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John Lynch (linguist)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Australian-Vanuatuan linguist (1946–2021)
For other people named John Lynch, seeJohn Lynch (disambiguation).

John Lynch
An elderly man in a loose blue polo shirt with a massive beard and huge aviator glasses holding a small black bowl which is red on the inside; the background is tropical with indigenous housing in the distance
Lynch drinkingkava inPort Vila (2015)
Born(1946-07-08)8 July 1946
Sydney, Australia
Died25 May 2021(2021-05-25) (aged 74)
Port Vila, Vanuatu
Citizenship
    • Australian
    • Vanuatuan (since 2002)
Spouse
Andonia Piau
(died 2011)
Children2
Academic background
Alma materUniversity of Hawaiʻi
ThesisLenakel Phonology (1974)
Doctoral advisorGeorge W. Grace
Academic work
DisciplineLinguistics
Sub-discipline
InstitutionsUniversity of Papua New Guinea
Notable worksThe Oceanic Languages

John Dominic Lynch (8 July 1946 – 25 May 2021) was an Australian-Vanuatuan linguist who specialised in the historical development of theOceanic languages. He was a professor at theUniversity of Papua New Guinea for over twenty years and elected its vice chancellor in 1986 before finishing his career at theUniversity of the South Pacific inPort Vila, Vanuatu. He retired asprofessor emeritus of the Pacific languages at the end of 2007.

While at the University of the South Pacific, Lynch served as the director of the Pacific Languages Unit, an association dedicated to the research and promotion of languages in the Pacific. Throughout his career, he was known as a gifted writer and administrator. He served as chief editor ofOceanic Linguistics for twelve years following the resignation ofByron Bender.

Early life and education

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John Dominic Lynch was born on 8 July 1946 inSydney, Australia, the eldest of five sons born to Dorothy Patricia "Pat" (née Conaghan), a high school music teacher, and Gregory Lynch, achemical engineer; both Pat's and Gregory's families wereIrish Catholic immigrants to Australia.[1][2] The family lived inWahroonga, a suburb north of Sydney, until 1958 when they moved toMelbourne.[3][4] There, John attendedXavier College, aboarding school run by theSociety of Jesus, during which he studiedLatin,French, andAncient Greek. AlthoughGerman was not available as a class, he began teaching himself the language. Eventually, he was tutored by a local Austrian native who was married to one of the schoolteachers and Lynch passed the final exam.[4]

Lynch began attending theUniversity of Sydney on aCommonwealth Scholarship in 1964, receiving a degree inanthropology and alinguistics distinction with first-class honours four years later.[5] At one point the only student in the honours linguistics program, Lynch's only linguistics professor wasArthur Capell, a specialist in theAboriginal languages of Australia and the languages of thePacific.[5][6] Following his graduation, Lynch received a grant from theEast–West Center to continue his doctoral studies at theUniversity of Hawaiʻi inHonolulu.[5] His thesis focused onLenakel, a language indigenous to theisland of Tanna in southernVanuatu, and provided adescriptive andhistorical account of the language's phonology.[5][7] In 1969, he began the first of five expeditions to the island to investigate the language.[5] Lynch completed his doctoral program in 1974, under the American linguistGeorge W. Grace.[7][6]

Career

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While working on his doctorate, Lynch began working at theUniversity of Papua New Guinea.[8] In 1969, the Australian linguistAndrew Pawley helped to establish an undergraduate linguistics program there as a part of the nascent anthropology and sociology department. The following year, Lynch assumed Pawley's position there following the latter's departure.[9] During this period, Lynch both taught at the University of Papua New Guinea and took classes back inHawaii while writing hisdissertation.[9]

