Linguaphile

Linguaphile

By Julie Sedivy

Pages

338

Rating

3.87

Year

2024

EssaysPopular ScienceMemoirPsychologyScienceLinguistics

Description

If there is one feature that defines the human condition, it is written, spoken, signed, understood, and misunderstood, in all its infinite glory. In this ingenious, lyrical exploration, Julie Sedivy draws on years of experience in the lab and a lifetime of linguistic love to bring the discoveries of linguistics home, to the place language itself occupies within the yearnings of the human heart and amid the complex social bonds that it makes possible.

A Life of Language Love follows the path that language takes through a human life—from an infant’s first attempts at sense-making to the vulnerabilities and losses that accompany aging. As Sedivy shows, however, language and life are inextricable, and here she offers them: a childish misunderstanding of her mother’s meaning reveals the difficulty of relating to other minds; frustration with “professional” communication styles exposes the labyrinth of standards that define success; the first signs of hearing loss lead to a meditation on society’s discomfort with physical and mental limitations.

Part memoir, part scientific exploration, and part cultural commentary, this book epitomizes the thrills of a life steeped in the aesthetic delights of language and the joys of its scientific scrutiny.

A celebration of the beauty and mystery of language and how it shapes our lives, our loves, and our world.

Linguaphile by Julie Sedivy - Bookist