Linguistic theory has undergone deep changes since the early 1990's, given the widespread impact of Chomsky's Minimalist Programme, Kayne's Antisymmetry Theory, and Kayne's Theory of Overt Movement. This work has brought into sharper focus questions concerning the architecture of linguistic theory that have a direct impact on our understanding of the process of change. Here, Pintzuk, Tsoulas, and Warner have brought together chapters which demonstrate the pivotal position of historical syntax within the larger domain of research into the nature, use, and acquisition of language. They show how current work in historical syntax is responsive to theoretical advances in linguistic theory, language acquisition, sociolinguistics, and theories of language use, as well as to less adjacent fields such as statistical techniques and evolutionary biology.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- 1: Susan Pintzuk, George Tsoulas, and Anthony Warner: Syntactic Change: Theory and Method
- Part I: Frameworks for the Understanding of Change
- 2: Nigel Vincent: Competition and Correspondence in Syntactic Change: Null Arguments in Latin and Romance
- 3: Ans van Kemenade: Jespersen's Cycle Revisited: Formal Properties of Grammaticalization
- 4: Ted Briscoe: Evolutionary Perspectives on Diachronic Syntax
- Part II: The Comparative Basis of Diachronic Syntax
- 5: Eric Haeberli: Adjuncts and the Syntax of Subjects in Old and Middle English
- 6: Anthony Kroch and Ann Taylor: Verb-Object Order in Early Middle English
- 7: Alexander Williams: Null Subjects in Middle English Existentials
- Part III: Mechanisms of Syntactic Change
- 8: Ana Maria Martins: Polarity Items in Romance: Underspecification and Lexical Change
- 9: John Whitman: Relabelling
- 10: Montse Batllori and Francesc Roca: The Value of Definite Determiners from Old Spanish to Modern Spanish
- 11: Lars-Olof Delsing: From OV to VO in Swedish
- 12: Chung-hye Han: The Evolution of Do-Support in English Imperatives
- 13: Thorbjörg Hróarsdóttir: Interacting Movements in the History of Icelandic
- 14: David Willis: Verb Movement in Slavonic Conditionals