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Don't Sleep, There Are Snakes: Life and Language in the Amazonian Jungle.


Don't Sleep, There Are Snakes: Life and Language in the Amazonian Jungle

Daniel L. Everett

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Daniel Everett Daniel Leonard Everett (born 1951 in Holtville, California[1]) is a linguistics professor who currently serves as Chairperson of the Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures at Illinois State University in Normal, Illinois.  is no by-the-book linguist, If you read his new book, you'll find out how Everett went from a 26-year-old missionary taking his family to live with and proselytize pros·e·ly·tize  
v. pros·e·ly·tized, pros·e·ly·tiz·ing, pros·e·ly·tiz·es

v.intr.
1. To induce someone to convert to one's own religious faith.

2.
 members of a remote Brazilian tribe to a major thorn in the side of influential language theorists. Along the way, he became immersed in the unusual culture and language of his Amazonian hosts, the Piraha people. These deceptively simple folk transformed the missionary, not vice versa VICE VERSA. On the contrary; on opposite sides. .

With straightforward writing, Everett explains how he decoded the mysterious Piraha tongue during fieldwork that spanned 30 years. In that time, he became a full-fledged linguist with a resume that included many colorful and harrowing jungle experiences. Everett recounts a desperate canoe and boat trip up the Amazon River Amazon River
 Portuguese Rio Amazonas

River, northern South America. It is the largest river in the world in volume and area of drainage basin; only the Nile River of eastern and northeastern Africa exceeds it in length.
 to save his malaria-stricken wife and daughter, and a watery encounter with an anaconda Anaconda, city, United States
Anaconda (ănəkŏn`də), city (1990 pop. 10,278), seat of Deer Lodge co., SW Mont.; inc. 1887.
, He also gives the reader a feel for how he began to understand a language that had stumped other linguists.

In defiance of Noam Chomsky's theory of universal grammar universal grammar
n. Abbr. UG
A system of grammatical rules and constraints believed to underlie all natural languages.
 and Steven Pinker's "language instinct" Everett concluded that the Piraha language, including its grammar, had been shaped by a culture that valued only a person's immediate experience, not past or future events. Everett found that the Piraha have no words for colors or numbers, no way to embed phrases within other phrases and one of the smallest sets of speech sounds in the world.

Everett portrays these masters of jungle survival as a generally jovial (Jules' Own Version of the International Algebraic Language) An ALGOL-like programming language developed by Systems Development Corp. in the early 1960s and widely used in the military. Its key architect was Jules Schwartz.  bunch who have no creation myths or storytelling traditions, They live in the present and believe only in what they and their comrades directly observe--a cultural characteristic that leads Everett to abandon his own faith.--Bruce Bower Pantheon Books, 2008, 283 p., $26.95.
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Author:Bower, Bruce
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief article
Date:Jan 17, 2009
Words:304
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