K. David Harrison is a Canadian and American linguist, anthropologist, author, filmmaker, and advocate for the documentation and preservation of endangered languages.

Biography

Harrison received his PhD from Yale University as a student of linguist Stephen R. Anderson, anthropologist Harold C. Conklin, and Slavist Alexander M. Schenker. He has done documentary field work on endangered languages around the world, including Turkic languages in Siberia and Mongolia including Tuvan, Tsengel Tuvan, Tofa, Chulym, Monchak, and in India on Munda, and indigenous tongues in Paraguay, Chile, Papua New Guinea, India, Vietnam, and Vanuatu. He specializes in phonology, morphology, and in the study of language endangerment, extinction and revitalization, digital lexicography, and environmental linguistics.[2]

Harrison has served as a Professor and Vice-Provost for Special Projects at VinUniversity. He is a tenured Professor at Swarthmore College, an Explorer at the National Geographic Society and a fellow of The Explorers Club. He serves as an Affiliate Scientist at the Center for Plants, People, and Culture at the New York Botanical Garden. His early career research focused on the Turkic languages of central Siberia and western Mongolia. In 2006, Harrison created the first online "Talking Dictionary", a platform that has since expanded to cover 150+ indigenous languages. In 2007–2013, he co-directed the Enduring Voices Project at the National Geographic Society. In 2007, Harrison created the concept of "Language Hotspots", and published the first language hotspots list and map in National Geographic Magazine, in collaboration with linguist Gregory Anderson of the Living Tongues Institute for Endangered Languages. His book When Languages Die: The Extinction of the World's Languages and the Erosion of Human Knowledge (Oxford Univ. Press, 2007) has been translated into Arabic and Spanish. His book The Last Speakers: The Quest to Save the World's Most Endangered Languages (National Geographic, 2010) has been translated into Japanese and Polish.

Harrison co-starred in Ironbound Films' Emmy-nominated 2008 documentary film The Linguists.[1] He served on the executive board of 7,000 Languages, The National Museum of Language, and BeeLine Reader Inc. He is a member of the Daylight Academy (Switzerland), and a founding member of the Center for Environmental Intelligence at VinUniversity.

He has been awarded over $5 million in research grants from the National Science Foundation, Volkswagen Stiftung, The Explorers Club, The Discovery Channel, National Geographic Society, Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage, Cognitive Science Society, and Velux Stiftung, for his research on endangered languages, cultural anthropology, ethnobotany, and daylight studies. Harrison's primary research is in digital lexicography (creating Talking Dictionaries), and Environmental Linguistics in locations such as Vanuatu, Fiji, Vietnam, and Siberia.[3][4][5]

Awards and honors

References

  1. ^ a b David and Greg,"The Linguists"[1], National Science Foundation under Grants No.0452417 and 0438121 and the Nonprofit Media Group.
  2. ^ K. David Harrison, Ph.D., Swarthmore College Linguistics, accessed May 2010
  3. ^ "Gay Anthropolgist [sic] Dr. K David Harrison Preserves Dying Languages". www.advocate.com. 2021-02-26. Retrieved 2021-02-26.
  4. ^ K. David Harrison, Ph.D., Swarthmore College Linguistics: Research, accessed May 2010
  5. ^ Brooks, Anthony (25 January 2008). "'The Linguists': Saving the World's Languages". WBUR. Retrieved 22 February 2009.

Publications

  • Book of Peoples of the World: A Guide to Cultures, National Geographic (2008), co-editor with Davis, Wade.
  • When Languages Die: The Extinction of the World's Languages and the Erosion of Human Knowledge (2010) Oxford Univ. Press.
  • The Last Speakers: The Quest to Save the World's Most Endangered Languages (2012) National Geographic Books.
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