Terrence Kaufman (1937
– March 3, 2022) was an American
linguist
Linguistics is the scientific study of human language. It is called a scientific study because it entails a comprehensive, systematic, objective, and precise analysis of all aspects of language, particularly its nature and structure. Lingui ...
specializing in documentation of unwritten languages,
lexicography
Lexicography is the study of lexicons, and is divided into two separate academic disciplines. It is the art of compiling dictionaries.
* Practical lexicography is the art or craft of compiling, writing and editing dictionaries.
* Theoret ...
,
Mesoamerica
Mesoamerica is a historical region and cultural area in southern North America and most of Central America. It extends from approximately central Mexico through Belize, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, and northern Costa Rica. W ...
n
historical linguistics
Historical linguistics, also termed diachronic linguistics, is the scientific study of language change over time. Principal concerns of historical linguistics include:
# to describe and account for observed changes in particular languages
# ...
and
language contact phenomena. He was an emeritus professor of
linguistics
Linguistics is the scientific study of human language. It is called a scientific study because it entails a comprehensive, systematic, objective, and precise analysis of all aspects of language, particularly its nature and structure. Lingu ...
and
anthropology
Anthropology is the scientific study of humanity, concerned with human behavior, human biology, cultures, societies, and linguistics, in both the present and past, including past human species. Social anthropology studies patterns of be ...
at the
University of Pittsburgh
The University of Pittsburgh (Pitt) is a public state-related research university in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The university is composed of 17 undergraduate and graduate schools and colleges at its urban Pittsburgh campus, home to the univers ...
.
Academic career
Kaufman received his PhD in Linguistics from the
University of California at Berkeley
The University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley, Berkeley, Cal, or California) is a public land-grant research university in Berkeley, California. Established in 1868 as the University of California, it is the state's first land-grant uni ...
in 1963 with his thesis on the grammar of Tzeltal.
Post-PhD, he taught at The Ohio State University (1963-1964) and at UC Berkeley (1964-1970) prior to taking up the position at the University of Pittsburgh that he held until his retirement in 2011.
Over the course of his career, Kaufman produced descriptive and comparative-historical studies of languages of the
Mayan,
Siouan
Siouan or Siouan–Catawban is a language family of North America that is located primarily in the Great Plains, Ohio and Mississippi valleys and southeastern North America with a few other languages in the east.
Name
Authors who call the enti ...
,
Hokan,
Uto-Aztecan
Uto-Aztecan, Uto-Aztekan or (rarely in English) Uto-Nahuatl is a family of indigenous languages of the Americas, consisting of over thirty languages. Uto-Aztecan languages are found almost entirely in the Western United States and Mexico. The na ...
,
Mixe–Zoquean and
Oto-Manguean families. His work on empirical documentation of unwritten languages through fieldwork and training of native linguists gave rise to a rich body of published work as well as a substantial unpublished corpus of notes.
Many of his articles were co-authored with other scholars such as
Lyle Campbell
Lyle Richard Campbell (born October 22, 1942) is an American scholar and linguist known for his studies of indigenous American languages, especially those of Central America, and on historical linguistics in general. Campbell is professor emeri ...
,
Sarah Thomason and John Justeson.
In a 1976 paper co-authored with Lyle Campbell, he advanced a theory that the
Olmec
The Olmecs () were the earliest known major Mesoamerican civilization. Following a progressive development in Soconusco, they occupied the tropical lowlands of the modern-day Mexican states of Veracruz and Tabasco. It has been speculated that ...
s spoke a
Mixe–Zoquean language, based on the substantial presence of early Mixe–Zoquean loans in many Mesoamerican languages, particularly from specific, culturally significant semantic domains.
Along with Lyle Campbell and
Thomas Smith-Stark
Thomas Cedric Smith-Stark, also known as Thomas Smith-Stark or Thomas C. Smith-Stark (January 1, 1948 - May 17, 2009) was an American linguist known for his researches on Mesoamerican languages. Most of his academic career was developed in Mexico ...
