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11 - Second Generation of American Humboldtians in the Nineteenth Century

Language Typology, History, and Evolution (Lieber, Gatschet, and Brinton)

from Part IV - Wilhelm von Humboldt’s Impact on Americanist Linguistics and Anthropology

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 January 2024

Emanuel J. Drechsel
Affiliation:
University of Hawaii, Manoa
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Summary

Humboldt also influenced a second generation of American linguists: Francis Lieber, who still had been a personal protégé of Humboldt’s and who studied Black English of South Carolina, English creoles of the Caribbean, and Chinook Jargon together with language acquisition; Albert S. Gatschet as a former student of the Humboldtian J. C. Eduard Buschmann in Berlin and as the only professional linguist at J. W. Powell’s Bureau of American Ethnology, studying diverse American languages; and Daniel G. Brinton, who examined Humboldt intensively, translated an essay of his on the verb in American languages into English, but misinterpreted Humboldt in social-evolutionist terms. Despite individual achievements, the second generation of American Humboldtians ultimately remained too disjointed to have much of a long-term impact, and Brinton appeared a renegade with his continued insistence on social Darwinism. When Brinton passed away, Humboldtian ideas evidently had little of a chance for survival in the United States.

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Wilhelm von Humboldt and Early American Linguistics
Resources and Inspirations
, pp. 223 - 251
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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