Greenberg, Joseph H.

Greenberg, Joseph H.

▪ American anthropologist and linguist
in full  Joseph Harold Greenberg  
born May 28, 1915, Brooklyn, New York, U.S.
died May 7, 2001, Stanford, California

      American anthropologist and linguist specializing in African languages and in language universals. Greenberg was the first to present a unified classification of African languages.

      Having studied with Franz Boas at Columbia University (B.A., 1936), Greenberg earned a Ph.D. in anthropology (1940) from Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, where he studied with Melville J. Herskovits (Herskovits, Melville J.). He served in the U.S. Army from 1940 to 1945, then taught at the University of Minnesota (1946–48) and Columbia University (1948–62) before becoming a professor of anthropology at Stanford University (1962–85; thereafter professor emeritus). While teaching at Columbia, Greenberg published Studies in African Linguistic Classification (1955; expanded and rev. 1963 as The Languages of Africa). From the time of its publication, the work has been controversial. Some linguists consider it the most influential study on African languages, while others find Greenberg's work to be only a modification of the earlier classification scheme of Diedrich Westermann (Westermann, Diedrich).

      Originally Greenberg posited 16 families of African languages; in the revised edition he presented only four—Niger-Kordofanian (now called Niger-Congo (Niger-Congo languages)), Afro-Asiatic (Afro-Asiatic languages), Nilo-Saharan (Nilo-Saharan languages), and Khoisan (Khoisan languages)—each of which is further subdivided. Greenberg claimed to have arrived at this conclusion by use of mass comparison, a somewhat dubious method he developed that uses similarities in vocabularies among languages to show genetic relation (the method is often criticized for building hypotheses without real evidence). Subsequent discoveries have refined some of his internal divisions, though most of his conclusions are generally accepted.

      Greenberg's studies on language universals are less controversial than his classification studies. In 1966 he published “Some Universals of Grammar with Particular Reference to the Order of Meaningful Elements.” In this article he offered 45 universals of word order and inflectional categories based on data from some 30 languages. He was among the first to deal with “implicational” universals (of the form “If A, then B”). He also edited Universals of Language (1963) and the four-volume Universals of Human Language (1978).

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • GREENBERG, JOSEPH — (1915–2001), U.S. anthropologist and linguist. Born on 28 May 1915, Joseph Greenberg was a gifted young pianist who had considered becoming a classical performer. He instead entered the academic world, graduating from Columbia University in 1936… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Greenberg, Joseph Harold — ▪ 2002       American anthropologist and linguist (b. May 28, 1915, New York, N.Y. d. May 7, 2001, Stanford, Calif.), proposed influential theories regarding relationships between the world s languages. After receiving a Ph.D. in anthropology… …   Universalium

  • Greenberg,Joseph Harold — Green·berg (grēnʹbûrg ), Joseph Harold. Born 1915. American linguist. His influential works include Languages of Africa (1966) and Language Universals (1966). * * * …   Universalium

  • Greenberg, Joseph H. — ► (n. 1915) Lingüista estadounidense. Realizó estudios fonemáticos. Obras: Ensayos lingüísticos (1957) y Universidad en el lenguaje (1963), entre otras …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Greenberg, Joseph H(arold) — born May 28, 1915, New York, N.Y., U.S. died May 7, 2001, Stanford, Calif. U.S. anthropologist and linguist. He received his Ph.D. from Northwestern University. He eschewed more orthodox methods of historical linguistics for the approach he… …   Universalium

  • Greenberg, Joseph H(arold) — (28 may. 1915, Nueva York, N.Y., EE.UU.–7 may. 2001, Stanford, Cal.). Antropólogo y lingüista estadounidense. Recibió su Ph.D. en la Universidad Northwestern. Dejó de lado los métodos más ortodoxos de la lingüística histórica, reemplazándolos por …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Joseph H. Greenberg — Joseph Harold Greenberg (* 28. Mai 1915 in Brooklyn, New York; † 7. Mai 2001 in Stanford) war ein hervorragender, aber auch umstrittener Linguist, gleichermaßen bekannt für seine Leistungen in der Sprachtypologie (Universalienforschung) wie bei… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Joseph Harold Greenberg — (* 28. Mai 1915 in Brooklyn, New York; † 7. Mai 2001 in Stanford) war ein hervorragender, aber auch umstrittener Linguist, gleichermaßen bekannt für seine Leistungen in der Sprachtypologie (Universalienforschung) wie bei der Klassifikation der… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Greenberg — Greenberg, Joseph H. * * * (as used in expressions) Greenberg, Clement Greenberg, Hank Henry Benjamin Greenberg Greenberg, Joseph H(arold) …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • GREENBERG (J. H.) — GREENBERG JOSEPH HAROLD (1915 ) Linguiste américain dont le nom est surtout attaché à deux directions de recherche: celle des universaux du langage et celle concernant la typologie, appliquée en particulier au problème des langues africaines.… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

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