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Re: [xmca] Seeking help with Vygtosky's translation



Greetings from Seoul, Professor Goncu, where your two books on play are often read and appreciated.
 
As Meccaci remarks (and van der Veer confirms), there is really no very good LITERAL translation of Thinking and Speech into English and there is never likely to be. Partly this is the fault of the overenthusiastic early translators but partly it is the fault of copyright laws which prevent the translation of this work from becoming, as would be really proper, an inter-individual and inter-generational enterprise.
 
Those who know other languages can rely on the excellent French translation by Seve or the BRILLIANT Italian translation by Meccaci himself. Here's what they have, retranslated into English by me:
 
Seve: It would be miraculous if the assimilation of a foreign language during the process of school learning was a replica, a reproduction of that of the mother tongue, which was carried out long ago and under completely different conditions. But these differences, however profound they may be, must not mask from us the fact that the two processes of assimilating the mother tongue and assimilating the foreign language have between them so many points in common that it appears that at bottom there is a single class of verbal development processes, to which the extremely original process of the development of written language also attaches itself, for this does not repeat any of the precedents but instead represents a new variation of a single unified process. What is more, these three processes—the assimilation of mother tongues and foreign tongues and the development of written language—each exercise a complex action on the others, and this testifies
 incontestably to their belonging to single and same class of genetic processes and to their internal unity. The assimilation of a foreign language is also, as we have said, an original process because it utilizes the whole of the semantic aspects of the mother tongue which are the result of a long development. The learning of the mother tongue is based therefore on the knowledge of the mother tongue. Less evident and less well known is the relationship of inverse dependence between these two processes: the foreign language exercises in reverse an influence upon the mother tongue of the child. Goethe understood this very well, he who said that one who does not know a foreign language does not really know his own. Research entirely confirms this idea of Goethe, because it shows that the mastery of a foreign language raises the mother tongue as well to a superior level in the sense that the child becomes aware of linguistic form, that he generalizes verbal
 phenomena, that he utilizes more consciously and more volitionally the word as an instrument of thinking and as an expression of a concept. One can say that the assimilation of a foreign language raises the mother tongue to a superior level as much as the assimilation of algebra raises the level of arithmetic thinking to a superior level, because it permits the child to understand that all arithmetic operations are a particular case of algebraic operations, they give him a freer, more abstract, more generalized, and at the same time more profound insight into operations using concrete quantities. Just as algebra frees the thinking of the child from the hold which concrete numbers had upon it, in the same way, but by other paths, the assimilation of a foreign language frees his verbal thinking from the hold of forms and concrete linguistic phenomena.
 
Meccaci: It would be a miracle if the development of a foreign language during the course of instructed learning in school repeated or reproduced the course, made much earlier and in other conditions, of the development of the mother tongue. These differences, although profound, should not hide from us the fact that these two processes of the developing mother tongue and the foreign one have between them very much in common and are at bottom members of a single class of processes of verbal development, and, in addition, they are accompanied by the extremely original process of development of written language which does not repeat the preceding processes but represents a new variation in this unique process of linguistic development. What is more, these three processes—the development of the mother tongue and the foreign tongue and the development of written language—are found in an extremely complex interaction which shows incontestably that they
 belong to a single class of genetic processes which has an internal unity. As we have seen above, the development of a foreign language is an original process, because it uses the whole of the semantic aspects of the mother tongue, which are born during a prolonged process of development. The learning in school of a foreign language is based in some way upon the knowledge of the mother tongue. Less evident and less well noted is the reverse dependence between these two processes, which consists of the inverse influence of the foreign language on the mother tongue of the child. Nevertheless Goethe understood this very well when he said that oen who does not know any foreign language does not truly know his own. Research has completely confirmed this idea of Goethe’s, showing that the mastery of a foreign language raises the mother tongue to a higher stage, in the sense that the awareness of the forms of language, of the generalizations of the phenomena
 of language, of the more voluntary and more conscious use of words as instruments of thinking and as expressions of concepts. If we may say so, the assimilation of a foreign language raises the level of the maternal language (rech) for the child as much as the assimilation of algebra raises to a higher level the child’s arithmetic thinking, because it permits the child to understand any arithmetical operation as a particular case of algebraic operations, furnishing the child a freer, more abstract, more generalized and at the same time more profound and rich view of operations on concrete quantitites. Just as algebra frees the thinking of the child from its dependence on concrete numbers and raises it to a higher level of more generalized thinking, in the same way the assimilation of a foreign language in completely diverse ways frees verbal thinking from the grip of concrete forms and concrete phenomena of language.
 

There is another very relevant passage in Chapter 6, section 5:
 
Seve: But between these two opposed paths there exists a reciprocal interdependence, just like that between the development of scientific concepts and spontaneous concepts. The conscious and intentional assimilation of a foreign language is, to all the best evidence, based on a certain level of development of the mother tongue. When the child assimilates a foreign tongue, he already has at his disposal from the mother tongue a system of significations which he transfers into the other language. But inversely as well, the assimilation of a foreign language breaks the trail for the mastery of the higher forms of the maternal language. It permits the child to conceive his mother tongue as a particular case of the linguistic system, and, as a result, gives him the possibility of generalizing the phenomena that are proper to it, which signifies also seizing conscious awareness of his proper verbal operations and mastering them. Just as algebra is an
 generalization and therefore a seizure of conscious awareness of arithmetic operations and their mastery, the development of a foreign language on the basis of the mother tongue signifies a generalization of linguistic phenomena and a seizure of conscious awareness of verbal operations, that is to say their translation onto the higher plane of a language which has become conscious and volitional. It is precisely in this sense that we must understand the aphorism of Goethe: “He who knows no foreign language does not at bottom understand his own.” 
 
Meccaci: But between these two roads which proceed in opposite directions, there exists a reciprocal interdependence, much like that between the development of scientific concepts and that of spontaneous concepts. This conscious and voluntary assimilation of a foreign language bases itself very evidently upon a certain level of development of the mother tongue. The child assimilates a foreign tongue because he has at his disposal a system of knowledge of the mother tongue and can transfer this into the sphere of the other language. Conversely, the assimilation of the foreign language opens the road to the mastery of the superior forms of the mother tongue. It permits the child to conceive of the mother tongue as a particular case of a language system and gives the possibility of generalizing the phenomena of the mother tongue; this means the seizure of conscious awareness of its proper verbal operations and mastering them. In the same way, algebra is a
 generalization and therefore a seizure of consciousness of arithmetical operations and allows their mastery, so too the development of a foreign language on the base of the mother tongue signifies the generalization of the linguistic phenomena and the seizure of consciousness of verbal operations, in other words their translation to a higher level of conscious and volitional language. This is the real sense in which we must understand the maxim of Goethe: He who does not know any foreign language, does not really know his own language at bottom.”
 

David Kellogg

Seoul National University of Education


      
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