Historical Linguistics and Language Change
Language change happens in the spatio-temporal world. Historical linguistics is the craft linguists exercise upon its results, in order to tell coherent stories about it. In a series of linked essays Roger Lass offers a critical survey of the foundations of the art of historical linguistics, and its interaction with its subject matter, language change. He takes as his background some of the major philosophical issues which arise from these considerations, such as ontology, realism and conventionalism, and explanation. Along the way he poses such questions as: where does our data come from; how trustworthy is it; what is the empirical basis for the reconstructive techniques we standardly take as yielding facts; and how much does the historian create data rather than receiving it? The paradoxical conclusion is that our historiographical methods are often better than the data they have to work with.
- Lass is one of the best-known authors on the list. See his Old English (1994)
- Current book is the result of many years of thinking about the nature of history, historical explanation, and its philosophical underpinnings
- Lass well known in English departments as well as in linguistics - book will appeal strongly to both markets
- Includes discussion on a current strong topic - evolution and language
Reviews & endorsements
"This is a useful and engaging book, discussing and illustrating principles of historical linguistics primarily with Indo-European examples." Keith Slater, Notes on Linguistics
"...this is a very learned, logically reasoned and very valuable book--the work of an outstanding historical linguist who has extraordinarily wide-ranging interests and a formidable memory. It is enjoyable reading....this is a work of impressive scholarship..." James Milroy, Diachronica
"...the book contains much of interst to students of language change at all levels. His examples and demonstrations of method would be of great value to newcomers to the field and, indeed, any of us can admire such perfect elucidation." Canadian Journal of Linguistics
Product details
April 1997Paperback
9780521459242
448 pages
229 × 152 × 30 mm
0.65kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Preface
- General prologue
- 1. The past, the present and the historian
- 2. Written records: evidence and argument
- 3. Relatedness, ancestry and comparison
- 4. Convergence and contact
- 5. The nature of reconstruction
- 6. Time and change: the shape(s) of history
- 7. Explanation and ontology
- References
- Index.