Dictionary Definition
philology n : the humanistic study of language
and literature [syn: linguistics]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- /fı'lɒlǝdʒı/
Etymology
First coined 1614, from philologie < φιλολογία < φίλος + λόγος.Noun
- The humanistic study of historical linguistics.
Translations
historical linguistics
- Croatian: filologija, jezikoznanstvo
- Interlingua: philologia
- Italian: filologia
- Slovenian: filologija
- Spanish: filología
Extensive Definition
- see comparative linguistics for the narrower field of "comparative philology".
Philology, derived from the Greek
(philologia, from the terms philos meaning "loved, beloved, dear,
friend" and logos "word,
articulation, reason") is a branch of the human
sciences dealing with language and literature, specifically a
literary
canon, combining aspects of grammar, rhetoric, historical
linguistics (etymology and language
change), interpretation
of authors, textual
criticism and the critical
traditions associated with a given language.
Philology considers both form
and meaning
in linguistic expression, combining linguistics and literary
studies.
Classical
philology is the philology of the Greek and
Latin and
languages. Classical philology is historically primary, originating
in European Renaissance
Humanism, but was soon joined by philologies of other languages
both European (Germanic,
Celtic,
Slavic
etc.) and non-European (Sanskrit,
Oriental
languages such as Persian or Arabic, Chinese etc.)
Indo-European
studies involves the philology of all Indo-European
languages in comparison. Any classical
language can be studied philologically, and indeed describing a
language as "classical" is to imply the existence of a philological
tradition associated with it.
Because of its focus on historical development
(diachronic analysis), philology came to be used as a term
contrasting with linguistics.
This is due to a 20th century development triggered by Ferdinand
de Saussure's insistence on the importance of
synchronic analysis, and the later emergence of post-structuralism
and Chomskian
linguistics with its heavy emphasis on spoken language (performance)
and syntax.
The term
The term philology itself enters the English language in the 16th century, from the Middle French philologie, in the sense of "love of literature". The Latin term philologia could mean "love of learning", like the original Greek term, , which described love of learning, of literature as well as of argument and reasoning, reflecting range of activities included under the notion of . The adjective meant "fond of discussion or argument, talkative", in Hellenistic Greek also implying an excessive ("sophistic") preference of argument over the love of true wisdom, .As an allegory of literary erudition,
Philologia appears in 5th century post-classical literature
(Martianus
Capella, De nuptiis Philologiae et Mercurii), an idea revived
in Late Medieval literature (Chaucer, Lydgate).
The meaning of "love of learning and literature"
was narrowed to "the study of the historical development of
languages" (historical
linguistics) in 19th century usage of the term due to the rapid
progresses made in understanding sound laws and
language
change, the "golden age of philology", taken to last throughout
the 19th
century, or "from Friedrich
Schlegel to Nietzsche". In
British
English usage, and in British academia, "philology" remains
largely synonymous with "historical linguistics", while in US English,
and US academia, the wider meaning of "study of a language's
grammar, history and literary tradition" remains more
widespread.
Branches of philology
Comparative philology
One branch of philology is comparative linguistics, which studies the relationship between languages. Similarities between Sanskrit and European languages were first noted in the early 16th century and led to the speculation of a common ancestor language from which all of these descended — now named Proto-Indo-European. Philology's interest in ancient languages led to the study of what were in the 18th century "exotic" languages for the light they could cast on problems in understanding and deciphering the origins of older texts.Textual philology and text editing
Philology also includes the close study of texts and their history. It includes elements of textual criticism, trying to reconstruct an author's original text based on variant manuscript copies. This branch of research arose in Biblical studies and has a long tradition, dating back to the Reformation. Scholars have tried to reconstruct the original readings of the Bible from the manuscript variants that have come down to us. This method was then applied to Classical Studies and to medieval texts for the reconstruction of the author's original. This method produced so-called critical editions which provided a reconstructed text accompanied by a critical apparatus, i.e. footnotes listing the various manuscript variants available, thus enabling scholars to gain insight into the entire manuscript tradition and argue about variants.A related study method, known as higher
criticism, which studies the authorship, date, and provenance
of texts, places a text in a historical context. These philological
issues are often inseparable from issues of interpretation, and
thus there is no clear-cut boundary between philology and hermeneutics. As such, when
the content of the text has a significant political or religious
influence (such as the reconstruction of Biblical texts), it is
difficult to find 'objective' conclusions.
