The Ausbau Issue in the Dravidian Languages: the Case of Tamil and the Problem of Purism. (original) (raw)

Tamil is a Dravidian language that began to try to develop itself, i.e. undergo Ausbau, when the perception developed that there was a threat from other languages to its very existence. In this study I claim that Tamil linguistic culture’s Ausbau project has had limited success, principally because of an excessive concern with and devotion to purism, to the neglect of other strategies for vocabulary development, such as abbreviation, blending, borrowing and nativization. Tamil linguistic culture has opted primarily for the strategy of loan translation, using ‘native’ roots, or neologizing ex nihilo, by using only what are thought to be ‘pure’ native resources. This study thus looks back in the history of the language to a number of moments when Tamil (and the other Dravidian languages) were confronted with linguistic ‘threats’ of various sorts, i.e. from Sanskrit, English, and from Hindi after Independence. In the end, the fact that higher education has always been in English in India, and continues to resist any switch to other languages, has severely hampered the development of scientific and technological registers in any South Asian language, including Tamil.