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Ainu Language and Identity in Relation to Japan

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... indigenous minority of northern Japan ... Horse. Umma. Uma. Hand Towel. Tenonkoy. Tenugui. Tobacco. Tampaku. Tabako. English ... Sea otter. Ainu. Japanese ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ainu Language and Identity in Relation to Japan


1
Ainu Language and Identity in Relation to Japan
  • Language, Culture, and Transformation

2
The People
  • The Ainu are an indigenous minority of northern
    Japan
  • Their numbers have been rapidly declining due to
    assimilation only about 24,000 ethnic Ainu
    remain.
  • Elements of the culture are struggling to be
    preserved, while the language is particularly
    endangered.

3
Ainu Culture and Heritage
  • The Ainu inhabit the island of Hokkaido,
    bordering Russia
  • Their precise origin is unknown, but they
    probably are part of the Mongoloid family, as are
    the Japanese.
  • Have an economy based mainly on fishing, and are
    characterized by elaborate, ancient ceremonies.
  • Isolation of communities has led to the emergence
    of a diverse, particularly linguistically.

4
The Language
  • Origins are unknown, but Ainu is not mutually
    comprehensible nor closely related to Japanese.
  • No written history until very recent, so Ainu has
    been preserved only through stories, songs,
    myths, and epics.
  • First Westerner, John Batchelor (1854-1944) began
    the process of codification of Ainu, and recent
    revivals of the language have pushed for a more
    thorough and compiling of grammar and vocabulary.

5
Language Origin Hypotheses
  • The origin of the Ainu Language is not certain
    and many hypotheses of this subject exist
  • Indo-European
  • Austronesian
  • Paleosiberian
  • Altaic

6
Structure of the Language
  • Nouns do not decline based on number, gender, or
    case rather, they suffixes are added according
    to grammatical person, a peculiarity of the Ainu
    language.
  • Verbs and adjectives are very similar neither
    conjugate/decline, and the only difference is
    that adjectives have no imperative form.
  • Ainu grammar is dependent almost solely on verbs,
    accounting for nearly 2/3 of all grammatical
    morphology. Verbs are either transitive or
    intransitive and never change their form, but
    utilizes complicated affixes, prefixes, suffixes,
    and auxiliaries.
  • Basic sentence structure follows the pattern of
    subject object verb, similar to Japanese and
    a multitude of other languages.
  • A characteristic of Ainu is its extensive use of
    post-positions, particles which determine the
    type of sentence i.e., negative, imperative,
    interrogative, etc.

7
Japanese Influence on Ainu Language
  • A long history of close contact between the two
    cultures has, of course, caused some language
    borrowing, mostly in nouns borrowed via trade.
  • Place Names The pronunciation of Ainu place
    names have been altered over time by Japanese,
    but still remain in Hokkaido and northern Tohoku.
  • Examples of borrowed words

8
Ainu influence on Japanese Language
  • Less influence on the Japanese Language by the
    Ainu has occurred
  • The majority of this influence also comes from
    trade
  • example table on right

9
Ainu Origins
  • Europoid as clear as light of day that
    theyre lost Caucasians
  • Australoid Southeast Asians who went north
  • Mongoloid not so different from their Japanese
    neighbors

10
Jomon
  • Proto-Australoid
  • Ancestor of Ainu or Japanese?
  • Japanese are Sinodontic (Chinese-toothed) while
    Ainu and Jomon are Sundadontic (Southeast
    Asian-toothed)

11
Original Uncertainty
  • Northeast Asian
  • Cranial Morphology yes to Neolithic Central
    Asians, no to Southeast Asians.
  • Southeast Asian
  • Though Sundadontic, they share few genetic
    similarities with Southeast Asian people.
  • Japanese
  • Modern Japanese are between 10-20 Ainu, and Ainu
    are as much as 40 Japanese

12
Native Japanese vs. Japanese
  • Treated similar to how US treated Native
    Americans
  • 1868 land confiscated, given to Japanese
    settlers
  • Forced onto bad land
  • 1979 protect minorities

13
The Language Situation
  • Inaccurate statistics
  • 1950 5 to 10 years
  • Language classes best barometer, increased in
    the 1980s
  • 1994 Akor itak textbook
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