Blog Post #3

Before taking this class, I had assumed most of the study done in the linguist field was about grammar, vocabulary, and origins. While taking the course, I find these are only a part of the field, and culture, history, living habits, and social situations also play an important role. It’s a fresh idea to think that language can affect how people think. As an international student, I realized that people from different countries have different thinking logic. I attributed this phenomenon to different cultural backgrounds, and people received different primary education. Now I know it’s language itself impacts us. So do that mean linguists change the thinking pattern of people? If so, I will be surprised by the power of linguistic.

As a native Chinese speaker, I have to say that some of the readings related to Chinese language or culture cannot reflect the contemporary situation in China. For example, we don’t have as many “tiger mothers” as the reading said. I believed it happened in the last generation. Now parents become pay more attention to children’s mental health and do not want to stress children too much anymore.

Blog 2

I found two examples of East Asian writing and I think these two are kind of same so I’m going to talk about them together. The first recruitment poster is in the psychology department located in the Straub Hall, and the second picture I took at a comic bookstore in Springfield.

The first poster has both Chinese characters and Japanese kanji and hiragana while in the second picture, I assume,  they are all Japanese kanji. Chinese characters are logographic and hiragana is both phonographic and syllabic. On the upper left of the poster is Chinese writing, which is SVO; and on the upper right is Japanese writing, which is SOV and left-branching. The reason why the poster uses Chinese and Japanese writing is that the participants of this research should be either Chinese or Japanese native speakers, so by using these two writings, the native speakers could find and participate in the research easily. For the second picture, I think it used kanji is because the products are imported from Japan and by writing in kanji, it can be observed by customers easier.

In this class, I find that taking notes with a notebook but not laptop helps me concentrate. Even though I am a native Chinese speaker I find something interesting and I didn’t before about Chinese. For example, I never thought deeply about classifiers and aspect markers, which I find I learned a lot from the class. When learning the sound system of Japanese and Korean, I feel that I can try to “sound like” Japanese or Korean and engage with the materials the most. Overall, I think the lecture is interesting and engaging, it gives me a fully-detailed explanation about the three languages and cultures. I enjoy taking this class.

Hello Class!

Hi there! My name is Carol Wang, and I’m majoring in psychology. I’m from the east coast of China, and my hometown is famous for fresh fruits and seafood. One fun fact about myself, even though I grew up by the seaside, I hate eating or smelling seafood, and I can’t swim. All of my friends who are from inland areas said I am wasting my resources.

I’m a cat person. I am jealous that so many of you can own a cat, but I can’t because my roommate hates “living animals.” Besides cats, I love building LEGO. I know it sounds childish, but I don’t think a kid can build Bugatti by himself/herself.

Since I was born in China, I have a certain understanding of the cultures of China, Korea, and Japan. In ancient times, Korea and Japan all borrowed or learned language, knowledge, and culture from China. However, the languages have been evolved into three different language systems, and the cultures, which seem to be identical in festivals and etiquette, are actually having distinctions. So I’m raising a question: are the three languages influenced their cultures, or it’s the opposite? I’m looking forward to finding answers to that.

About the class:

I think the teaching method of the course is engaging, including the activities in class and the small discussion section. My learning approach is accumulating. Psychology major requires tones of reading and writing, so accumulating the quantity of reading and writing would be important. In this course, we also have many readings, so I believe the same approach will work as well. This class can provide a different aspect to think of East Asian languages and culture, so I’m excited about it!