Sociolinguistics is the subfield of linguistics that examines the relationship between language and society.
Sapir describes language as a purely human and non-instinctive method of communicating ideas, emotions and desires by means of a system of voluntarily produced symbols.
Modern Linguistics see language as a system of arbitrary vocal symbols (sound and meaning vary in language) used for human communication.
Sign and Object in words
Onomatopoeic/sign: Sign/word replicates some characteristic of the object (for example Buzzz)
Symbol: Arbitrary relationship between the sign and object, but which is understood as a convention. (green light in traffic = go)
Index: logical relation between sign and object (weathercock)
Icon: involves a relationship whereby the sign replicates some characteristic of the object, such as a drawing of a cat replicates the shape of a cat.
Linguists see language as an instinct, as a manifestation of an ability that is specific to humans.
History of Sociolinguistics
In 500BC the first linguistic study was done by Pánini and his followers in India. They did oral treaties on phonetics and language structure. In 1786 Modern Linguistics was founded by Sir William Jones. In the early 20th century structuralism predominated linguistics (internal systems of language, instead of historical comparisons), but in 1957 the Generative Linguistics is founded by Chomsky (shift to a more psycho-biological stage, how do children acquire language).
Chomsky: Linguistic theory is primarily concerned with an ideal speaker-listener, in a completely homogeneous speech community, who knows its language perfectly and is unaffected by such grammatically irrelevant conditions as memory limitations, distractions, shifts in attention and interest, and errors (random or characteristic) in applying his knowledge of the language in actual performance.
→ Chomsky's emphasis in the 1960s on abstracting language from the context in which it was spoken.
Break between the linguistics
Psycholinguistics with an interest in language use within human societies
Sociolinguistics with the ideas of Chomsky (focuses on what can be said, to whom, in whose presence, when and where, in what manner etc.). → acquiring language not just a cognitive process, but it's a social process as well.
Language is not just denotational (refers to the process of conveying meaning), but it's also indexical
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