Poignant Headline: “Ancient Tribal Language Becomes Extinct as Last Speaker Dies" (published in the "Guardian" in February 2010 – http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/feb/04/ancient-language-extinct-speaker-dies). The death of the last native speaker of the Bo language broke a 65,000-year link to one of the world's oldest cultures.
Taking the flip side of the debate, in a blog post from 2008, “Languages Are Vanishing: So What?” Roy F. Baumeister argues that maybe fewer languages would be better -- http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/cultural-animal/200811/languages-are-vanishing-so-what.
It seems to be a controversial issue, one that is particularly poignant to me. I remember sitting in a class a couple of years ago and being shocked when a participant suggested we would all be better off if there were fewer languages because it would make us more unified as a global population. The devastation I encountered at her comment and at the very thought of vanishing languages is also the number of nuances, rituals, stories, and traditions that are also lost as each language fades away and the last native speaker dies--especially knowing many indigenous languages were completely supressed by those who colonized the people who spoke them. What do you think about the whole issue?
If you have interest in the topic, consider checking out the work done by an organization called Cultural Survival who features a Language Revitalization initiative, especially among Native American cultures where they predict that in the U.S. alone, in the United States, where more than 70 Native American languages will disappear in the next 10 years: http://www.culturalsurvival.org/current-projects/native-language-revitalization-campaign.
Replies
Your observations about half-told stories and massive species inflation are, for me this morning, connected to the pastor in Florida who is insisting on hosting a book-burning of the Quran on September 11. The irony, of course in all this, is that the pastor, Terry Jones, along with members of his congregation, honestly believe this is what "God" wants. What is the irony in the fact that "God" is telling certain people to burn the "word of God" which others believe?
And, to answer your question, yes! The person who suggested we all would benefit from speaking one language was an English speaker and was clearly assuming the one language would "naturally" be English....
My fear is that we assume that our modern day languages, increasingly shaped by corporate and scientific terminology, are more advanced, meaning more expressive of reality, than earlier languages. I end this rant with the response from the old Saturday Night Live newsteam: Really!?
(I will apologize publically if after reading the attachments my fears are releaved.) :)