Linguistic Relativity
An essential guide to past debates and future prospects
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP USA
- Date of Publication 18 August 2025
- ISBN 9780197799840
- Binding Paperback
- No. of pages160 pages
- Size 208x143x6 mm
- Weight 163 g
- Language English 1119
Categories
Short description:
Linguistic Relativity is an introduction to linguistic relativism which delves into its historical antecedents as well as its contemporary applications
MoreLong description:
The concept of linguistic relativity (or Whorfianism) has its roots in the linguistic anthropology of Edward Sapir and his student Benjamin Whorf in the early twentieth century. However, questions over the relationship between natural language and human cognition go much further and deeper. Unfortunately, linguistic relativity has about as many misinterpretations as it does labels (linguistic relativity, linguistic relativism, linguistic determinism, Whorfianism, Sapir-Whorf hypothesis - weak and strong).
The idea that language determines thought through an environmentally constrained feedback system is at the heart of most concepts associated with linguistic relativity. The real philosophical questions, however, only seem to present themselves at a level beyond the trivial truism that linguistic structure has an effect on thought, i.e. different languages might encode environmental information differently resulting in variation in things like processing times, measured in psycholinguistic experiments.
These questions are important for a number of related disciplines, yet the concept itself is one of the most misunderstood in modern anthropology, sociology, philosophy of language, linguistics, and cognitive science. This book contributes much needed clarity to a theoretical landscape at the centre of insights into what makes us human, both linguistically and cognitively.
Table of Contents:
1 Basic Linguistic Relativity: A quick sketch
2 Some Historical Antecedents of Linguistic Relativity
3 Edward Sapir and Benjamin Lee Whorf: Lives, Research,
and Whor
anism
4. Three Interpretations of Linguistic Relativity
5 Linguistic Relativity and Cognitive Science
6 Conclusion: Whorf and Relativity { Yes? or No?