The Handbook of the History of English is a collection of articles written by leading specialists in the field that focus on the theoretical issues behind the facts of the changing English language.
* organizes the theoretical issues behind the facts of the changing English language innovatively and applies recent insights to old problems
* surveys the history of English from the perspective of structural developments in areas such as phonology, prosody, morphology, syntax, semantics, language variation, and dialectology
* offers readers a comprehensive overview of the various theoretical perspectives available to the study of the history of English and sets new objectives for further research
Inhoudsopgave
Editors’ Introduction.
Notes on Contributors.
Part I: Approaches and issues.
1. Change for the Better? Optimality Theory versus History:
April Mc Mahon (University of Sheffield).
2. Cueing a New Grammar: David Lightfoot (Georgetown
University).
3. Variation and the Interpretation of Change in periphrastic
DO: Anthony Warner (University of York).
4. Evolutionary Models and Functional-Typological Theories of
Language Change: William Croft (University of New Mexico).
Part II: Words: derivation and prosody.
5. Old and Middle English Prosody: Donka Minkova (UCLA).
6. Prosodic Preferences: From Old English to Early Modern
English: Paula Fikkert (Radboud University Nijmegen, The
Netherlands), Elan Dresher (University of Toronto, Canada) and
Aditi Lahiri (University of Konstanz, Germany).
7. Typological Changes in Derivational Morphology: Dieter
Kastovsky (University of Vienna).
8. Competition in English Word Formation: Laurie Bauer (Victoria
University of Wellington).
Part III: Inflectional morphology and syntax.
9. Case Syncretism and Word Order Change: Cynthia Allen
(Australian National University).
10. Discourse Adverbs and Clausal Syntax in Old and Middle
English: Ans van Kemenade (Radboud University Nijmegen) and
Bettelou Los (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam).
11. The loss of OV Order in the History of English: Susan
Pintzuk and Ann Taylor (both University of York).
12. Category Change and Gradience in the Determiner System:
David Denison (University of Manchester).
Part IV: Pragmatics.
13. Pathways in the development of pragmatic markers in English:
Laurel Brinton (University of British Columbia).
14. The Semantic Development of Scalar Focus Modifiers:
Elizabeth Traugott (Stanford University).
15. Information Structure and Word Order Change: The Passive as
an Information Rearranging Strategy in the History of English:
Elena Seoane (University of Santiago de Compostela).
Part V: Pre- and postcolonial varieties.
16. Old English Dialectology: Richard Hogg (University of
Manchester).
17. Early Middle English Dialectology: Problems and Prospects:
Margaret Laing (University of Edinburgh) and Roger Lass (University
of Cape Town).
18. How English became African American English: Shana Poplack
(University of Ottawa).
19. Historical Change in Synchronic Perspective: The Legacy of
British Dialects: Sali Tagliamonte (University of Toronto).
20. The making of Hiberno-English and other ‘Celtic Englishes’:
Markku Filppula (University of Joensuu).
Part VI: Standardisation and globalization.
21. Eighteenth-century Prescriptivism and the Norm of
Correctness: Ingrid Tieken – Boon van Ostade (University of
Leiden).
22. Historical Sociolinguistics and Language Change: Terttu
Nevalainen (University of Helsinki).
23. Global English: From Island Tongue to World Language:
Suzanne Romaine (University of Oxford).
Appendix: Useful Corpora for Research in English Historical
Linguistics.
Index.
Over de auteur
Ans van Kemenade is Professor in the Department of English
at the Radboud University Nijmegen, and is author of Syntactic
Case and Morphological Case in the History of English (1987),
and The Syntax of Early English (2000; with O. Fischer, W.
Koopman, and W. van der Wurff).
Bettelou Los is a lecturer in the Department of English
at the Radboud University Nijmegen. She is author of Infinitival
Complementation in Old and Middle English (1999) and The
Rise of the to-infinitive (2005).