Kapil Muni Tiwary

Kapil Muni Tiwary
Born Nainijor-Bishupur village, Bhojpur District, Bihar
Nationality Indian
Alma mater University of Pennsylvania
Occupation Linguist

Kapil Muni Tiwary (born 1932) is a former professor and head of the department of Linguistics and Literature at Patna University[1] and currently a professor of English in Yemen.[2]

Biography

Kapil Muni Tiwary was born in Nainijor village in the Bhojpur District of Bihar, India. He graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 1966 with a dissertation on grammar and phonology, Comparative reconstruction of Indo-Iranian sounds: On the basis of 'An Avesta grammar in comparison with Sanskrit, part 1' by A. V. Williams Jackson.

Tiwary is a scholar of South Asian languages. He has published on such topics as echo words in Bhojpuri and has argued that echo-word constructions (in which "a word is repeated without its initial consonant, sometimes with a vowel change") can function as a kind of secret language.[3] He coined the term "institutionalized weeping" in a study of weeping among Tamil women.[4]

Books

Tiwary's first book, Panini's description of Sanskrit nominal compounds, was published by Janaki Prakashan, Patna in 1984. Another book, Language Deprivation and the socially disadvantaged: with special reference to Bihar, was published by Janaki Prakashan in 1994.[5]

Editor

Tiwary was one of the editors of a bi-annual journal of social sciences and humanities, Explorations in 1987-88.[6][7] His article, Caste-Conflict: A View from Bhojpur, was published in Volume I, No. I of Exploration in 1987.[8]

He also edited an anthology of English prose, Aspects of English prose: an anthology, with R.C. Prasad in 1986.

Linguist

His articles and books on various branches of linguists have been of special interest for the scholars in India and abroad.[9][10][11][12]

References

  1. ↑ Tiwary, K. M. (Autumn 1978). "Tuneful Weeping: A Mode of Communication". Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies 3 (3): 24–27. doi:10.2307/3346324. JSTOR 3346324.
  2. ↑ Archived 11 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine.
  3. ↑ Sherzer, Joel (1987). "A Discourse-Centered Approach to Language and Culture". American Anthropologist 89 (2): 295–309. doi:10.1525/aa.1987.89.2.02a00010. JSTOR 677756.
  4. ↑ Clark-Decès, Isabelle (2005). No one cries for the dead: Tamil dirges, rowdy songs, and graveyard petitions. University of California Press. p. 4. Retrieved 17 November 2011.
  5. ↑ , openlibrary.org, accessed on 12 March 2011
  6. ↑ , www.books.google.co.in, accessed on 27 March 2011
  7. ↑ Cambridge University Press (1988). "Brief Notices". Language in Society 17 (03): 459–473. doi:10.1017/s0047404500013038.
  8. ↑ "Caste Conflict: A View from Bhojpur". Explorations (Radha Devi Mahila Vidyapeeth, Sikandarpur, Muzaffarpur) 1 (1). 1987. Retrieved 31 July 2013.
  9. ↑ Debra J. Occhi, Society for Linguistic Anthropology (U.S.). Languages of sentiment: cultural constructions of emotional substrates. John Benjamins Publishing Co, The Netherlands. p. 47. Retrieved 17 November 2011.
  10. ↑ James MacLynn Wilce (2009). Crying shame: metaculture, modernity, and the exaggerated death of lament. Blackwell Publishing. p. 249. Retrieved 17 November 2011.
  11. ↑ Herman Parret, ed. (1975). History of linguistic thought and contemporary linguistics. p. 142. Retrieved 17 November 2011.
  12. ↑ Regna Darnell, ed. (2002). American anthropology, 1971-1995: papers from the American anthropologist. American Anthropological Association, USA. p. 514. Retrieved 17 November 2011.

External links

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