As a result, some scholars avoid all critical
methods of textual philology. Especially in historical linguistics
it is important to study the actually recorded materials. The
movement known as New
Philology has rejected textual criticism because it injects
editorial interpretations into the text and destroys the integrity
of the individual manuscript readings, hence damaging the
reliability of the data. Supporters of New Philology insist on a
strict diplomatic, that is, faithful rendering of the text exactly
as it is found in the manuscript, without emendations.
Decipherment
In the case of Bronze Age literature, philology includes the prior decipherment of the language in question. This has notably been the case with the Egyptian, Sumerian and Assyrian, Hittite and Luwian languages. Beginning with the sensational decipherment and translation of the Rosetta Stone by Jean-François Champollion in 1822, a number of individuals attempted to decipher the writing systems of the Ancient Near East and Aegean. In the case of Old Persian and Mycenean Greek, decipherment of writing systems yielded records of languages already known from slightly younger traditions (Middle Persian, Alphabetic Greek).Work on the ancient languages of the Near East
progressed rapidly. In the mid-19th century,
Henry Rawlinson and others deciphered the Behistun
Inscription, which records the same text in Old
Persian, Elamite,
and Akkadian,
using a variation of cuneiform
for each language. The understanding of cuneiform script led to the
decipherment of Sumerian.
Hittite
was deciphered in 1915 by Bedřich
Hrozný.
Linear B, a
language used in the ancient Aegean, was deciphered in 1952 by
Michael
Ventris, who demonstrated that the script recorded an early
form of Greek, now known as Mycenaean
Greek. Linear A, the
writing system which records the still unknown language of the
Minoans,
resists deciphering, despite many attempts.
Work still continues on scripts such as Maya
hieroglyphics (with great progress made in the 20th century by
the scholar Yuri
Knorozov) and Etruscan
(deciphered most completely by the scholar Svetislav Bilbija of the
Institute of Etruscan Studies in Chicago).
See also
References
External links
- A Bibliography of Literary Theory, Criticism, and Philology (ed. José Ángel García Landa, University of Zaragoza, Spain)
- Philology in Runet -(A special web search through the philological sites of Runet)
- Asociación de Jóvenes Investigadores Filólogos de la Universidad Complutense de Madrid (AJIF-UCM)
philology in Arabic: فيلولوجيا
philology in Bengali: সাংস্কৃতিক
ভাষাতত্ত্ব
philology in Bosnian: Filologija
philology in Bulgarian: Филология
philology in Catalan: Filologia
philology in Czech: Filologie
philology in Welsh: Ieitheg
philology in Danish: Filologi
philology in German: Philologie
philology in Estonian: Filoloogia
philology in Modern Greek (1453-):
Φιλολογία
philology in Spanish: Filología
philology in Esperanto: Filologio
philology in Basque: Filologia
philology in French: Philologie
philology in Friulian: Filologjie
philology in Galician: Filoloxía
philology in Croatian: Filologija
philology in Ido: Filologio
philology in Indonesian: Filologi
philology in Interlingua (International
Auxiliary Language Association): Philologia
philology in Ossetian: Филологи
philology in Icelandic: Textafræði
philology in Italian: Filologia
philology in Hebrew: פילולוגיה
philology in Georgian: ფილოლოგია
philology in Latin: Philologia
philology in Lithuanian: Filologija
philology in Hungarian: Filológia
philology in Macedonian: Филологија
philology in Dutch: Filologie
philology in Japanese: 文献学
philology in Norwegian: Filologi
philology in Occitan (post 1500):
Filologia
philology in Piemontese: Filologìa
philology in Polish: Filologia
philology in Portuguese: Filologia
philology in Russian: Филология
philology in Slovak: Filológia
philology in Slovenian: Filologija
philology in Serbian: Филологија
philology in Serbo-Croatian: Filologija
philology in Finnish: Filologia
philology in Swedish: Filologi
philology in Thai: นิรุกติศาสตร์
philology in Vietnamese: Văn hiến học
philology in Turkish: Filoloji
philology in Ukrainian: Філологія
philology in Chinese: 文字学
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
bowwow theory, comparative linguistics, derivation, descriptive
linguistics, dialectology, dingdong
theory, etymology,
glossematics,
glossology, glottochronology,
glottology, grammar, graphemics, historical
linguistics, language study, lexicology, lexicostatistics,
linguistic geography, linguistic science, linguistics, mathematical
linguistics, morphology, morphophonemics,
paleography,
phonetics, phonology, psycholinguistics,
semantics, sociolinguistics,
structuralism,
syntactics,
transformational linguistics