I first came to UCSB as a declared
Global Studies major. It’s sort of a broad major—you know, studying the globe
and all—but generally encompassed the fields of international relations,
political science, sociology, anthropology, environmental studies….In theory the
major would be perfect for me, since I am interested in other countries,
languages, and grew up with some very politically-charged family members.
However, I soon came to realize how truly depressing it could be to study global affairs day in and day
out. Every Powerpoint slide in the Intro classes touched upon some new atrocity
the U.S. government had committed in the past week, some new war we were about
to enter, some new famine hitting Africa that was producing hoards of
round-bellied children. It was simply too much. Instead of instilling me with
hope and motivation to do something, I started feeling like it was best to
start making funeral arrangements, should the next terrorist attack or natural
disaster strike much closer to home.
During this time I took an Intro to
Linguistics class, since the use of languages had always interested me. And I
discovered an odd and foreign feeling. There is nothing depressing about the
way our mouth produces sounds, or the way certain words are constructed, or how
different cultures use language differently. The saddest theme that class
managed to touch upon was the fact that some remote languages in the far
corners of the earth are disappearing—sobering indeed, but a far cry from the
tragedies of nuclear warfare and infanticide. After that first class I went on
to explore the social side of linguistics—how language is used in social
settings and across cultures—and since that day I haven’t looked back.
Certainly there are aspects that I don’t find thrilling about the field—namely,
syntax, which should come as no great shock—but overall I love what I study,
and thoroughly loved applying a linguistic vantage point to learning a new
language in Spain (which is the basis for this blog, in fact).
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