How Language Change Actually Took Place

The study of language change is a necessary correlate of historical semantics, if not a precondition for it. Yet there are many ways of looking for linguistic alterations: they could be operating at the level of ‘discourse,’ i.e. within an arborescence of ideas; or, they could derive from the materi...

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Main Author: Marc Aymes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association pour la Recherche sur le Moyen-Orient 2021-05-01
Series:European Journal of Turkish Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/ejts/6914
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author Marc Aymes
author_facet Marc Aymes
author_sort Marc Aymes
collection DOAJ
description The study of language change is a necessary correlate of historical semantics, if not a precondition for it. Yet there are many ways of looking for linguistic alterations: they could be operating at the level of ‘discourse,’ i.e. within an arborescence of ideas; or, they could derive from the material layout of linguistic artefacts. This paper leans toward the latter stance: it commits to analysing language change literally, at its most material, as a physical process of alteration. In administrative and judicial sources from the nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century Ottoman Empire, that process was referred to (among other names) as taḥrîf. Focusing on the materiality of such rewritings, interpolations, and emulations, means combining two kinds of historical semantics: one that rests on discrete and meaningful lexemes, the other on conceptual relationships embedded in phrasings that determine the choice of words. The case for methodological materialism also implies that language change be understood not primarily as a macroscopic, long-running, institutional process, but as a minute, largely ephemeral, practical event. This way of dealing with historical documents as intrinsically precarious readings lays the groundwork for approaching language change from below.
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spelling doaj.art-c4dcfe21dcc1470ba832354d2eb3078c2022-12-21T22:58:44ZengAssociation pour la Recherche sur le Moyen-OrientEuropean Journal of Turkish Studies1773-05462021-05-013110.4000/ejts.6914How Language Change Actually Took PlaceMarc AymesThe study of language change is a necessary correlate of historical semantics, if not a precondition for it. Yet there are many ways of looking for linguistic alterations: they could be operating at the level of ‘discourse,’ i.e. within an arborescence of ideas; or, they could derive from the material layout of linguistic artefacts. This paper leans toward the latter stance: it commits to analysing language change literally, at its most material, as a physical process of alteration. In administrative and judicial sources from the nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century Ottoman Empire, that process was referred to (among other names) as taḥrîf. Focusing on the materiality of such rewritings, interpolations, and emulations, means combining two kinds of historical semantics: one that rests on discrete and meaningful lexemes, the other on conceptual relationships embedded in phrasings that determine the choice of words. The case for methodological materialism also implies that language change be understood not primarily as a macroscopic, long-running, institutional process, but as a minute, largely ephemeral, practical event. This way of dealing with historical documents as intrinsically precarious readings lays the groundwork for approaching language change from below.http://journals.openedition.org/ejts/6914forgeryOttoman Empiremethodological materialismphilologyjusticetaḥrîf
spellingShingle Marc Aymes
How Language Change Actually Took Place
European Journal of Turkish Studies
forgery
Ottoman Empire
methodological materialism
philology
justice
taḥrîf
title How Language Change Actually Took Place
title_full How Language Change Actually Took Place
title_fullStr How Language Change Actually Took Place
title_full_unstemmed How Language Change Actually Took Place
title_short How Language Change Actually Took Place
title_sort how language change actually took place
topic forgery
Ottoman Empire
methodological materialism
philology
justice
taḥrîf
url http://journals.openedition.org/ejts/6914
work_keys_str_mv AT marcaymes howlanguagechangeactuallytookplace