Manuel Alvar

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Manuel Alvar
Born(1923-07-08)8 July 1923
Real Academia Española
In office
7 December 1975 – 13 August 2001
Preceded byCarlos Clavería Lizana [es]
Succeeded byArturo Pérez-Reverte
Director of the
Real Academia Española
In office
1 December 1988 – December 1991
Preceded byRafael Lapesa
Succeeded byFernando Lázaro Carreter

Manuel Alvar (July 8, 1923 - August 13, 2001) was a Spanish linguist, historian, and university professor who specialized in the study of

Real Academia Española for four years and was a member of language academies throughout Europe and Latin America.[1]

Early life and education

Manuel Alvar was born on July 8, 1923, in Benicarló, Castellón de la Plana, Spain.[2] He began his studies at the Universidad de Zaragoza, where he was a student of José Manuel Blecua, a renowned Spanish philologist.[2] Alvar transferred to the Universidad de Salamanca and graduated from there in 1945 with the highest honors, with a degree in Philosophy and Spanish Literature. Just three years later, Alvar received his doctorate from the Universidad de Madrid.[2] His primary teaching position was at the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid.[3]

Alvar married historian Elena Ezquerra and together they had seven sons, many of whom are likewise academics and linguistically inclined—one is a lexicographer and university linguistics professor; another teaches Romance language philology; a third teaches Latin philology.

Alvar lost his battle to lung cancer in August 2001, at the age of 78. He is buried in Chinchón, a small town southeast of Madrid.

Professional contributions and major areas of study

Fieldwork

Alvar's research provides sociohistorical context of Spanish dialect diversification, outlined in his Manual de dialectología hispánica (1996). His studies cover Spanish dialect variants in his native country (especially in Andalucía, the Canary Islands, Navarra and Aragón regions), as well as Spanish dialects in the United States, South and Central America. Alvar's study of Spanish in the Aragón region includes an in-depth historical background, development of orthography over time, personal names, and variation in syntax, morphology, and phonology,[4] published in his 1953 work El Dialecto Aragonés.

For Alvar's later publication, "Atlas lingüístico y etnográfico de Aragón" (1979-1983), he and his team transcribed words pronounced in isolation, elicited from residents of the Aragón region.[1] He used a similar method to elicit data from people living in the Canary Islands and published a linguistic atlas of this dialect in 1975.[1] Alvar was a strong proponent of smaller linguistic atlases focusing on regional variation rather than larger national atlases—his Atlas Lingüístico de España y Portugal reflects this preference, though that atlas began more than 30 years ago with the fieldwork still not complete.[5] Alvar has also been criticized for using overly traditional field methods in his dialectology studies, for example focusing on forms in isolation rather than in context, or leaving out morphosyntactic variables.[5]

Teaching

Alvar spent much of his professional life teaching. He began his teaching career in 1947 at the University of Salamanca as an adjunct professor.[2] In 1948 he became chair of the department of Spanish languages at the University of Granada.[2] Alvar also taught at the Autonomous University of Madrid and Universidad Complutense, securing chair positions at both universities in 1968 and 1971, respectively.[2] He served as director of a program teaching Spanish language and culture to foreigners in Málaga from 1965-1968, and was known for his passion for teaching Spanish as a foreign language throughout his life.[2] In 1966, Alvar developed an advanced Spanish philology course at the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), leading it until 1997.[2]

He served as a visiting professor at universities in his native Spain as well as many foreign universities, and was nominated for awards at several universities in North and South America, as well as Europe.[2]

Membership in language academies

Alvar served as a member of several prestigious language academies. He served as Director of the

Association of Spanish Language Academies),[8] and la Academia Mexicana de la Lengua (likewise dedicated to the conservation and purity of the Spanish language as well as increasing the study of Spanish, according to its stated objectives).[9] Alvar was also a member of several historical and cultural academies, including the Real Academia de la Historia, appointed to serve as director in 1999 (replacing Luis Díez del Corral).[3] The Academia studies history "ancient and modern, political, civil, ecclesiastical, military, scientific, of letters and arts, of civilization, and of the culture of the Spanish people."[10] Beginning in 1963, Alvar also served as director of the CSIC Department of Linguistic Geography and Dialectology,[2] Spain's largest public institution dedicated to Spanish language research.[11]

Legacy

Influence

Although his work in dialectology has been the most influential, Alvar's work broached other topics such as the linguistics of Romance languages in general, historical linguistics, toponymy, medieval literature (serving as principal investigator along with the University of Wisconsin in developing the Spanish Medieval Dictionary in 1978), translation, history of the Americas, among others. In terms of dialectology, Alvar wrote, directed, or coordinated the development of many linguistic atlases and Spanish-language research published in Spain and Latin America during the second half of the 20th century,[12] including the Atlas Lingüístico y Etnográfico de Andalucía (ALEA), the Atlas Lingüístico de España y Portugal (ALEP), the Atlas Lingüístico de Castilla y León (ALCyL), and the Linguistic and Ethnographical Atlas of Argentina (AleCuyo). Alvar served as a member of the Executive Committee of the Atlas Linguarum Europae (ALE) in Holland in 1971, a linguistic atlas supported by UNESCO which includes Altaic languages, Basque, Indo-European languages, Ibero-Caucasian languages, Semitic languages and Uralic languages. Forty-seven national committees and four minority language committees worked on this atlas.[13] Other important atlases Alvar has worked on include an Atlas Lingüístico de Andalucía (1957-1959).

