Department of World Languages & Cultures - Chapman University

Department of World Languages & Cultures - Chapman University The Department of World Languages & Cultures is part of Wilkinson College at Chapman University.

CHAPMAN UNIVERSITY'S DEPARTMENT OF LANGUAGES is comprised of a diverse group of intelligent, cultured, well-traveled professors who wish to expand and share their knowledge of other languages among the Chapman community.

Ending another great semester! Muy buen trabajo, muchach@s.
12/06/2019

Ending another great semester! Muy buen trabajo, muchach@s.

In the last year, the number of Spanish speakers goes from 572,6 million to 577 million, according to Instituto Cervante...
03/22/2019

In the last year, the number of Spanish speakers goes from 572,6 million to 577 million, according to Instituto Cervantes.

Son datos del Instituto Cervantes de Madrid.  Según su informe anual, el 7,6 % de la población mundial es hoy hispanohablante.       

https://blogs.chapman.edu/wilkinson/2019/03/14/shipibo-konibo/
03/14/2019

https://blogs.chapman.edu/wilkinson/2019/03/14/shipibo-konibo/

It has been estimated that up to 45% of Peru’s ca. 33 million people is Amerindian. Almost 50 different indigenous groups, speaking their own languages, inhabit the country’s Andean and Amazonian regions. Until recently it was almost impossible for Native parents to officially register their chi...

"In the late 19th century, the modern Japanese government annexed land from the Ainu people and prohibited them from pra...
02/15/2019

"In the late 19th century, the modern Japanese government annexed land from the Ainu people and prohibited them from practising their customs and using their language."

The ethnic minority, mainly living on Hokkaido, has long suffered the effects of a policy of forced assimilation.

"The Amawaka are an Indigenous Amazonian people from Peru and Brazil. Their language, also called Amawaka, belongs to th...
08/07/2018

"The Amawaka are an Indigenous Amazonian people from Peru and Brazil. Their language, also called Amawaka, belongs to the Panoan Family. A pressing concern of the Amawaka people is the ongoing rapid displacement of their language by Spanish and Portuguese. Today, only in the most distant villages do children acquire it. Therefore, capturing a permanent record of Amawaka language and cultural knowledge is urgent. This project is a joint initiative brainstormed by researchers from two academic institutions in response to this grave situation: Chapman University and Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú (PUCP)."
https://blogs.chapman.edu/wilkinson/2018/08/01/grant-awarded-to-dr-valenzuela/

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9401 Jeronimo Road
Orange, CA
92618

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