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Babel: History or Myth


Babel: History or Myth
This is an expository essay, comparing and contrasting the story of the Tower of Babel vs. the evolution of language, with a specific concenration on the English language.
1,459 words (approx. 5.8 pages) | 6 sources | MLA | 2004 Canada


Paper Summary:

This essay begins with a quotation taken from the Bible, describing the story of the Tower of Babel. It then proceeds to break down language, from its origins through its evolution down to modern times. It attempts to portray that although Babel is a myth, its premise is true-all language and thus people were cut from essentially the same cloth.

From the Paper:

?And the Lord said, ?Indeed the people are one and they all have one language, and this is what they begin to do; now nothing that they propose to do will be withheld from them. Come, let Us go down and there confuse their language, that they may not understand one another's speech.?? (Genesis 11:6-7) It is the humans? ability to communicate through spoken word which differentiates us from our primitive counterparts. The legend of Babel identifies language as the tie that binds a society together and denotes a direct correlation between language and the advancement of a particular society. According to tradition, after the Lord destroyed the world by flood, the sons of Noah, who spoke one language and who were descendants of the same origin, were given the task to repopulate the earth. Perpetually plagued by the sins of Adam, they were driven to build a tower so great that they themselves would be seen as gods. Therefore the Lord debilitated them by removing their ability to communicate with one another, which forced them to diverge into separate, distinct societies. Although the story grossly over simplifies both the complex history of man and the evolution of language, its premise does have some merit. Popular modern languages can be traced ancestrally to a few families. Furthermore, languages that have survived - English as the most prominent example - are considerably indebted to the influence of the powerful societies that spoke them."

Cite this paper

APA Citation:

Babel: History or Myth (2012, January 15). Retrieved February 10, 2012, from http://www.academon.ca/Analytical-Essay-Babel-History-or-Myth/51865

MLA Citation:

"Babel: History or Myth" 15 January 2012. Web. 10 Feb. 2012. <http://www.academon.ca/Analytical-Essay-Babel-History-or-Myth/51865>




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Published by:

igodess1 CA
Publisher Since:
May 30, 2002
I have been pursuing, part-time, my Bachelor of Arts degree, majoring in the humanities for the past four years. Writing and Critical thinking skills are especially important in this major, as it is these skills that are majorily deployed within each individual course. I am making my application to law school, where I hope to gain entrance into a program that will enable me to practice throughout North America. My final grades usually vary between and A+ and an A-. I have always been acclaimed as an excellent writer and was first published in the Montreal Gazette at the age of sixteen. I hope that you will enjoy my papers.
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