2019
DOI: 10.1111/lnc3.12325
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The dispersal of Austronesian languages in Island South East Asia: Current findings and debates

Abstract: This paper reviews the “standard” view of the Austronesian language family tree in connection with the archeological “farming/language dispersal” hypothesis of Neolithic populations moving into Island South East Asia (ISEA) and beyond. It focuses on what is currently known about the dispersal history of the ~650 languages spoken in ISEA (Malaysia, the Philippines, Indonesia, and Timor‐Leste) that belong to the Malayo‐Polynesian branch of Austronesian and points out where the topology of the MP branch is agreed… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Regarding language, Donohue and Denham argue that the previously defined hierarchical Austronesian subgroups in ISEA are not valid, nor is the geographically staged dispersal of languages those subgroups signified. Instead, current subgrouping indicates that "rapid, multi-directional, and multi-modal propagation" [17:229] of Austronesian languages better accounts for their distribution across ISEA [18]. Soares and colleagues' [19] analysis of 157 human mtDNA genomes also questions the OoT hypothesis.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Regarding language, Donohue and Denham argue that the previously defined hierarchical Austronesian subgroups in ISEA are not valid, nor is the geographically staged dispersal of languages those subgroups signified. Instead, current subgrouping indicates that "rapid, multi-directional, and multi-modal propagation" [17:229] of Austronesian languages better accounts for their distribution across ISEA [18]. Soares and colleagues' [19] analysis of 157 human mtDNA genomes also questions the OoT hypothesis.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…8 8 Innovative research by Owen Edwards (2018) on substrate retention from pre-Austronesian languages has begun to provide new insights into historical linguistic relationships in the Timor area and has wider methodological and theoretical implications for an understanding of the Austronesianspeaking world. Marian Klamer (2019) provides an excellent summary discussion of current findings and debates on the dispersal of Austronesian languages in island Southeast Asia.…”
Section: Pathways Through the Austronesianspeaking Worldmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Austronesian language family comprises approximately 1,200 languages or 20% of the world's languages, spoken in a larger area from Madagascar to New Zealand, crossing several South East Asia countries such as Indonesia, Malaysia, and the Philippines (Blust, 2011;Klamer, 2019) by about 180-250 million speakers (Pereltsvaig, 2012). Due to the language family's number of languages and wideness of domain, Austronesian is among the largest language families (Lynch, 1998).…”
Section: Filipino and Indonesian As Austronesian Languagesmentioning
confidence: 99%