In 1974, Lynch assumed the chief editing role at theacademic journalKivung (nowLanguage and Linguistics in Melanesia), published by the Linguistic Society of Papua New Guinea.[9] The same year, the Department of Language was created at the university; Lynch was promoted to senior lecturer two years later. He was granted afull professorship in 1978, teaching up to seventeen hours per week, and resigned as chief editor ofKivung, though he later served as a reviewing editor from 1982 to 1986.[9] Recognised for his talent in administration, Lynch was made Dean of Arts for several years before being madevice chancellor in 1986.[10] From then on until his death in 2021, he continued to be involved inKivung's editorial process, as either an associate editor or as a member of the journal's editorial board.[9] Prior to his promotion, Lynch anonymously penned a newsletter throughout his career at the university, entitledMoving Finger, in which hesatirised the university's bureaucracy and internal politics. It is unclear whether it was known he was the author when he was appointed to the chancellorship.[9] Between 1985 and 1988, Lynch and the English-Australian linguistTerry Crowley were funded byUNESCO to organise workshops for language development throughoutMelanesia, culminating in a course book entitledCommunication and Language published in 1988.[11]

Lynch began working at theUniversity of the South Pacific's Emalus campus inPort Vila, Vanuatu, in 1991.

At the end of 1991, Lynch left Papua New Guinea to begin work at theUniversity of the South Pacific's Emalus campus; he and his family moved toPort Vila, Vanuatu.[12][8] Prior to beginning work there, Lynch was appointed to the directorship of the university's Pacific Languages Unit, an organisation for the research and promotion of Pacific languages, following Crowley's resignation from the position.[11] Lynch was honoured with apersonal chair in 1995, as Professor of the Pacific languages. The same year, he was made head of the Emalus campus and served in that capacity until his retirement in 2007.[11][8] In 2002, Lynch was grantedVanuatuan citizenship.[13]

Retirement and death

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Lynch retired on New Year's Eve 2007, given the honour of being namedprofessor emeritus which was a rarity at the University of the South Pacific.[14][15] Following his retirement, he was approached byByron Bender to become the editor of the academic journalOceanic Linguistics following Bender's resignation. Bender had originally sought outRobert Blust, who declined, and then reached out to Andrew Pawley. Pawley also declined, but strongly recommended Lynch for the position. Bender and Lynch co-edited one 2006 issue together, and the latter remained chief editor from 2007 to 2019.[16]

Later in his life, Lynch suffered from serious health problems. In 2014, Lynch experiencedcongestive heart failure,haematoma, and muscle infections. He was no longer allowed to fly based on his medical issues, which severely limited his ability to conduct research and remain a part of academic life outside Vanuatu.[16] Although these later years had been marked by serious disease, he resolved to stay in Vanuatu rather than return to Australia.[17]

Lynch died inPort Vila on 25 May 2021 following astroke.[18] His funeral was held virtually.[2]

Recognition and legacy

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Much of Lynch's best-known work focused on theOceanic languages.

In 1985, Lynch was honoured by the government of Papua New Guinea with its 10th Anniversary Medal for his contributions to education in the country.[14] In 2008, Lynch was voted a Fellow of theAustralian Academy of the Humanities.[19] Eight years later, Vanuatu awarded him the Independence Anniversary Medal during the thirtieth year ofits independence in honour of his contributions to "linguistics, language studies, and tertiary education".[11][14] Lynch's work was heavily focused on the languages of Vanuatu; nearly seventy of his 125 articles dealt with the topic, much of it focused on thehistorical phonology of the country's southern languages.[11][20] Apart from that work, he wrote about the morphological development andpidgins of the region.[11]

Among his best-known works are his monographPacific Languages: An Introduction (1998) andThe Oceanic Languages (2002), coauthored withMalcolm Ross and Crowley.[21] His 1998 monograph was highly regarded and saw use as a university textbook for decades after its release; it has been used in this capacity by hundreds of students as recently as 2021 at the University of the South Pacific.[22]The Oceanic Languages provides an overview of forty-threeOceanic languages and the languages' last common ancestor,Proto-Oceanic. It remains a standard reference work among scholars of the languages, who often refer to it simply as "the blue book".[21]

Lynch was highly regarded for his writing ability; coauthors commented that his first drafts were usually indistinguishable from his final drafts and that he used plain language whenever possible, which he felt would make himself better understood.[21]

