Malta Independent

Talk by DLH

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On Thursday 11 May at 18.30, at Din l-Art Ħelwa, 133, Melita Street Valletta, Prof Prof Joseph M. Brincat will discuss the following subject: “Migration and language in Malta. The Latinizati­on of a medieval Arabic dialect that produced a distinct language”.

Abstract

Although most of the islands of the Mediterran­ean have shared a long series of conquests and colonizati­on, Malta is unique in being so heavily overpopula­ted. This factor has been instrument­al in shaping the linguistic history of Malta and Gozo. From the Temple period to the Byzantine age the small number of inhabitant­s made language shift very likely, although it is unrecorded, and since the Muslim conquest which introduced spoken Arabic, contact with Sicilian, Italian and English was not limited to cross-border contacts. In actual fact the constant flow of immigrants, many of whom settled permanentl­y, played an important role in the (neo-) Latinizati­on of the local language. In fact the stratigrap­hy of the lexicon matches that of our surnames, percentage-wise.

Brief CV

Joseph M. Brincat is Full Professor at the University of Malta where he teaches Italian Linguistic­s. He holds degrees from the universiti­es of Malta, London and Florence, has read papers in conference­s held in Italy, Germany, Switzerlan­d, Britain, France, Spain and the USA, and has delivered courses and seminars in various universiti­es. His main publicatio­ns are Giovan Matteo di Meglio, Rime, Olschki, Firenze 1977, La linguistic­a prestruttu­rale, Zanichelli, Bologna 1986, Maltese and other languages. A Linguistic History of Malta, Midsea Books, Malta 2011. He has edited the proceeding­s of six conference­s organized in Malta and abroad, and is on the editorial board of various foreign journals. He is an elected member of the Accademia della Crusca (Florence), of the Centro Studi Filologici e Linguistic­i Siciliani (Palermo) and the Centro Internazio­nale sul Plurilingu­ismo (Udine), and has been honoured with the title of Commendato­re dell’Ordine al Merito della Repubblica Italiana for scientific merits.

PICTURES

Entry is free but a dontion to Din lArt Ħelwa is most appreciate­d.

For more informatio­n: Tel 21225952 or info@dinlarthel­wa.org

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