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Creole Speaks: Creole Understands: Part One
| Article
# : |
14129 |
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Section : |
CULTURE
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| Issue
Date : |
1 / 1988 |
3,863 Words |
| Author
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Robert Lawless Robert Lawless is professor of anthropology at the University
of Florida. |
One of the most solidly entrenched misunderstandings about Haiti concerns its language, Creole. For many years popular wisdom held that Haitian Creole was an inferior form of French, the language of the island's colonizers and, until recently, the "official" language of Haiti. According to this view, Creole was developed by a people who were capable only of an imperfect imitation of the dominant language.
Other theories have also held that Haitian Creole, like other creoles, is an imitative mutation of different language combinations. But recent research shows something quite different. Haitian Creole evolved in modern times and may contradict notions of language being timeless. This language, as well as other creoles, may give insights into the universal properties of all human languages, and into the origin of language itself.
Misconceptions about language are not at all uncommon. The disparity between the lay person's notion of language and the linguist's scientific analysis plagues scholars. Ethnocentric and amateurish opinions on language abound in the popular media, and linguists generally label these notions as prescriptive. Prescriptivism is an ideology that professes the absolute, correct, and unchanging nature of language; it implies an authoritarian belief in the unquestioned value of order, stability, and tradition.
In addition to the belief in an unchanging, correct form for communication, prescriptivism supplies its adherents with surprisingly precise options about "primitive" and "civilized" languages. Primitive languages are simple, easy-to-learn (though not worth learning), poor vehicles for expressing refined thoughts;
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