, Kaufman carried out research published in ''
Language
Language is a structured system of communication. The structure of a language is its grammar and the free components are its vocabulary. Languages are the primary means by which humans communicate, and may be conveyed through a variety of ...
'' (1986) which led to the recognition of
Mesoamerica
Mesoamerica is a historical region and cultural area in southern North America and most of Central America. It extends from approximately central Mexico through Belize, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, and northern Costa Rica. W ...
as a
linguistic area
A sprachbund (, lit. "language federation"), also known as a linguistic area, area of linguistic convergence, or diffusion area, is a group of languages that share areal features resulting from geographical proximity and language contact. The lan ...
.
In ''Language contact, Creolization, and genetic linguistics'' (1988), co-authored by Kaufman and Sarah Thomason, the authors developed a theoretical framework for the understanding of the processes of contact-induced language change.
Along with John Justeson, in 1993 he claimed to have successfully deciphered the
Isthmian or
Epi-Olmec script. This claim has been rejected by anthropologists
Michael Coe and
Stephen Houston in 2004 after using the decipher key on a recently discovered jade mask. Coe states that the result "turns out to be total nonsense and gobbledygook,". In the years prior to his death, Kaufman was involved in the "Project for the Documentation of the Languages of Mesoamerica" or PDLMA, focused on collecting standardized linguistic data from the under documented languages of Mesoamerica.
Early advocate and activist for role of native speakers
In the early 1970s, Dr. Kaufman visited Guatemala to conduct linguistic surveys in the Mayan highlands which would eventually lead to his proposal for a classification of the Mayan languages. In the process, he stopped at the ''Proyecto Linguistico Francisco Marroqui''n (PLFM) in Antigua Guatemala, a Guatemalan NGO intent on becoming a national Mayan-based resource institution.
Together with PLFM staff, and inspired in part by MIT Kenneth Hale's 1960s unpublished paper, American Indians in Linguistics, Kaufman was a principal participant in the development of the PLFM's plan to train one hundred community-based native speakers of Mayan languages, mostly primary school graduates, to become descriptive linguists for their own languages. He devoted his summers, uncompensated, to lead a level of training for them usually reserved for university students. In this, he was augmented by a dozen professional linguists who were pursuing their PhDs. Each served for several years under the auspices of the Peace Corps to provide year-round follow-up training.
Under Dr. Kaufman's leadership, and in consultation with this corps of linguists and Mayan trainees, PLFM developed a proposal for "rational" alphabets for each of the Mayan languages which respected the integrity and unique features of each. This ''Proposal for alphabets and orthographies for writing the Mayan languages'' was published in Spanish in January 1976 under Dr. Kaufman's name, by the Guatemalan Ministry of Education (which supported the proposal). In the polarized environment of 1970s Guatemala, the proposal was not without powerful opponents. With different goals, some insisted on orthographies which imposed the irregularities and values of Spanish language orthography on the Mayan languages, to the detriment of the latter.
But the considerable corps of PLFM Mayan linguists, expertly trained by Kaufman and his colleagues, joined national congresses and debates at the highest level, bringing to the process recognized linguistic expertise, and they prevailed. In the 1980s, the Guatemalan National Congress enacted legislation which made the alphabet that Dr. Kaufman and the PLFM had proposed (with one minor change) the legal, national alphabet of the country. The Mayan trainees had been so engaged in the consideration of Kaufman's published proposal, that some later suggested that they should have been co-authors.
Kaufman was known by his friends as "Top Kat," after his initials, and sported a distinctive beard, beret and manner of dress unusual in Antigua at the time. He was the kind of expert (like PLFM colleagues Dr. Nora England and Dr. Judith Maxwell after him), who was committed to sharing his hard-won expertise with native speakers themselves, enabling them to play the dominant roles in decisions about their own languages. Native speakers trained by Terry Kaufman and colleagues assumed leadership of the PLFM in 1976. They were invited to present technical papers at international academic meetings. Carrying Guatemalan diplomatic passports, they represented and added to the prestige of not only their communities and linguistic groups, but of the country as a whole.
