Carlota S. Smith was a key figure in linguistic research and a
pioneering woman in generative linguistics. This selection of
papers focuses on the research into tense, aspect, and discourse
that Smith completed while Professor of Linguistics at the
University of Texas at Austin.
Smith s early work in English syntax is still cited today, and
her early career also yielded key research on language acquisition
by young children. Starting in the mid-1970s, after her move to UT,
she embarked on her most important line of research. In numerous
papers the first of which was published in 1975 and in a very
important 1991 book (The Parameter of Aspect), Smith analyzed how
languages encode time and how they encode the ways events and
situations occur over time.
Smith s work on the expression of time in language is notable
because of its careful analyses of a number of quite different
languages, including not only English and French, but also Russian,
Mandarin, and Navajo. Inspired by a year in France in the early
1970s, Smith began to analyze the differing ways in which languages
encode time and how they encode the ways events and situations
occur over time. In doing so, she developed her signature
two-component theory of aspect. This model of temporal aspect
provided an excellent framework for graduate students seeking to
analyze the temporal systems of an array of languages, including
under-described languages that are so much the focus of research in
UT s Linguistics Department.
Selected by Carlota Smith herself and by her longtime friends
and colleagues, this book contains her 1980 piece on temporal
structures in discourse, her 1986 comparison of the English and
French aspectual systems, a 1996 paper on the aspect system in
Navajo (an increasingly-endangered language which Smith worked to
preserve), and her 1980 and 1993 papers on the child s acquisition
of tense and aspect.
Smith, who died in 2007, was a trailblazer in her field whose
broad interests fed into her scholarly research. She was an avid
reader who sought to bring the analytic tools of linguistics to the
humanistic study of literature, by examining the syntactic and
pragmatic principles which underlie literary effects. Her research
on rhetorical and temporal effects in context was integrated into
her last book, Modes of Discourse (2003).
The current volume of articles covers much of her most fruitful
work on the way in which language is used to express time, and will
be essential reading for many working and studying in linguistics
generally and in semantics particularly"
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!