
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In his research, UC Berkeley Ph.D. candidate Saagar Asnani looks at music manuscripts from between the 12th and 14th centuries in medieval France. He says only recently have scholars begun to use a wider variety of media and artistic expressions as a way to study language. "If we unpack the genre of music, we will find a very precise record of how language was spoken," Saagar says.
To read medieval music, Saagar learned five languages — Latin, German, Italian, Catalan and Occitan — making 10 languages that he knows in total (for now, at least).
In losing the history of pieces of music, Saagar says, we’ve lost languages and cultures that were present and important to the time period.
And today, at a time when linguistic boundaries are crumbling before our eyes, he says, instead of judging someone who speaks differently from you, realize that “it's actually a way of speaking a language and that we should cherish that because it's beautiful in its own way."
Listen to the episode and read the transcript on UC Berkeley News (news.berkeley.edu/podcasts).
UC Berkeley photo by Brandon Sánchez Mejia.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By UC Berkeley5
2020 ratings
In his research, UC Berkeley Ph.D. candidate Saagar Asnani looks at music manuscripts from between the 12th and 14th centuries in medieval France. He says only recently have scholars begun to use a wider variety of media and artistic expressions as a way to study language. "If we unpack the genre of music, we will find a very precise record of how language was spoken," Saagar says.
To read medieval music, Saagar learned five languages — Latin, German, Italian, Catalan and Occitan — making 10 languages that he knows in total (for now, at least).
In losing the history of pieces of music, Saagar says, we’ve lost languages and cultures that were present and important to the time period.
And today, at a time when linguistic boundaries are crumbling before our eyes, he says, instead of judging someone who speaks differently from you, realize that “it's actually a way of speaking a language and that we should cherish that because it's beautiful in its own way."
Listen to the episode and read the transcript on UC Berkeley News (news.berkeley.edu/podcasts).
UC Berkeley photo by Brandon Sánchez Mejia.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

90,991 Listeners

38,210 Listeners

6,751 Listeners

3,331 Listeners

4,056 Listeners

14,659 Listeners

6,294 Listeners

1,072 Listeners

87,566 Listeners

112,234 Listeners

25 Listeners

16,386 Listeners

5,798 Listeners

6,480 Listeners

16,230 Listeners