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語言、技術(shù)與社會 讀者對象:教師、學(xué)生 ![]()
本書探索語言、技術(shù)與社會之間的相互關(guān)系,討論自文字——第一項專門為語言而設(shè)計的技術(shù)——到數(shù)碼時代機器翻譯、網(wǎng)絡(luò)語言等各種與語言相關(guān)的創(chuàng)新。以語言技術(shù)史為線,以語言技術(shù)原理為點,以語言技術(shù)發(fā)展產(chǎn)生的社會影響為面,通過精心的引導(dǎo),將語言、技術(shù)與學(xué)生個體和社會的重要議題關(guān)聯(lián)起來,討論書寫系統(tǒng)與語言之間的關(guān)系、讀寫能力對認知和科學(xué)發(fā)展的影響、印刷機在中西方社會的影響、打字機對現(xiàn)代化辦公與性別平等的影響、電報機與計算機編碼的源起、機器翻譯的使用和局限性、人工智能的突破以及未來前景、網(wǎng)絡(luò)和社交媒體對語言產(chǎn)生的影響等話題。教材以思想性帶動語言學(xué)習(xí),通過描述、闡釋、分析和評價語言、技術(shù)與社會之間的關(guān)系,增強學(xué)生的英語綜合應(yīng)用能力和學(xué)習(xí)共同體構(gòu)建意識,發(fā)展學(xué)生的跨文化交際能力和批判性思維能力。
劉小俠
---------------------------- 北京大學(xué)英語語言文學(xué)博士,北京大學(xué)英語系副教授。研究方向為英語語言學(xué),發(fā)表論文20篇,出版專著1部(Vilem Mathesius’Thoughts on Word Order: Toward a Linguistic Historiography. Prague: Bronx,2013),譯著1部(奧托·葉斯柏森著《英語的成長和結(jié)構(gòu)》,商務(wù)印書館印行“語言學(xué)名著譯叢”之一,已交稿待付梓),作為負責(zé)人完成省部級項目1個,本科重點課程建設(shè)項目2個,立項數(shù)字化教材建設(shè)項目1個,獲得國家基金委青年骨干教師項目選派2次,參與教材編寫3部,獲得省部級教學(xué)獎1次,校級教學(xué)獎1次。
Contents
Chapter I What Is Language .......................................................................1
Jumping-in .....................................................................................................................................1
1.1 What is language ..................................................................................................................2
1.2 Elements of language ...........................................................................................................3
1.2.1 Phonetics ...................................................................................................................3
1.2.2 Phonology .................................................................................................................8
1.2.3 Morphology.............................................................................................................10
1.2.4 Syntax .....................................................................................................................13
1.2.5 Semantics ................................................................................................................15
1.2.6 Pragmatics ..............................................................................................................19
Summing-up.................................................................................................................................21
References....................................................................................................................................22
Further reading.............................................................................................................................24
Chapter II How Writing Came About .......................................................25
Jumping-in ...................................................................................................................................25
2.1 How writing originated ......................................................................................................27
2.1.1 Pictographic theory .................................................................................................27
2.1.2 Token theory ...........................................................................................................29
2.2 Logogram at the root of invented writing ..........................................................................33
2.3 Mechanism in action: the rebus principle ..........................................................................36
2.3.1 Sumerian cuneiform ...............................................................................................36
2.3.2 Oracle bone inscriptions .........................................................................................37
2.4 Mechanism in action: the acrophonic principle .................................................................38
2.4.1 Egyptian hieroglyph ...............................................................................................39
2.4.2 Maya script ............................................................................................................. 40
2.5 Extension and differentiation ............................................................................................. 40
Summing-up ................................................................................................................................ 42
References ................................................................................................................................... 43
Further reading............................................................................................................................. 44
Chapter III How Writing Represents Language ........................................ 45
Jumping-in ................................................................................................................................... 45
3.1 Problems with a “universal” writing system ..................................................................... 46
3.2 Glottograhic: logographic vs. phonographic ..................................................................... 49
3.3 Phonographic writing systems ........................................................................................... 51
3.3.1 Syllabic writing ...................................................................................................... 51
3.3.2 Segmental writing .................................................................................................. 55
Summing-up ................................................................................................................................ 65
References ................................................................................................................................... 66
Further reading ............................................................................................................................ 66
Chapter IV Interaction between Language and Writing: Decipherment of Egyptian Hieroglyph ............................................................................... 67
Jumping-in ................................................................................................................................... 67
4.1 Rosetta Stone: pattern of fusion ......................................................................................... 70
4.2 The decipherment: competition and cooperation .............................................................. 72
4.3 Methodology of the decipherment ..................................................................................... 73
4.3.1 Distribution analysis for patterns ........................................................................... 73
4.3.2 Held-out data for verification ................................................................................. 75
4.3.3 The underlying language to stand on ..................................................................... 77
4.3.4 Interaction between language and writing ............................................................ 81
4.4 Number of symbols and type of script ............................................................................... 83
Summing-up ................................................................................................................................ 84
References.................................................................................................................................... 86
