Morris Swadesh | |
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Born | Holyoke, Massachusetts, U.S. | January 22, 1909
Died | July 20, 1967 Mexico City, Mexico | (aged 58)
Nationality | American |
Known for | Swadesh list |
Academic background | |
Education |
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Thesis | The Internal Economy of the Nootka Word (1933) |
Doctoral advisor | Edward Sapir |
Academic work | |
Discipline | Linguist |
Institutions | |
Main interests |
Morris Swadesh (/ˈswɑːdɛʃ/; January 22, 1909 – July 20, 1967) was an American linguist who specialized in comparative and historical linguistics.
Swadesh was born in Massachusetts to Bessarabian Jewish immigrant parents. He completed bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of Chicago, studying under Edward Sapir, and then followed Sapir to Yale University where he completed a Ph.D. in 1933. Swadesh taught at the University of Wisconsin–Madison from 1937 to 1939, and then during World War II worked on projects with the United States Army and Office of Strategic Services. He became a professor at the City College of New York after the war's end, but was fired in 1949 due to his membership in the Communist Party. He spent most of the rest of his life teaching in Mexico and Canada.
Swadesh had a particular interest in the indigenous languages of the Americas, and conducted extensive fieldwork throughout North America. He was one of the pioneers of glottochronology and lexicostatistics, and is known for his creation of the Swadesh list, a compilation of basic concepts believed to present across cultures and thus suitable for cross-linguistic comparison. Swadesh believed that his techniques could discover deep relationships between apparently unrelated languages, thus allowing for the identification of macrofamilies and possibly even a "Proto-Human" language. His theories were often controversial, and some have been deprecated by later linguists.