Personal life

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Lynch was married to Andonia "Andy" (née Piau), with whom he had two sons.[16][23] She died of cancer in 2011.[16] While in Vanuatu, his wife worked as aneducational psychologist on the island and was the nation's only psychologist with a degree. She was later an advocate forwomen's rights in Vanuatu, as well as for those with disabilities.[11] Following her death, Lynch worked with theAustralian High Commission to establish the Andy Lynch Award, issued onInternational Women's Day to recognise women working incommunity service anddisability advocacy. Lynch remained heavily involved in the selection process until 2020.[24]

Along with many of his friends, Lynch enjoyed drinking beverages made fromkava, a plant with mildpsychoactive qualities. He consumed it with some regularity, even until a few days before his death.[25] Aside from his native English, Lynch spokeLenakel,Aneityum,Tok Pisin,Bislama, and French.[26]

Lynch was a fan ofcricket.[5][27] While in Honolulu, he played for the local cricket team atKapiʻolani Park alongside other international players.[5] One of his sons, Steven, is a Vanuatuan cricket player who has represented the nation in international tournaments.[28]

Selected works

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Articles

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  • "Those kind of adjectives" (1973)
  • "Bislama Phonology and Grammar" (1975)
  • "A Note on Proto-Oceanic Vowels" (1976)
  • "On the Kuman 'Liquids'" (1982)
  • "On the Origin of Tok Pisinna" (1994)
  • "On the Relative Instability of*tina- 'Mother' in the Languages of Eastern Oceania" (1996)
  • "The Phonological History of Iaai" (2015)
  • "Numeral Systems, Internal Subgrouping, and Language Contact in Malakula" (2016)
  • "The Proto-Oceanic Common Article in Southwestern Malakula Languages" (2017)
  • "Final Consonants and the Status of Proto-North-Central Vanuatu" (2018)
  • "The Phonological History of Naman, a Western Malakula Language" (2019)
  • "The Phonological History of Nese, a Northern Malakula Language" (2019)
  • "The Phonological History of Uripiv, an Eastern Malakula Language" (2020)
  • "Homophony of Subject Markers in the Languages of Tanna (Vanuatu)" (2020)

Books

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  • Lenakel Phonology (1974), dissertation
  • The Design of Language: An Introduction to Descriptive Linguistics (1995)
  • Pacific Languages: An Introduction (1998)
  • A Grammar of Anejom̃ (2000)
  • The Linguistic History of Southern Vanuatu (2001)
  • Languages of Vanuatu: A New Survey and Bibliography (2001, with Terry Crowley)
  • The Oceanic Languages (2002, with Malcolm Ross and Terry Crowley)

References

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Citations

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  1. ^Geraghty & Pawley 2021, p. 489.
  2. ^abEarly & Spriggs 2022, ¶9.
  3. ^Ross & Blust 2021, p. i.
  4. ^abGeraghty & Pawley 2021, pp. 489–490.
  5. ^abcdefgGeraghty & Pawley 2021, p. 490.
  6. ^abVolker 2022, ¶4.
  7. ^abVanuatu Daily Post 2021, ¶3.
  8. ^abcEarly & Spriggs 2022, ¶10.
  9. ^abcdefGeraghty & Pawley 2021, p. 491.
  10. ^
  11. ^abcdefgGeraghty & Pawley 2021, p. 492.
  12. ^Geraghty & Pawley 2021, pp. 491–492.
  13. ^Vanuatu Daily Post 2021, ¶8.
  14. ^abcEarly & Spriggs 2022, ¶11.
  15. ^Garae 2016, ¶13.
  16. ^abcdGeraghty & Pawley 2021, p. 494.
  17. ^Early & Spriggs 2022, ¶17.
  18. ^Early & Spriggs 2022, ¶1, ¶17.
  19. ^
  20. ^Early & Spriggs 2022, ¶16.
  21. ^abcGeraghty & Pawley 2021, p. 493.
  22. ^Early & Spriggs 2022, ¶13.
  23. ^Early & Spriggs 2022, Photo 1, ¶5.
  24. ^Vanuatu Daily Post 2021, ¶9–10.
  25. ^Early & Spriggs 2022, ¶5, ¶17.
  26. ^Garae 2016, ¶10.
  27. ^Early & Spriggs 2022, ¶4.
  28. ^Geraghty & Pawley 2021, p. 495.

Sources

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External links

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