Further reading ............................................................................................................................ 87
Chapter V Interaction between Language and Writing: Decipherment of Linear B .................................................................................. 88
Jumping-in ................................................................................................................................... 88
5.1 Linear B .............................................................................................................................. 89
5.2 The decipherment of Linear B ........................................................................................... 92
5.2.1 Alice Kober: building the grid ............................................................................... 92
5.2.2 Emmett Bennett: expanding with data ................................................................... 95
5.2.3 Michael Ventris: assigning sound values .............................................................. 96
5.2.4 John Chadwick: supporting, refining, documenting ............................................ 101
5.3 Frequency, entropy, and more .......................................................................................... 103
Summing-up .............................................................................................................................. 106
References.................................................................................................................................. 108
Further reading .......................................................................................................................... 109
Chapter VI Writing, Literacy, and Society .............................................. 110
Jumping-in.................................................................................................................................. 110
6.1 Literacy: the multifaceted nature ..................................................................................... 112
6.2 Literate society vs. oral society ....................................................................................... 114
6.3 Alphabetic literacy vs. logographic literacy .................................................................... 117
6.4 Script reform and literacy rate: the Chinese case ............................................................ 119
6.4.1 Foreign attempts to romanize Chinese ................................................................ 120
6.4.2 Native attempts to romanize Chinese .................................................................. 122
6.4.3 Character simplification ....................................................................................... 127
Summing-up .............................................................................................................................. 128
References ................................................................................................................................. 130
Further reading .......................................................................................................................... 132
Chapter VII Printing, Stability, and Variability .........................................133
Jumping-in ................................................................................................................................. 133
7.1 Printing in China............................................................................................................... 134
7.1.1 Block printing ....................................................................................................... 137
7.1.2 Movable type printing........................................................................................... 138
7.2 Printing in Europe............................................................................................................. 142
7.2.1 Manuscripts and scribes........................................................................................ 143
7.2.2 Gutenberg and the printing press.......................................................................... 143
7.2.3 Gutenberg and the Gothic type ............................................................................ 145
7.2.4 Printing and the standardization of English ......................................................... 147
Summing-up............................................................................................................................... 154
References ................................................................................................................................. 155
Further reading .......................................................................................................................... 157
Chapter VIII Typewriter, Mind, and Style............................................... 158
Jumping-in ................................................................................................................................. 158
8.1 Malling-Hansen and Writing Ball .................................................................................... 159
8.2 Sholes and the QWERTY keyboard ................................................................................ 161
8.2.1 Theories on the QWERTY rationale .................................................................... 161
8.2.2 Head start and path dependency .......................................................................... 166
8.3 Typewriter and writing style ............................................................................................ 168
8.4 Chinese typewriter ........................................................................................................... 171
8.4.1 Characters of common usage and movable typewriter ....................................... 171
8.4.2 Divisible type and combinatorial typewriter ....................................................... 173
8.4.3 Search-writing and MingKwai typewriter ........................................................... 174
8.5 Typewriter and women’s entrance into office .................................................................. 176
Summing-up .............................................................................................................................. 178
References.................................................................................................................................. 179
Further reading .......................................................................................................................... 180
Chapter IX Telegraph, Morse Code, and Global Connectivity...................181
Jumping-in ................................................................................................................................. 181
9.1 The semiotic architecture: Morse Code ........................................................................... 182
9.2 Logographic writing and Morse Code ............................................................................. 186
9.3 “Communication” reconceptualized ................................................................................ 191
9.4 Journalistic style, news objectivity, and information consumption................................. 193
9.5 Cable adventure, a thread across the ocean, and global connectivity.............................. 196
Summing-up............................................................................................................................... 198
