In:History of Linguistics 2021: Selected papers from the 15th International Conference on the History of the Language Sciences (ICHoLS 15), Milan, 28 August – 1 September
Edited by Savina Raynaud, Maria Paola Tenchini and Enrica Galazzi
[Studies in the History of the Language Sciences 133] 2024
► pp. 198–210
Chapter 13Three documents bearing on the foundation of the Linguistic Society of America in the age of scientific
racism
Published online: 28 November 2024
https://doi.org/10.1075/sihols.133.13tho
https://doi.org/10.1075/sihols.133.13tho
The centennial of the Linguistic Society of America invites reflection on how the organization has
arrived at its current activist stance, which prioritizes social-justice issues and anti-racist initiatives within the
discipline of linguistics. This article highlights the inward-looking nature of the foundation of the LSA in 1924,
offset against the so-called scientific racism that imbued early twentieth-century American public discourse. I
examine three short texts produced at the outset of the institutionalization of the LSA, all (co-)authored by Leonard
Bloomfield, that communicate the centripetal social dynamics of the foundation of the society and its insistence on
the scientific nature of the study of language — together lending a particular complexion to the group within the
sociocultural world of early twentieth-century America.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Three texts that document the foundation of the LSA
- 2.1The recruitment letter
- 2.2“The call”
- 2.3Bloomfield (1925): “Why a linguistic society?”
- 3.A professional society for “us” linguists
- 3.1The inward-looking nature of the early LSA in a context of external threats
- 3.2Racism and the early LSA
- 4.A society to promote the science of language
- 5.Conclusion
Notes References
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