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CrowdScience

Why do languages fade from us?

CrowdScience

BBC

Science, Technology

4.8985 Ratings

🗓️ 25 October 2024

⏱️ 28 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Can learning new languages make us forget our mother tongue? CrowdScience listener Nakombe in Cameroon is concerned that his first language, Balue, is slipping from his grasp. He has learned multiple languages through his life, but Balue is the language of his family and home. It’s central to his identity and sense of belonging. So why does it seem to be fading from him, and what can he do to get it back?

We search for answers, investigating what happens in our brains when we struggle to recall languages, as well as the social and economic factors that lead to language loss. Presenter Anand Jagatia asks Michael Anderson from the University of Cambridge, an expert on memory and forgetting, whether forgotten languages disappear from our brain, or just become difficult to access. Linguist Monika Schmid from the University of York takes us through the phenomenon of first language attrition, and has words of reassurance and advice for Nakombe and others in his situation.

And we meet Larry Kimura from the University of Hawai’i at Hilo, a pioneer of Hawaiian language revitalization, and Gabriela Pérez Báez, an expert in indigenous languages and language revitalization at the University of Oregon. They explain why languages around the world become threatened, and how to keep them alive.

Presenter: Anand Jagatia Producer: Margaret Sessa Hawkins Editor: Cathy Edwards Production Co-ordinator: Ishmael Soriano Studio Managers: Sarah Hockley and Omera Ahamed

(Photo: Diccionario, Argentina Credit: PonyWang via Getty Images)

Transcript

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0:00.0

You are about to listen to a BBC podcast and I like to tell you a bit about what goes into making one.

0:06.0

I'm Siddhartha Cesset, an assistant commissioner of Podcasts for BBC Sounds.

0:11.0

I pull a lot of levers to support a diverse range of

0:13.7

podcasts on all sorts of subjects, relationships, identity, comedy, even one

0:18.9

that mixes poetry, music and inner city life. So one day I'll be helping host develop their ideas, the next

0:26.1

fact checking, a feature and the next looking at how a podcast connects with its

0:31.5

audience and maybe that's you so if you like this

0:34.6

podcast check out some others on BBC Sounds.

0:39.4

How can I put it? Okay, it's like I'm losing a part of me.

0:50.0

It's like I'm losing my identity because I identify myself as an African and a Balwie man.

0:58.0

If you're a Balwie man, you have to speak the Balwie language.

1:02.0

If you cannot speak the Balwway language, how do you identify

1:05.1

yourself as if you come from that community? It's like I'm losing my identity. Something

1:10.0

is really wrong. And it needs to be rectified. You're listening to crowd science from the BBC

1:16.7

World Service. I'm Anan Jagatia and this is one of our listeners. This is one of our boys.

1:25.0

You know, we're not a barina, nakombi,

1:29.0

or a one of the Camarondi a

1:31.0

and a bambokah, the Comera Vallewet,

1:34.0

or South West Ridge,

1:35.0

Raka Meron.

1:36.0

Naro so me

1:38.0

in your area

...

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