In his work on Spanish in the United States, he worked closely with the Comité Conjunto Hispano-Norteamericano to develop an atlas there, and in 1991 produced one of the most comprehensive atlases of the Latin America, Atlas Lingüístico de Hispanoamérica.[2] Alvar continued to publish books and journal articles until late in life.

Controversy

Alvar has been criticized by his contemporaries for an overly nationalistic and colonialist viewpoint on the Spanish language. In his final year as director of the

Real Academia Española, Alvar responded harshly to the European Commission (an institution of the European Union)[14] after it requested that Spain revoke its law that all typewriters, computers and printers sold domestically include the tilde, a Spanish diacritical mark. Alvar declared that "[T]he tilde is our tradition and our identity."[15] He also received criticism for a statement he made in 1991 about indigenous languages, stating, "Mexico knew better than anybody else the value of having a language that unifies, that liberates the indigenous communities from their backwardness and misery...the path to freedom runs through hispanization."[16]

Awards and recognition

Manuel Alvar received many prestigious awards during his life, and after his death has been honored with awards given in his name. He lectured throughout the world, and received numerous degrees honoris causa.[12]

Beginning in 1991 he was appointed member of the Colegio Libre de Eméritos at the University of Madrid.[2] Alvar won the coveted Premio Nacional de Literatura in 1976 for his work in sociolinguistics and linguistic geography, and presided over the Fifth International Congress of Linguistic Studies in the Mediterranean (Málaga, 1973).[2] Alvar received a Fulbright grant for his work on "Atlas de los marineros peninsulares."[2] He received the coveted Premio Nacional de Investigación (awarded by Spanish National Research Council) for his 1960 publication "Estructura del léxico andaluz" and the Premio Nacional de Literatura por Aragón in 1976.[2] The Institución Fernando el Católico created a position entitled "Manuel Alvar Chair of the Linguistics Department" in his honor in 1985, while the National University of San Juan (Argentina) created the "Instituto de Filología Manuel Alvar" in 1992, in recognition of his work .[2] The Fundación José Manuel Lara (in Seville) grants an award for excellence in the humanities each year in Alvar's name, beginning in 1993.[17]

Major publications

Manuel Alvar published works in more than 170 books and 600 scientific articles throughout his lifetime,[12] below are listed some of his most-cited works.

  • 1947: "Dialectical Boundaries in the Pyrenees"
  • 1953: "El dialecto aragonés" (The Aragon dialect)
  • 1960: Texto hispánicos dialectales (Text of Spanish Dialects)
  • 1961: Atlas lingüístico y etnográfico de Andalucia (Linguistic and Ethnographic Atlas of Andalusia)
  • 1969: Variedad y unidad del español (Variety and Uniformity of Spanish)
  • 1976: "El dialecto riojano" (The Rioja dialect)
  • 1977: Estudios lingüísticos sobre la Amazona colombiana (Linguistic Studies of the Colombian Amazon)
  • 1996: Manual de dialectología hispánica: el español de América (Manual of Spanish Dialectology: the Spanish of the Americas)
  • 1996: Manual de dialectologia hispánica: el español de España (Manual of Spanish Dialectology: the Spanish of Spain)

References

  1. ^
    JSTOR 345013
    .
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Castañer Martín, Rosa (2002–2004). "Notas biográficas: In memoriam Manuel Alvar (1923-2001)" (PDF). Archivo de Filología Aragonesa. LIX–LX: 21.
  3. ^ a b "Muere el filólogo y académico Manuel Alvar | Cultura | Cultura - Abc.es". ABC.es. August 14, 2001. Retrieved March 17, 2017.
  4. JSTOR 25832213
    .
  5. ^ a b Heap, David (2008). "The Linguistic Atlas of the Iberian Peninsula (ALPI): A Geolinguistic treasure 'lost' and found". Toronto Working Papers in Linguistics. 27: 87–96.
  6. ^ "Real Academia Española". www.rae.es (in Spanish). Retrieved April 25, 2017.
  7. ^ "Academia Colombiana de la Lengua | Just another WordPress site". www.academiacolombianadelalengua.co (in Spanish). Retrieved April 25, 2017.
  8. ^ "Academia Argentina de Letras". www.aal.edu.ar (in Spanish). Retrieved April 25, 2017.
  9. ^ "Academia Mexicana de la Lengua". www.academia.org.mx. Retrieved April 25, 2017.
  10. ^ "INICIO - Real Academia de la Historia". Real Academia de la Historia (in European Spanish). Retrieved April 25, 2017.
  11. ^ "Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas - CSIC - csic.es". www.csic.es (in Spanish). Retrieved April 25, 2017.
  12. ^ a b c "Biografia de Manuel Alvar". www.biografiasyvidas.com (in Spanish). Retrieved March 17, 2017.
  13. ^ "Atlas Linguarum Europae". www.lingv.ro (in Romanian). Retrieved April 25, 2017.
  14. ^ "Organisational structure". European Commission - European Commission. Retrieved April 25, 2017.
  15. ProQuest 1700406762
    .
  16. .
  17. ^ "Bases del Premio Manuel Alvar de Estudios Humanísticos | Fundación José Manuel Lara". fundacionjmlara.es (in European Spanish). October 4, 2014. Retrieved April 25, 2017.

External links