Victor Golla

Victor Golla (born 1939) is a linguist and a leading expert on the indigenous languages of California and Oregon, especially the Pacific Coast Athabaskan subgroup of the Athabaskan language family and the languages of the region that belong to the Penutian phylum. He is emeritus professor of anthropology at Humboldt State University and lives in Trinidad, California.

Victor Golla
Born1939
NationalityAmerican
OccupationLinguist
Academic background
Alma materUniversity of California, Berkeley
Academic work
Main interestsIndigenous languages of California and Oregon

Life and work

Golla grew up in the small town of Mt. Shasta, in the far north of California, where his father was a funeral director and deputy coroner of Siskiyou County. The family moved to the San Francisco Bay area in 1952 and he attended high school in Oakland. He graduated from UC Berkeley in 1960 and received his Ph.D. in linguistics from the same institution in 1970.

Golla taught briefly at the University of Alberta (assistant professor of linguistics, 1966-1967) and Columbia University (instructor in anthropology, 1967–1968), and then settled in Washington, D.C. for two decades, teaching in the anthropology department at George Washington University (1968-1988) and conducting research on the extensive archival documentation of American Indian languages that is housed in the National Anthropological Archives at the Smithsonian Institution. In 1988, he was invited to join the faculty of Humboldt State University, in Arcata, California, as professor of Native American Studies and director of the Center for Indian Community Development.

In addition to his work at Humboldt, Golla has held a series of visiting appointments at UC Davis (professor of anthropology 1996-1997; research associate in anthropology, 1997-2006), and from 2001 co-principal investigator of the J. P. Harrington Database Project. He has also served as a linguistic consultant to the Hoopa Valley Tribe, where he has been responsible for creating the Hupa Practical Alphabet and a number of pedagogical and reference materials, including an English-Hupa bilingual dictionary (1996a).

He is the author of several scholarly books and numerous articles on American Indian languages, including three grammars of Hupa (1970, 1986a, 1996b) and a 1000-page compendium of the Hupa lexical and grammatical materials collected in 1927 by Edward Sapir (Sapir & Golla 2001). His latest major publication, California Indian Languages (2011) was awarded the 2013 Leonard Bloomfield Book Award by the Linguistic Society of America for being the recently published book "which makes the most outstanding contribution to the development of our understanding of language and linguistics".[1]

In 1981 Golla helped found the Society for the Study of the Indigenous Languages of the Americas (SSILA), and subsequently served for 25 years as the Society's secretary-treasurer and editor of its quarterly SSILA Newsletter (1982 to 2007). SSILA has recently established the Golla Prize in his honor, to recognize Americanist linguists who show a significant history of both linguistic scholarship and service to the scholarly community.

In 2015 Golla was named a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). In selecting Golla, the society cited his "influential research on Native American linguistics and ethnography" and his "outstanding service to the profession."[2]

Major publications

  • Golla, Victor (1970). Hupa Grammar. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Berkeley.
  • Golla, Victor (1976). Tututni (Oregon Athapaskan). International Journal of American Linguistics 42:217-227.
  • Golla, Victor & Shirley Silver, editors (1978). Northern California Texts. IJAL-Native American Texts Series 2(2). Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Krauss, Michael E. & Victor Golla (1981). Athabaskan Languages of the Subarctic. In Handbook of North American Indians, volume 6:Subarctic (June Helm, editor), pp. 67–85. Washington: Smithsonian Institution.
  • Golla, Victor (1984). The Sapir-Kroeber Correspondence. Letters Between Edward Sapir and A. L. Kroeber, 1905-1925. Survey of California and Other Indian Languages, Report 6. Berkeley: Department of Linguistics, University of California.
  • Golla, Victor (1986a). A Short Practical Grammar of Hupa. Hoopa: Hupa Language Project, Hoopa Valley Tribe.
  • Whistler, Kenneth W. & Victor Golla (1986b). Proto-Yokuts Reconsidered. International Journal of American Linguistics 52: 317-358
  • Golla, Victor (1987). Sapir, Kroeber, and North American Linguistic Classification. In New Perspectives on Edward Sapir in Language, Culture and Personality (W. Cowan et al., editors), pp. 17–38. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
  • Golla, Victor, editor (1994). John P. Harrington and His Legacy. Special Issue, Anthropological Linguistics (volume 33.4, March 1984).
  • Golla, Victor (1996a). Hupa Language Dictionary, Second Edition. Arcata: Center for Indian Community Development, Humboldt State University and Hoopa Valley Tribe. (Online eLibrary file.)
  • Golla, Victor (1996b). Sketch of Hupa, an Athapaskan Language. Handbook of North American Indians, volume 17, Languages (Ives Goddard, editor), pp. 364–389. Washington: Smithsonian Institution.
  • DeLancey, Scott & Victor Golla (1997). Penutian: Retrospect and Prospect. International Journal of American Linguistics 63:171-201
  • Sapir, Edward & Victor Golla (2001). Hupa Texts, with Notes and Lexicon. In: The Collected Works of Edward Sapir, volume 14, Northwest California Linguistics (Victor Golla & Sean O’Neill, editors), pp. 19–1011. Berlin & New York: Mouton de Gruyter.
  • Golla, Victor (2003). Ishi's Language. In: Ishi in Three Centuries (Karl Kroeber & Clifton Kroeber, editors), pp. 208–225. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
  • Golla, Victor & Juliette Blevins (2005). A New Mission Indian Manuscript from the San Francisco Bay Area. Boletíin, California Mission Studies Association 22:33-61.
  • Golla, Victor (2007a). North America. In: Encyclopedia of the World’s Endangered Languages (Christopher Moseley, editor), pp. 1–96. London & New York: Routledge.
  • Golla, Victor (2007b). Linguistic Prehistory. In: California Prehistory. Colonization, Culture and Complexity (Terry L. Jones & Kathryn A. Klar, editors), pp. 71–82. Lanham (Maryland): Altamira Press.
  • Golla, Victor, with Lyle Campbell, Ives Goddard & Marianne Mithun (2008). North America. In: Atlas of the World’s Languages, second revised edition (R .E. Asher & Christopher Moseley, editors). London & New York: Routledge.
  • Golla, Victor (2011). California Indian Languages Berkeley, Los Angeles and London: University of California Press.
gollark: I am everywhere.
gollark: Perhaps you're just bad at comparing.
gollark: Cool people like me can compare anything to anything else.
gollark: Possibly different distance though.
gollark: Other light sources do scatter. This is why the sun is vaguely yellow and the sky is blue.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.