图书简介
This ambitious Handbook takes advantage of recent advances in the study of the history of English to rethink the understanding of the field.
Preface; Contents; Contributors; Abbreviations; Introduction: Rethinking and extending approaches to the history of the English language. (Terttu Nevalainen and Elizabeth Closs Traugott); --PART I. RETHINKING EVIDENCE; --Guide to Part I.; --Evidence; 1. Lead Chapter: Evidence for the history of English: Introduction. (Susan Fitzmaurice and Jeremy Smith); 2. Evidence from sources prior to 1500. (Carole Hough); 3. Coins as evidence. (Philip Shaw); 4. Editing early English texts. (Simon Horobin); 5. Evidence from sources after 1500. (Joan C. Beal); 6. Examples of evidence from phonology; 6.1 Middle English phonology in the digital age: What written corpora can tell us about sound change. (Nikolaus Ritt); 6.2 Evidence for sound-change from Scottish corpora. (Wendy Anderson); 6.3 GOAT vowel variants in the Diachronic Electronic Corpus of Tyneside English (DECTE). (Karen P. Corrigan); 6.4 Analyzing the ONZE data as evidence for sound change. (Jennifer Hay); 7. Using dictionaries and thesauruses as evidence. (Julie Coleman); 8. Evidence from surveys and atlases in the history of the English language. (William A. Kretzschmar Jr. and Merja Stenroos); 9. Evidence from historical corpora up to the twentieth century. (Merja Kyto and Paivi Pahta); 10. Variability-based Neighbor Clustering: A bottom-up approach to periodization in historical linguistics. (Stefan Th. Gries and Martin Hilpert); 11. Data retrieval in a diachronic context: The case of the historical English courtroom (Dawn Archer); --Observing recent change through electronic corpora; 12. Lead Chapter: Some methodological issues related to corpus-based investigations of recent syntactic changes in English. (Mark Davies); 13. Small is beautiful - On the value of standard reference corpora for observing recent grammatical change. (Marianne Hundt and Geoffrey Leech); 14. Exploring variation and change in New Englishes: Looking into the International Corpus of English (ICE) and beyond. (Joybrato Mukherjee and Marco Schilk); 15. Change in the English infinitival perfect construction. (Jill Bowie and Bas Aarts); 16. Revisiting the reduplicative copula with corpus-based evidence. (Anne Curzan); 17. Exploring aspects of the Great Complement Shift, with evidence from the TIME Corpus and COCA. (Juhani Rudanko); 18. Diachronic collostructional analysis meets the noun phrase: Studying many a noun in COHA. (Martin Hilpert); 19. From opportunistic to systematic use of the Web as corpus: do-support with got (to) in contemporary American English. (Christian Mair); --PART II. ISSUES IN CULTURE AND SOCIETY; --Guide to Part II.; --Mass communication and technologies; 20. Lead Chapter: Technologies of communication. (Thomas Kohnen and Christian Mair); 21. Oral practices in the history of English. (Ursula Schaefer); 22. Forms of early mass communication: The religious domain. (Tanja Rutten); 23. From manuscript to printing: Transformations of genres in the history of English. (Claudia Claridge); 24. The competing demands of popularization vs. economy: Written language in the age of mass literacy. (Douglas Biber and Bethany Gray); 25. The impact of electronically-mediated communication on language standards and style. (Naomi S. Baron); 26. Old news: Rethinking language change through Australian broadcast speech. (Jenny Price); 27. The commodification of language: English as a global commodity. (Deborah Cameron); --Socio-cultural processes; 28. Lead Chapter: Socio-cultural processes and the history of English. (Jonathan Culpeper and Minna Nevala); 29. Democratisation. (Michael Farrelly and Elena Seoane); 30. Changing attitudes and political correctness. (Geoffrey Hughes); 31. Social roles, identities, and networks. (Minna Palander-Collin); 32. Changes in politeness cultures. (Andreas H. Jucker); 33. The history of English seen as the history of ideas: Cultural change reflected in different translations of the New Testament. (Anna Wierzbicka); 34. Attitudes, prescriptivism, and standardisation. (Carol Percy); 35. Perceptions of dialects: Changing attitudes and ideologies. (Chris Montgomery); 36. English in Ireland: A complex case study. (Tony Crowley); --PART III. APPROACHES FROM CONTACT AND TYPOLOGY; --Guide to Part III.; --Language contact; 37. Lead Chapter: Assessing the role of contact in the history of English. (Raymond Hickey); 38. Early English and the Celtic hypothesis. (Raymond Hickey); 39. Language contact in the Scandinavian period. (Angelika Lutz); 40. Language contact and linguistic attitudes in the Later Middle Ages. (Tim William Machan); 41. Code-switching in English of the Middle Ages. (Paivi Pahta); 42. Ethnic dialects in North American English. (Charles Boberg); 43. Contact in the African area - A Southern African perspective. (Ana Deumert and Rajend Mesthrie); 44. Contact in the Asian arena. (Lisa Lim and Umberto Ansaldo); 45. Contact-induced change in English world-wide. (Edgar W. Schneider); 46. Second language varieties of English. (Devyani Sharma); 47. Pidgins and creoles in the history of English. (Donald Winford); --Typology and typological change; 48. Lead Chapter: Typology and typological change in English historical linguistics. (Bernd Kortmann); 49. The drift of English towards invariable word order from a typological and Germanic perspective. (John A. Hawkins); 50. Typological hierarchies and frequency drifts in the history of English. (Mikko Laitinen); 51. Lexical typology and typological changes in the English lexicon. (Alexander Haselow); 52. Analyticity and syntheticity in the history of English. (Benedikt Szmrecsanyi); 53. Grammaticalization in non-standard varieties of English and English-based pidgins and creoles. (Agnes Schneider); 54. Towards an automated classification of Englishes. (Soren Wichmann and Matthias Urban); --PART IV. RETHINKING CATEGORIES AND MODULES; --Guide to Part IV.; --Cycles and continua; 55. Lead Chapter: Cycles and continua: On unidirectionality and gradualness in language change. (Ricardo Bermudez-Otero and Graeme Trousdale); 56. Quantitative evidence for a feature-based account of grammaticalisation in English: Jespersen’s Cycle. (Phillip Wallage); 57. The syntax-lexicon continuum. (Cristiano Broccias); 58. Toward a unified theory of chain shifting. (Aaron J. Dinkin); 59. (Non)-rhoticity - Lessons from New Zealand English. (Jennifer Hay and Alhana Clendon); 60. Lenition in English. (Patrick Honeybone); 61. Continua and clines in the development of New Englishes. (Devyani Sharma and Caroline R. Wiltshire); --Interfaces with information structure; 62. Lead Chapter: The interaction between syntax, information structure, and prosody in word order change. (Roland Hinterholzl and Ans van Kemenade); 63. Rethinking the loss of Verb Second. (Ans van Kemenade); 64. Rethinking the OV/VO alternation in Old English: The effect of complexity, grammatical weight, and information status. (Ann Taylor and Susan Pintzuk); 65. The impact of focusing and defocusing on word order in OE and OHG, and on changes at the right periphery in the middle periods. (Svetlana Petrova); 66. The loss of local anchoring: From adverbial local anchors to permissive subjects. (Bettelou Los and Gea Dreschler); 67. Stress clash and word order changes in the left periphery in Old English and Middle English. (Augustin Speyer); 68. Clefts as resolution strategies after the loss of a multifunctional first position. (Bettelou Los and Erwin Komen); Glossary; List of corpora and databases; Index of languages and language varieties; Name index; Subject index
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