Yaron Matras
Yaron Matras (born October 24, 1963) is a linguist at the University of Manchester specializing in Romani and other languages, including Middle Eastern languages. He is one of the most prominent English-language Romani linguists and the author of several pioneering studies, including a book on Romani: A Linguistic Introduction (Cambridge University Press, 2002) and on Romani in Britain: The afterlife of a language (Edinburgh University Press, 2010), and A Grammar of Domari (De Gruyter Mouton, 2012). Matras organized the First International Conference on Romani Linguistics in 1993, and has served as Editor of the cross-disciplinary journal Romani Studies since 1999. He has coordinated the Romani Project at the University of Manchester since 1999, and in 2010 he launched the Multilingual Manchester project. His publications include a book on Language Contact (Cambridge University Press, 2009) and a co-edited trilogy on Mixed Languages, Linguistic Areas, and Grammatical Borrowing.
In 2012 Yaron Matras was awarded the Senior Fellowship of the Zukunftskolleg at the University of Konstanz.[1]
Notable works
[edit]Matras wrote I Met Lucky People: The Story of the Romani Gypsies, published in 2014. The book gives an overview of Romani history and culture aimed at a general readership.[2][3] Writing in The Observer, journalist Peter Stanford wrote that "Matras's immaculately researched, warm and comprehensive study is a challenge belatedly to make a start [of understanding the Romani]."[4] Linguist Victor Friedman praised the book for its scholarship while being able to be read by both an academic and general audience, also writing that the book "...fills an important gap in the literature on the Romani people."[2] Historian Eve Rosenhaft complimented the book's "lively style, colourful anecdote and measured and conscientious approach to presenting and assessing evidence" and recommended it to "both scholarly and popular readerships, and this is important because it is meant to find a wide audience and deserves to do so."[3]
In 2015, The Romani Gypsies was published by Harvard University Press. The book contains the same text as I Met Lucky People but with an expanded bibliography, footnotes, revised index, and additional text on Romani identity.[3]
Bibliography
[edit]- Romani: A Linguistic Introduction. Cambridge University Press, 2002. ISBN 9781139433242.
- Romani in Britain: The Afterlife of a Language. Edinburgh University Press, 2010. ISBN 9780748643691.
- A Grammar of Domari. Walter de Gruyter, 2012. ISBN 9783110291421.
- I Met Lucky People: The Story of the Romani Gypsies. Penguin Books, 2014. ISBN 9780241954706.
- The Romani Gypsies. Harvard University Press, 2015. ISBN 9780674368385.
- Language Contact. Cambridge University Press, second edition. 2020. ISBN 9781108425117.
References
[edit]- ^ "University of Konstanz". Zukunftskolleg. 25 February 2021. Retrieved 23 April 2021.
- ^ a b Friedman, Victor A (29 September 2015). "I Met Lucky People: The Story of the Romani Gypsies. By Yaron Matras. London: Allen Lane, Penguin Books, 2014, 276 pp.; ISBN 978-1-846-14481-3". Social Inclusion. 3 (5): 161–166. doi:10.17645/si.v3i5.302. ISSN 2183-2803.
- ^ a b c Rosenhaft, Eve (2015). "I met lucky people: The story of the Romani Gypsies by Yaron Matras, and: The Romani Gypsies by Yaron Matras (review)". Romani Studies. 25 (2): 220–224. ISSN 1757-2274.
- ^ Stanford, Peter (23 February 2014). "I Met Lucky People: The Story of the Romani Gypsies by Yaron Matras – review". The Observer. ISSN 0029-7712. Retrieved 21 October 2024.
External links
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