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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Alternative Linguistics

Descriptive and theoretical modes

Edited by Philip W. Davis
Rice University, Houston, Texas

1996. vii, 325 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 3635 7 / EUR 120.00
978 1 55619 586 0 / USD 180.00
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The papers in this volume were presented at the Fifth Biennial Symposium of the Department of Linguistics, Rice University, March 1993. The participants were asked to concentrate in depth and in a self-reflective way upon some range of data. The intent was multifold. The first purpose was descriptive. It was expected that the participants would carry out their task in a retrospective way, exemplifying and building upon their previous work, but it was also expected that they would begin to demonstrate the configuration of some area in a more comprehensive picture of language. The point was to take (at least) one substantive step in the depiction of what we think language will ultimately be like. The contributions were both specific and generalizing, with focus as much upon methodology as upon hypotheses about language. In examining descriptive practice, we continued to concentrate upon issues which concerned us all, and at the same time we tried to advance the discourse by the results of such description. We hoped that problematic and recalcitrant data would make our own practice clearer to us and that it might also instruct us in the refinement of our conceptions of language.


Table of contents

Editors’ foreword
v
What constitutes ‘Good’ data for the study of language development? Hwo children learn to talk about things with no name: ‘Double emotions’
Michael Bamberg, D.L. Ammirati and Sheila Shea
1
The way of language: dimensions of VOICE
Philip W. Davis
45
A syntactic exploration of repair in English conversation
Barbara A. Fox and Robert Jasperson
77
Asserting identity
János Révai
135
Viewing in cognition and grammar
Ronald W. Langacker
153
What can conversation tell us about syntax?
Tsuyoshi Ono and Sandra A. Thompson
213
Prolegomenta to the next linguistics
Stephen A. Tyler
273
Dictionairies vs. encyclopaedias: how to draw the line
Anna Wierzbicka
289
Index of names
317
Index of subjects and terms
323


Subject classification

Linguistics
Theoretical linguistics