Roy Andrew Miller

For other people of the same name, see Roy Miller (disambiguation).

Roy Andrew Miller (September 5, 1924 August 22, 2014[1][2]) was an American linguist notable for his advocacy of Korean and Japanese as members of the Altaic group of languages.

Biography

Miller was born in Winona, Minnesota, USA, on September 5, 1924, to Andrew and Jessie (née Eickelberry) Miller. In 1953, he completed a PhD in Chinese and Japanese at Columbia University in New York. Long a student of languages, his early work in the 1950s was largely with Chinese and Tibetan. For example, in 1969 he wrote the Encyclopædia Britannica entry on the Tibeto-Burman Languages of South Asia.

He was Professor of Linguistics at the International Christian University in Tokyo from 1955 to 1963. Subsequently he taught at Yale University; between 1964 and 1970, he was chairman of the department of East and South Asian Languages and Literatures. From 1970 until 1989 he held a similar post at the University of Washington in Seattle. He then taught in Europe, mainly in Germany and Scandinavia.

He wrote extensively on the Japanese language, from A Japanese Reader (1963) and The Japanese Language (1967) to Japanese and the Other Altaic Languages (1971) and Nihongo: In Defense of Japanese (1986). He later broadened his scope by linking Korean both to Japanese and Altaic, most notably in Languages and History: Japanese, Korean, and Altaic (1996).

On the occasion of his 75th birthday, Professors Karl Menges and Nelly Naumann prepared a Festschrift highlighting his career and including articles on Altaic languages.[3]

Selected works

Books

Articles

Reviews

References

  1. Obituary
  2. Obituary
  3. Menges, Karl H., and Nelly Naumann (eds.) (1999). Language and Literature Japanese and the Other Altaic Languages: Studies in Honour of Roy Andrew Miller on His 75th Birthday. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag.

External links

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