129: They Started It: Children and Language Evolution (with Madeleine Beekman)

129: They Started It: Children and Language Evolution (with Madeleine Beekman)

We've asked linguists about how language began, but what would an evolutionary biologist tell you? Prof Madeleine Beekman says it's part of a complex web of body, brain, and community, and at the heart of it is (perhaps surprisingly) childcare. Madeleine is the author of The Origin of Language: How We Learned to Speak and Why.

Timestamps

  • Cold open: 0:00
  • Intros: 0:42
  • News: 9:07
  • Related or Not: 30:02
  • Interview with Madeleine Beekman: 49:43
  • Words of the Week: 1:40:49
  • Comments: 2:01:30
  • The Reads: 2:08:07
  • Outtakes: 2:17:38

Jaksot(100)

39: Is This a Reference? (with Sylvia Sierra)

39: Is This a Reference? (with Sylvia Sierra)

You probably communicate with your friends using media references all the time. Not that there's anything wrong with that. But why do we include media references, when we could just talk? Turns out it has a lot to do with identity, building social relationships, and communication — all the stuff that language normally does. We're having a media-heavy discussion with Dr Sylvia Sierra about her book Millennials Talking Media: Creating Intertextual Identities in Everyday Conversation.

1 Marras 20211h 41min

38: Generativism 2: How It's Going (with Taylor Miller and Adam Tallman)

38: Generativism 2: How It's Going (with Taylor Miller and Adam Tallman)

This is the second of a two-parter on generativism, the linguistic school of thought originated by Noam Chomsky. This time, it's from the perspective of early-career researchers. How is generativism relevant to them, and how do they regard its claims? We ask: What importance does linguistic theory have on day-to-day research? How does generativism relate to nativism, the idea that at least some language is innate? Is there a conflict between generativism and functionalism today? What's the next step in the generative enterprise?

14 Loka 20211h 56min

37: Generativism 1: How It Started (with David Adger and John Goldsmith)

37: Generativism 1: How It Started (with David Adger and John Goldsmith)

We're doing a deep dive into generativism, the linguistic school of thought championed by Noam Chomsky. It's had an enormous impact on the direction of linguistics, and even those who disagree with the generative programme will be at least somewhat conversant with its claims and the debate around it. Here, we'll try to answer questions such as: What is generativism, and what are its claims? What does generativism help you to do in linguistics? What is the relationship to nativism, the idea that some aspects language are inborn? How does generativism relate to functionalism? What should the next generation of generative linguists keep in mind?

30 Syys 20211h 50min

36: Journal Club: Clickety Clack (with Stephen Mann)

36: Journal Club: Clickety Clack (with Stephen Mann)

The Because Language team are talking through some of the most interesting research around, and you get to listen! Valuable medical information gets lost when Indigenous languages are wiped out When it comes to learning languages, multilinguals have the edge over bilinguals A generativist argues that languages don't adapt to their environment. What's behind this? And it's iconicity turned up to 11: some experiments that explore how language began.

13 Syys 202153min

35: Something's Got to Change (with Lesley Woods and Alice Gaby)

35: Something's Got to Change (with Lesley Woods and Alice Gaby)

Linguistics as a discipline throws up challenges to Indigenous linguists. At the same time, they're the ones called upon to fix it. It can't stay like this. How do we make linguistics a safe place to work? Daniel, Hedvig, and very special co-host Ayesha Marshall are having a yarn with Lesley Woods and Dr Alice Gaby about their work in changing linguistics for the better.

27 Elo 20211h 21min

34: OzCLO 2021: 2 Cool 4 School (with Elisabeth Mayer, Henry Wu, Victoria Papaioannou, and the students of Melbourne Girls Grammar School)

34: OzCLO 2021: 2 Cool 4 School (with Elisabeth Mayer, Henry Wu, Victoria Papaioannou, and the students of Melbourne Girls Grammar School)

OzCLO is the Australian Computational and Linguistic Olympiad. It gets students together to compete and solve linguistic problems. It's also a gateway to further linguistic study. We've brought some of the winning students to compete in a linguistic quiz with Ben and Hedvig. Will it go well for them?

5 Elo 20211h 46min

33: You're Wrong About Everett, Roberts, Blasi 2015

33: You're Wrong About Everett, Roberts, Blasi 2015

All it took was a tweet. Last week, linguists refocused their attention on a paper about humidity and tone. Was it bad linguistics? Environmental determinism? The reaction said a lot about linguistics and the nature of linguistic communication in the digital age.

25 Heinä 20211h 25min

32: Fallen Leaves: The Chinese Languages (with Wu Mei-Shin, Ye Jingting, and Israel Lai)

32: Fallen Leaves: The Chinese Languages (with Wu Mei-Shin, Ye Jingting, and Israel Lai)

What we call sometimes Chinese is really a gigantic family of languages. They're somewhat divided in mutual intelligibility, and somewhat united in their writing system. How are they different, and how are they maintaining themselves? Two Chinese researchers, Wu Mei-Shin and Ye Jingting, join us. And what's going on in the Cantonese lingopod world? We're joined by Israel Lai of Rhapsody in Lingo.

18 Heinä 20211h 38min

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