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Linguistic Theory a Contribution To an Anthropological Project

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 April 2024

Claude Hagège*
Affiliation:
Collège de France, Paris
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Up until today, the term linguistics has never figured in the title of any chair in the Collège de France. However, those having a rapport with language have not been lacking, among them those of “language and literature,” “history and philology” of various cultures, philology, although it does not study language itself, having recourse to it. There are four personalities to be kept in mind in the twentieth century: Abbé Rousselot, whose teaching of phonetics, although briefly, left a permanent mark on his listeners; Mario Roques, who gave a course in the “Histoire du vocabulaire français” from 1937 to 1946; Roland Barthes, who rendered “Sémiologie littéraire” illustrious from 1976 to 1980; and M. Zemb, who two years ago was the first linguist in the modern sense to enter the Collège, with a chair of “Grammaire et pensée allemandes.”

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1989 Fédération Internationale des Sociétés de Philosophie / International Federation of Philosophical Societies (FISP)

References

* This text gives the essentials of the inaugural lecture of the Chair of Linguistic Theory of the College de France, given on April 26, 1988.

1 Introduction à l'Atlas ethnographique du globe.

2 New edition of the Dictionnaire de la langue française, by Boiste.

3 "To Be a Scientist," Presidential Address, the Thirteenth Lacus Forum, Lake Bluff, The Linguistic Association of Canada and the United States, 1986 p. 1 (1-21).

4 Cf. Jaap J., SPA, Sémiologie et linguistique. Réflexions préparadigmatiques, Amsterdam, Rodopi 1985, p. 18.

5 Logique de la découverte scientifique, French translation of N. Thyssen-Rutten and Ph. Devaux, Paris, Payot 1984, p. 401.

6 The most important part of the statement.

7 Éloge de la folie, Ch. 49, last paragraph.

8 Saint-John Perse, Exil, Neiges: IV. "Seul à faire le compte…" Paris, Gallimard 1960.