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Reflections on Syntax

Lectures in General Linguistics, Syntax, and Child Language Acquisition
BookHardcover
Ranking79094inSprachen
CHF123.00

Description

The lectures in this book are immensely Chomskyan in spirit, recursive-syntactic in nature, and tethered to a framework which takes as the null hypothesis the notion that language is an innate, pre-determined biological system-a system which by definition is multi-complex, human-specific, and analogous to a philosophy highly commensurate of Descartes' great proverbial adage which announces the calling for a 'ghost-in-the-machine'. The book begins with a gradual assessment of the kinds of complex constructs students of syntax need to work-up. Leading to the classic 'Four-Sentences'-each of which bears as a kind of post-mark its own decade of Chomskyan analysis-we trace the origins of generative grammar from the fields of child language acquisition (of the 1960s), to psycholinguistics (of the 1970s), to where we stand today within the Minimalist Program. Various spin-off proposals have been spawned by envisioned analyses which treat syntactic movement as the quintessential human processing-a processing which would give rise to human language. Such spin-offs include 'Proto-language' and a new treatment of the so-called morpho-syntactic 'Dual Mechanism Model'.
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Details

ISBN/GTIN978-1-4331-8432-1
Product TypeBook
BindingHardcover
PublisherPeter Lang
Publishing date30/07/2021
Series no.101
Pages314 pages
LanguageEnglish
SizeWidth 155 mm, Height 231 mm, Thickness 21 mm
Weight591 g
Article no.32302810
CatalogsBuchzentrum
Data source no.36052785
Product groupSprachen
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Author

Joseph Galasso (Ph.D., University of Essex) is on the Linguistics Faculty at California State University, Northridge and also lectures as adjunct at California State University, Long Beach. His main research and publications involve issues surrounding early child syntactic development.