References.................................................................................................................................. 199
Further reading .......................................................................................................................... 200
Chapter X Linguistics, Rationalism, and Rule-Based Machine Translation ..................................................................................................201
Jumping-in ................................................................................................................................. 201
10.1 Formal grammar and MT ....................................................................................................... 203
10.2 Parsing: constituency vs. dependency............................................................................... 204
10.2.1 Constituency structure ........................................................................................ 205
10.2.2 Dependency structure ......................................................................................... 207
10.2.3 Trees and brackets............................................................................................... 208
10.3 Types of RBMT ......................................................................................................................210
10.3.1 Direct translation approach................................................................................. 211
10.3.2 Transfer approach ............................................................................................... 212
10.3.3 Interlingual approach ......................................................................................... 215
10.4 Achievements and limitations............................................................................................ 216
Summing-up ......................................................................................................................................... 217
References.................................................................................................................................. 218
Further reading .......................................................................................................................... 219
Chapter XI Corpora, Empiricism and Data-driven Machine Translation .............................................................................................. 220
Jumping-in ................................................................................................................................. 220
11.1 Text, corpora, and SMT ................................................................................................. 221
11.2 Probability and SMT....................................................................................................... 226
11.3 IBM models: groundwork of SMT ................................................................................ 228
11.4 Scope of SMT: from word to sentence .......................................................................... 231
11.5 Neural MT and beyond .................................................................................................. 233
Summing-up............................................................................................................................... 237
References.................................................................................................................................. 239
Further reading........................................................................................................................... 240
Chapter XII MT Literacy and MT Ethics ............................................... 241
Jumping-in ................................................................................................................................. 241
12.1 Ambiguity, thy name is language .................................................................................. 242
12.1.1 Lexical ambiguity ............................................................................................... 242
12.1.2 Morphological ambiguity ................................................................................... 243
12.1.3 Syntactical ambiguity ......................................................................................... 245
12.1.4 Discoursal ambiguity ......................................................................................... 246
12.2 MT ethics ........................................................................................................................ 249
12.3 MT literacy in the scholarly community ....................................................................... 253
12.3.1 As text creator .................................................................................................... 253
12.3.2 As MT user ......................................................................................................... 254
Summing-up .............................................................................................................................. 255
References ................................................................................................................................. 257
Further reading .......................................................................................................................... 259
Chapter XIII Social Media and Language Play........................................ 260
Jumping-in ................................................................................................................................. 260
13.1 Language: spoken vs. written ........................................................................................ 262
13.2 Language online: a third kind? ...................................................................................... 263
13.3 Features of CMC ............................................................................................................ 264
13.4 Language play in WeChat group chat ............................................................................ 266
13.4.1 Bracketed annotation and Cooperative Principle............................................... 266
13.4.2 Bracketed annotation and Politeness Principle .................................................. 270
13.4.3 Bracketed annotation: playing by flouting maxims ........................................... 273
Summing-up............................................................................................................................... 275
References ................................................................................................................................. 277
Further reading .......................................................................................................................... 278
Master Bibliography.................................................................................. 279
Works Consulted ....................................................................................... 299
Name Index ............................................................................................... 307
Subject Index............................................................................................. 314
List of Figures.......................................................................................................318
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