Ecolinguistics reunited: Rewilding the territory

Stephen J. Cowley*

*Corresponding author for this work

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    Abstract

    Ways of meaning link ecosystemic destruction with social and linguistic interdependencies. By freeing the entangled roots of these phenomena, we can find a way to rewilding ecolinguistic territory. Turning from focus on analysis of languages, texts, or practices, one unleashes the epistemic power of languaging. As we come to know and understand, languaging permeates perception and action. The perspective solves what I call “Haugen’s problem”, or how languages can interact with environments. Playing down the mind, semogenesis uses practices to graft the cultural on to the biotic. Saying things, like all natural innovation, connects history with cascading situated contingencies. With culture, artifacts, and voices, practical action enables discovery of techniques. These use natural evoneering as personal know-how draws on an evolving social semiotic (or cultural second order). Meanings link emplacement to practices that serve people who engage in organized action. The results shape realities which, along with languages, transform the bioecologies that make up the changing ecosphere. Pursuing the epistemic power of languaging brings new awareness that can ground practical theories. Once we focus on consequences of languaging and languages, ecolinguistics gains maturity. To become a discipline, however, theorists need to use historically effective work to build a clear vision of how, as ecolinguists, we can contribute to the future of evolution.

    Original languageEnglish
    JournalJournal of World Languages
    Volume7
    Issue number3
    Pages (from-to)405-427
    ISSN2169-8252
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1. Dec 2021

    Bibliographical note

    Publisher Copyright:
    © 2021 Stephen J. Cowley, published by De Gruyter.

    Keywords

    • Biosemiotics
    • Distributed language
    • Ecolinguistics
    • Ecology of language
    • Languaging
    • Semogenesis

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