In the process, together with a PLFM linguistic aide, Jo Froman, whom he had trained, Kaufman completed his nation-wide linguistic surveys and a dialect boundary mapping exercise. He then published a proposed classification for the Mayan languages. Translated and edited by Lic. Flavio Rojas Lima of the Seminario de Integración Social, PLFM volunteer Margarita Cruz, PLFM Director Tony Jackson and supported by Ministry of Education language advisor Dr. Salvador Aguado Andreut, the proposal was published only in Spanish in 1974 as Idiomas de Mesoamerica (Languages of Meso-America).
Selected Bibliography
Articles
*Campbell, Lyle, and Terrence Kaufman. 1976. "A Linguistic Look at the Olmec." ''American Antiquity'' 41(1):80–89.
*Campbell, Lyle, and Terrence Kaufman. 1980. "On Mesoamerican linguistics." ''American Anthropologist'' 82:850–857.
*Campbell, Lyle, Terrence Kaufman and Thomas C. Smith-Stark. "Meso-America as a Linguistic Area", ''Language'' Vol. 62, No. 3 (Sep. 1986), pp. 530–570.
*Campbell, Lyle, Terrence Kaufman, "Mayan Linguistics: Where are we Now?" ''Annual Review of Anthropology'', Vol. 14, 1985 (1985), pp. 187–198.
*Justeson, John, and Terrence Kaufman. 1993. "A decipherment of epi-Olmec hieroglyphic writing". ''Science'' 259:1703–1711.
*Kaufman, Terrence. 1976. "Archaeological and Linguistic Correlations in Mayaland and Associated Areas of Meso-America" ''World Archaeology, Vol. 8, No. 1'', Archaeology and Linguistics (Jun. 1976), pp. 101–118
*Kaufman, Terrence. 1988. "A Research Program for Reconstructing Proto-Hokan: First Gropings." In Scott DeLancey, ed. ''Papers from the 1988 Hokan–Penutian Languages Workshop'', pp. 50–168. Eugene, Oregon: Department of Linguistics, University of Oregon. (University of Oregon Papers in Linguistics. Publications of the Center for Amerindian Linguistics and Ethnography 1.)
*Kaufman, Terrence. 1990. "Language History in South America: What we know and how to know more." In Doris L. Payne, ed. ''Amazonian Linguistics'', pp. 13–74. Austin: University of Texas Press.
Books
*Justeson, John, William Norman, Lyle Campbell, and Terrence Kaufman (1985). ''The Foreign Impact on Lowland Mayan Language and Script''. Middle American Research Institute Publication 53. .
*Kaufman, Terrence (1972). ''El Proto-Tzeltal-Tzotzil. Fonología comparada y diccionario reconstruido''. México, UNAM. .
*Thomason, Sarah G., and Terrence Kaufman (1988). ''Language contact, creolization, and genetic linguistics''. Berkeley: University of California Press. .
References
*Campbell, Lyle (1997). ''American Indian Languages, The Historical Linguistics of Native America''. Oxford Studies in Anthropological Linguistics, Oxford University Press
*Houston, Stephen, and Coe, Michael. 2004. "Has Isthmian Writing Been Deciphered?", ''Mexicon'' XXV: 151–161.
Brigham Young University press releaseon behalf of Brigham Young University archaeologist Stephen Houston and Yale University professor emeritus Michael Coe disputing Justeson/Kaufman findings.
Project for the Documentation of the Languages of MesoamericaAutobiographical notes by Kaufman*
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kaufman, Terrence
1937 births
2022 deaths
Linguists from the United States
Historical linguists
Linguists of Mesoamerican languages
American Mesoamericanists
Anthropology educators
University of Pittsburgh faculty
University of California, Berkeley alumni
20th-century Mesoamericanists
21st-century Mesoamericanists
Linguists of Hokan languages
Linguists of Uto-Aztecan languages
Paleolinguists
Linguists of Mixe–Zoque languages
Linguists of Oto-Manguean languages
Mayanists
Linguists of indigenous languages of the Americas