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The Amazon Basin: linguistic areas and language contact

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posted on 2023-11-10, 03:31 authored by Alexandra AikhenvaldAlexandra Aikhenvald
The chapter focuses on area diffusion and linguistic areas in the Amazon Basin, one of the linguistically most diverse regions in the world. The long-term history of language interaction in the linguistically highly diverse basin of the Amazon Basin has been marred by a large scale language extinction and obliteration of contact patterns. At present, the Vaupés River Basin area is the best established linguistic area. Linguistic and cultural features of neighbouring languages in the Upper Rio Negro region, and in the basin of neighbouring Caquetá and Putumayo, point towards possible areal diffusion in the past. The Upper Xingu region is a well-established cultural area; however, given its relatively shallow time depth, its status as a linguistic area is questionable. A number of other regions within Amazonia show traces of possible language contact with inconclusive evidence in favour of long-standing areal diffusion. A number of pan-Amazonian features are shared by genetically unrelated, and often geographically remote, languages. These may well reflect traces of linguistic contact that can no longer be recovered.

Funding

Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)

History

Editor

Mufwene SS; Escobar AM

Start Page

232

End Page

260

Number of Pages

29

ISBN-10

1009115774

ISBN-13

9781009115773

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Place of Publication

Cambridge, UK

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • Yes

Cultural Warning

This research output may contain the images, voices or names of Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander or First Nations people now deceased. We apologize for any distress that may occur.

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Chapter Number

8

Parent Title

The Cambridge Handbook of Language Contact Volume 1: Population Movement and Language Change