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Reviewed by:
  • Surmic languages and cultures ed. by Gerrit J. Dimmendaal, Marco Last
  • Edward J. Vajda
Surmic languages and cultures. Ed. by Gerrit J. Dimmendaal and Marco Last. (Nilo-Saharan. Linguistic analyses and documentation 13.) Köln: Rüdiger Köppe Verlag, 1998. Pp. viii, 458.

The fourteen articles in this monograph represent a major contribution to the study of one of Africa’s most remote language families. The Surmic languages are spoken across a linguistically diverse zone in southwestern Ethiopia and southern Sudan frequently rendered inaccessible to researchers by civil war or other local calamities. The book’s individual contributions are wide ranging and address both synchronic and diachronic issues as well as sociolinguistic and anthropological aspects of Surmic speech communities. Several of the articles are also rich in ethnohistorical detail. The book is pioneering in the sense that many of its topics have never before been discussed at any length in print. Each article is a self-contained study followed by its own bibliography, but together the collection serves as a superb introduction to Surmic studies. One of the contributions, ‘Surmic bibliography: Language and culture’ (127–41), by Jon Abbink and Peter Unseth, also provides an extensive and invaluable, though not exhaustive, source guide to Surmic publications.

The book begins with Gerrit J. Dimmendaal’s ‘Surmic languages and cultures: An introduction’ (3–33), which surveys past attempts to subclassify Surmic family membership and discusses alternate names for the various individual languages. ‘A syntactic typology of Surmic from an areal and historical- comparative point of view’ (35–81), also by Dimmendaal, concludes that Proto-Surmic likely had verb-second rather than verb-initial word order and that the family is transitional between the neighboring Omotic and Nilotic families. Moges Yigezu’s ‘Women in society and female speech among the Suri of Southwestern Ethiopia’ (83–101) explores the linguistic effects of the tribe’s custom of forcing women to wear labrets, a practice that causes female speakers to systematically replace labials with corresponding dentals or velars. In ‘Cross-ethnic clan identities among Surmic groups and their neighbours: The case of the Mela’ (103–11), Peter Unseth and Jon Abbink explore how clan names shared by multiple ethnic groups can reveal facts about the origins of various Surmic tribes. In ‘Two old causative affixes in Surmic languages’ (113–26), Unseth demonstrates the existence of a causative affix shared between Proto-Surmic and Proto-Nilotic (Surmic’s closest relative within Nilo-Saharan).

The remaining articles deal with individual Surmic languages or subgroups rather than the family as a whole. Unseth’s ‘Clan, kinship and marriage patterns among the Majangir’ (145–78) is the only contribution dealing specifically with a Northeastern Surmic language and culture. In ‘Murle categorization’ (181–218), Johathan E. Arensen explains the semantic and cultural logic behind a Southwestern Surmic nominal classification system (important grammatically as the determiner of which singulative or pluralizing suffix each noun requires). Scott Randal’s ‘A grammatical sketch of Tennet’ (219–72) and ‘Notes on Baale’ (273–317) by Moges Yigezu and Gerrit J. Dimmendaal provide more comprehensive structural descriptions of two other Southwestern Surmic languages. The final four articles, which describe individual Southeastern Surmic languages, are: ‘Violence and political discourse among the Chai Suri’ (321–44) by Jon Abbink; ‘A sketch of Koegu grammar: Towards reconstructing Proto-Southeastern Surmic’ (345–74) by Osamu Hieda; ‘A grammatical sketch of Chai’ (375–436) by Marco Last and Deborah Lucassen; and ‘The Me’en verb system: Does Me’en have tenses?’ (437–58) by Hans-Georg Will. Each of these articles adds significant detail to what had previously been published on the language in question.

This book is an important contribution to Nilo-Saharan studies and will undoubtedly influence the direction of new research on Surmic languages for years to come.

Edward J. Vajda
Western Washington University
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