Dharwad: Curtains came down at the sixth edition of Dharwad Sahitya Sambrahma with masses of literature fanatics being handled to various finer facets and types of literature, art, culture and track at Karnatak University's Golden Jubilee Auditorium right here on Sunday.
Owing to area crunch simplest about 400 other people may participate in the interplay on the auditorium on every day, but over 2 lakh other people the world over watched the proceedings are living to the web site launched through vividlipi.
Spread over 15 periods the three-day mega match deliberated on several burning and related socio-economic and political problems besides reviewing the path being traversed through literature typically and Kannada literature particularly. The meet attracted the stalwarts who have produced most sensible class literature, hanging Kannada and Karnataka on a high pedestal in the literary international.
Hubballi-Dharwad Municipal Corporation commissioner Siddalingayya Hiremath was the chief guest on the valedictory function. Na Damodara Shetty gave an overall evaluate of the meet.
The concluding day witnessed dialogue on some severe topics. Linguist Ganesh Devy of Gujarat, who lately made Dharwad his home, elaborately handled the subject "Diversity, Aphasia and Image: The Future of Language" and expressed fear over several native languages facing extinction. He stated that the local dialects spoken through tribals have been facing the risk of extinction because of the migration of the folk and because of the training policy.
Citing an instance, he stated that simplest 4 other people have been speaking a language called 'Maje' as according to a survey performed in 2011. Of the 4, who spoke the language, two died and the remainder migrated to other states discovered any other survey performed in 2014.
Adopting English as a medium of instruction on the primary level of training has additionally posed danger to the regional and vernacular languages he stated and added that with the extensive use of cellphone, human beings have stopped conversing with fellow humans. "Instead, the machines are talking to each other," he stated.
Devi published that those that died right through Tsunami in Tamil Nadu weren't locals but outsiders.
The locals had passed messages about the forthcoming danger of their local dialect and moved to safer puts. Those, who didn't understand the local dialect of fishermen, didn't get the message and changed into victims of the Tsunami, Devy defined.
Replying to a question on the future of Kannada, Devy stated that the language is now in the in depth care unit and there's need to make sure that it comes out of it. Due to English-medium faculties, children don't learn or write Kannada and this could hurt the possibilities of Kannada, he warned. However, he was hoping that Kannada would continue to exist on account of its robust roots.
Professor Rajendra Chenni moderated the session.
Owing to area crunch simplest about 400 other people may participate in the interplay on the auditorium on every day, but over 2 lakh other people the world over watched the proceedings are living to the web site launched through vividlipi.
Spread over 15 periods the three-day mega match deliberated on several burning and related socio-economic and political problems besides reviewing the path being traversed through literature typically and Kannada literature particularly. The meet attracted the stalwarts who have produced most sensible class literature, hanging Kannada and Karnataka on a high pedestal in the literary international.
Hubballi-Dharwad Municipal Corporation commissioner Siddalingayya Hiremath was the chief guest on the valedictory function. Na Damodara Shetty gave an overall evaluate of the meet.
The concluding day witnessed dialogue on some severe topics. Linguist Ganesh Devy of Gujarat, who lately made Dharwad his home, elaborately handled the subject "Diversity, Aphasia and Image: The Future of Language" and expressed fear over several native languages facing extinction. He stated that the local dialects spoken through tribals have been facing the risk of extinction because of the migration of the folk and because of the training policy.
Citing an instance, he stated that simplest 4 other people have been speaking a language called 'Maje' as according to a survey performed in 2011. Of the 4, who spoke the language, two died and the remainder migrated to other states discovered any other survey performed in 2014.
Adopting English as a medium of instruction on the primary level of training has additionally posed danger to the regional and vernacular languages he stated and added that with the extensive use of cellphone, human beings have stopped conversing with fellow humans. "Instead, the machines are talking to each other," he stated.
Devi published that those that died right through Tsunami in Tamil Nadu weren't locals but outsiders.
The locals had passed messages about the forthcoming danger of their local dialect and moved to safer puts. Those, who didn't understand the local dialect of fishermen, didn't get the message and changed into victims of the Tsunami, Devy defined.
Replying to a question on the future of Kannada, Devy stated that the language is now in the in depth care unit and there's need to make sure that it comes out of it. Due to English-medium faculties, children don't learn or write Kannada and this could hurt the possibilities of Kannada, he warned. However, he was hoping that Kannada would continue to exist on account of its robust roots.
Professor Rajendra Chenni moderated the session.
Several native languages facing extinction: Linguist
Reviewed by Kailash
on
January 22, 2018
Rating: