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Yukhíti Kóy - by Geoffrey D Kimball Hardcover
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Highlights
- Geoffrey Kimball presents the first grammar of the American Indian language Yukhíti Kóy, better known in English as Atakapa, once spoken in coastal southwestern Louisiana and coastal eastern Texas.
- About the Author: Geoffrey Kimball is a research associate in the Department of Anthropology at Indiana University.
- 318 Pages
- Social Science, Ethnic Studies
Description
About the Book
Geoffrey Kimball presents the first grammar of the American Indian language Atakapa, Yukhíti Kóy, once spoken in coastal southwestern Louisiana and coastal eastern Texas.
Book Synopsis
Geoffrey Kimball presents the first grammar of the American Indian language Yukhíti Kóy, better known in English as Atakapa, once spoken in coastal southwestern Louisiana and coastal eastern Texas. The late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries saw a drastic fall in the Atakapa population, and by the first decades of the twentieth century the Atakapa language ceased to be spoken.
The grammar is based on the field notes collected by Albert Samuel Gatschet in January of 1885, with additional material collected by John R. Swanton in 1907-8. Gatschet worked with two speakers of the language, Kisyuc, also known as Yoyot, and her cousin Tottoks, whose English names were Louison Huntington and Delilah Moss, respectively. John R. Swanton wrote a grammatical sketch of Atakapa in 1929 based on Gatschet's notes and in 1932 published the texts Gatschet had gathered, as well as a dictionary.
The materials, originally written phonetically, have been phonemicized, and the nature of the grammar has been elucidated. The nine surviving texts in Yukhíti have been phonemicized, analyzed, and translated, and the parallels between them and other traditional oral literatures of Native American languages of the Southeast are discussed. This reference grammar includes a vocabulary of all words contained in the field notes.
Review Quotes
"A book worth having, and it yields a great deal of insight, not just about Atakapa as a language, but also about the people who spoke the language--people like Kisyuc and Tottoks. This book honors their voices and their work with Gatschet."--Anthony K. Webster, Anthropological Linguistics
"This is a meticulously documented and useful reference source. . . . Because of the lack of documentation on this subject, any resource is a treasure for language revival and further academic studies."--Jurgita Antoine, Tribal College Journal
"There has not been a comprehensive reference grammar of the Atakapa language, and so this book fills a real need. There is very careful philological work here."--George Aaron Broadwell, author of A Choctaw Reference Grammar
"This reference grammar will make a huge and much-needed contribution to Atakapan language studies and to linguistics in general. Geoffrey Kimball has clearly well researched the language based on both the original Gatschet field notes and the published Gatschet and Swanton Atakapa dictionary."--David V. Kaufman, author of Clues to Lower Mississippi Valley Histories: Language, Archaeology, and Ethnography and Atakapa Ishakkoy Dictionary
About the Author
Geoffrey Kimball is a research associate in the Department of Anthropology at Indiana University. He is the author of Koasati Traditional Narratives (Nebraska, 2010), Koasati Dictionary (Nebraska, 1994), and Koasati Grammar (Nebraska, 1991).