Tuesday, July 14, 2015
The Grammar Of Happiness.
The Grammar Of Happiness follows the story of Daniel Everett
among the extraordinary ‘nonconvertible’ Amazonian Pirah tribe, a group
of indigenous hunter- gatherers whose culture and outlook on life has
taken the world of linguistics by storm. As a young ambitious missionary
three decades ago, Dan, a red-bearded towering American, decamped to
the Amazon rain forest to save indigenous souls. His assignment was to
translate the book of Mark into the tongue of the Pirah, a people whose
puzzling speech seemed unrelated to any other on Earth. What he learned
during his time with the Pirah led him to question the very foundations
of his own deep beliefs. As a ‘born again’ atheist, Dan divorced his
devout Christian wife and became estranged from his children. Having
lost faith and family, his new life is dominated by the desire to leave
behind his legacy. Everett’s most controversial claim is that the Pirah
language lacks ‘recursion’ – the ability to build an infinite number of
sentences within sentences, regarded by Chomsky-ists as perhaps the most
fundamental characteristic of human language. The Grammar Of Happiness
interweaves the tale of Everett’s attempt to return to the Pirah with
the story of his personal journey since the sixties – from drug-taking
musician to evangelical missionary to rabble-rousing academic. It’s the
adventurous tale of losing faith but finding happiness.
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