Dell Hymes (during his employment at the University of Pennsylvannia) |
Today’s blog post will cover the life and anthropological
contributions of Dell Hymes, a pioneering linguistic anthropologist. Hymes passed away in 2009, leaving behind an
academic legacy that has since been mired in some controversy. Despite this controversy he did make some
important impacts on the field of anthropological linguistics, which will be
covered herein.
Dell Hymes started his academic career at Reed College, but
he was almost derailed from pursuing his goals by war. He was drafted into the US Army and became a
Decoder, and while this situation may have derailed some people it actually
inspired Hymes to pursue his studies in linguistics and anthropology. He returned to Reed College and studied under
anthropologists David French and Kay Story French. It was during this time that he began working
with Native American groups in Oregon, including the Wasco, Wishram, and
Sahaptin peoples, and he continued to work with them during his graduate
work. His dissertation, which he
completed in a year, focused on the language of another Native American group,
the Kiksht, and was eventually published by Franz Boas.
Hymes went on to teach social anthropology at Harvard
University, the University of California-Berkley, and the University of
Pennsylvania. He taught classes in folklore,
linguistics, sociology, and education.
During this time he made several important contributions to the fields
of anthropological linguistics. The
first part of his career focused on developing the field of sociolinguistics,
while the second part of his career focused on ethnopoetics. Hymes promoted the notion that one cannot truly
understand a language until they understood the contexts of the language, which
is a central tenant of sociolinguistics today. He also put forward the need for
sociolinguistic scholars to study how social class and cultural affect
language, which helped direct anthropological study into social justice
issues. The second part of his career concentrated
on oral traditions and how rhythms and metric rules of speech affect language
and meaning, which is the foundation of ethnopoetics.
Hymes passed away in 2009.
He had previously written a public obituary that chronicled the personal
aspects of his life and highlighted his humor.
He is left behind by his wife and their four children. Since his death a series of accusations of
sexual harassment have been lodged against him, tainting his professional career. While it still unknown the extent of these
accusations and how they will affect his overall legacy it is important to
recognize his contributions to the field of sociolinguistics, while also acknowledging
his potential improper actions.
Works Cited
No Author. (2010, March). Anthropologist
revolutionized field of sociolinguistics. Reed magazine, p. 1.
PENN GRADUATE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION. (2009, November
30). Remembering Dell Hymes 1927-2009. Retrieved from University of
Pennsylvania: https://www.gse.upenn.edu/node/1221
Tripathi, P., & Reyaz, A. (2016). How Cultures
Talk: A Study of Dell Hymes' Ethnography of Communication. Journal of
Humanities and Cultural Studies, 1-10.