‘Collect, protect, connect’: Yale researcher aims to rescue disappearing languages

Mark Turin, an associate research scientist at the Macmillan Center’s South Asian Studies Council, is working to preserve the languages and oral traditions of the Himalayas.

As more and more people embrace the global languages of English, Mandarin Chinese, Spanish, and Arabic, other languages are rapidly disappearing. In fact, half of the estimated 6,000–7,000 languages spoken around the world today will likely be extinct by the next century, according to the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).

In an effort to stem the tide of language loss, anthropologists and linguists from a number of organizations — UNESCO, National Geographic, and the Yale-based Endangered Language Fund, among them — have for many years been recording and documenting vanishing languages and the unique cultures they convey.

Mark Turin, an associate research scientist at the Macmillan Center’s South Asian Studies Council, who specializes in the languages and oral traditions of the Himalayas, is following in that tradition. His recently published book, “A Grammar of Thangmi with an Ethnolinguistic Introduction to the Speakers and their Culture,” grows out of his experience living, working, and raising a family in an isolated village in Nepal.

Documenting the Thangmi language and culture is just a starting point for Turin, who seeks to expand his efforts to include other languages and oral traditions across the Himalayan reaches of India, Nepal, Bhutan, and the Tibetan plateau. But he is not content to simply record these vanishing voices before they disappear without record.

At the University of Cambridge, where he held his last academic position, Turin discovered a treasure trove of archival materials — including photographs, film footage, audio recordings, and field notes — which had remained uncatalogued and were badly in need of preservation.

Now, through the two organizations that he has founded — the Digital Himalaya Project and the World Oral Literature Project — Turin has launched a campaign to make such documents, found in libraries and repositories around the world, accessible not just to scholars but to the descendants of communities from whom the materials were originally collected.

Turin sums up his mission with three words: “collect, protect, connect.” Thanks to digital technology and the widely available Internet, he notes, moribund or even dormant languages can be revived and reconnected with speech communities.

In the audio podcast “Preserving Endangered Languages and Oral Traditions” (here on Yale iTunesU), Turin describes his research and the projects he has initiated to record endangered languages; to preserve and digitize records that already exist; and to disseminate such archival recordings online.

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Media Contact

Dorie Baker: dorie.baker@yale.edu, 203-432-1345