel Corbera Mori & Camille Cardoso Miranda, Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Brasil ""LIAMES, Campinas"" A rollicking account of the dos and don'ts of fieldwork, richly exemplified from Campbell's decades of experience, Linguist on the Loose does for linguistics what Indiana Jones does for archaeology with the advantage that Linguist is all true: an impassioned plea for language documentation, a call to adventure.... and hard work.--Prof. Judith Maxwell, Tulane University" "Campbell presents an entertaining book without the heaviness of linguistic theories that are difficult to grasp for those who have not been trained in linguistics and linguistic anthropology.--Oliver Delto, Technical University of Darmstadt ""Journal of Linguistic Anthropology"" This remarkable book, part fieldwork advice and part fieldwork autobiography, is written by one of the most experienced field linguists in the world. Practical advice on such topics as what to take to the field and how to avoid exotic diseases and political violence is punctuated by sometimes hair-raising personal anecdotes---monkey attacks, an attempted coral snake incursion into the author's bed, clever thieves, and more.--Prof. Sarah G. Thomason, University of Michigan Linguist on the Loose: Adventures and Misadventures in Fieldwork is undoubtedly a splendid publication by Lyle Campbell, a field linguist internationally recognized for his linguistic studies in the field of historical linguistics, but, above all, in the documentation, description and revitalization of endangered languages, having as its central focus the languages and cultures of the Amerindian peoples, who, for the most part, have become minorities within globalizing national societies.The contents carefully presented by Campbell are a clear example that it is possible to do linguistic science without neglecting its social contributions, mainly in those societies that are characterized by ethnic, linguistic and cultural diversity.--Angel Corbera Mori & Camille Cardoso Miranda, Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Brasil ""LIAMES, Campinas"" A rollicking account of the dos and don'ts of fieldwork, richly exemplified from Campbell's decades of experience, Linguist on the Loose does for linguistics what Indiana Jones does for archaeology with the advantage that Linguist is all true: an impassioned plea for language documentation, a call to adventure.... and hard work.--Prof. Judith Maxwell, Tulane University Campbell is an experienced guide to the ""perils, parasites, politics, and violence"" of linguistic fieldwork, as well as its joys. Linguist on the Loose: Adventures and misadventures in fieldwork would be instructive to those embarking on a career in this area of linguistics, as well as would-be explorers and travellers seeking adventure off the beaten track.--Graham Elliott ""The Linguist""" Author InformationLyle Campbell, Professor of Linguistics, University of Hawai'i at Manoa. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |