Book

Western Apache language and culture: essays in linguistic anthropology

University of Arizona PressTucson • Published In 1990 • Pages:

By: Basso, Keith H..

Abstract
This is a study of the language and culture of the Western Apache, with a focus on the Cibecue of the Fort Apache Reservation. Topics include: a semantic analysis of a set of Apache 'classificatory' verb stems; a discussion of the semantic domain delineated by Western Apache terms for the human body; an analysis of the written script invented by Silas John Edwards in 1904, a Western Apache religious leader; Apache metaphores; the use of silence, where appropriate, in conservation; and the use of placenames in two styles of contemporary (late twentieth century) discouse (framing historical narrative which recount events of abiding moral significance for members of the modern community, and a specialized kind of talk use to console persons beset by fear and anxiety).
Subjects
Place names
Theoretical orientation in research and its results
Grammar
Phonology
Sociolinguistics
Semantics
Writing
Conversation
culture
Western Apache
HRAF PubDate
2002
Region
North America
Sub Region
Southwest and Basin
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Types
Ethnologist
Linguist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
John Beierle ; 2000
Field Date
1959, 1964-1969, 1977-1980
Coverage Date
not specified
Coverage Place
Cibecue Apache, Fort Apache Reservation, east central Arizona, United States
Notes
Keith H. Basso
Includes bibliographical references (p. [183]-190) and index
LCCN
89020242
LCSH
Western Apache Indians