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Ever since Chomsky's Barriers, functional heads have been the
privileged object of research in generative linguistics. But over
the last two decades, two rival approaches have developed. The
cartographic project, as represented by the collections in this
Oxford series, considers evidence for a functional head in one
language as evidence for it in universal grammar. On the other
hand, minimalist accounts tend to consider structural economy as
literally involving as few heads as possible. In the present
volume, some of the most influential linguists who have
participated in this long-lasting debate offer their recent work in
short, self contained case studies. The contributions cover all the
main layers of recently studied syntactic structure, including such
major areas of empirical research such as grammaticalization and
language change, standard and non-standard varieties, interface
issues, and morphosyntax. Functional Heads attempts to map aspects
of syntactic structure following the cartographic approach, and in
doing so demonstrate that the differences between the cartographic
approach and the minimalist approach are more apparent than
substantial.
This book explores sets of movement cases in medieval Italian from
1200 to 1315. It offers an integrated description of all the
relevant aspects of word order in Old Italian based on uniform
principles (analysing the left periphery of the sentence, of the
verbal phrase, and of the determiner phrase, and the interaction of
these structures with quantification and negation). From the
theoretical point of view, it considers the possibilities of a
syntactic model in which the (left) edges of the constituents play
an essential role in determining the possible structures. The
author suggests that Old Italian has a rule preposing topic and
focus elements to dedicated positions not only in the left
periphery of the complementizer phase but also in the left
periphery of other phases. She also provides an account of the
apparent optional negative concord pattern exhibited by Old Italian
in terms of dedicated positions. The book concludes with a summary
of the various types of preposing presented in the book, arguing
that all cases of optionality can be resolved within a single
grammar and without need to resort to the double base hypothesis,
which requires competence of the speakers on two different
grammatical systems. The book makes important contributions to the
medieval history of Italian, to Romance historical linguistics, and
to the study of diachronic syntactic change more generally.
Ever since Chomsky's Barriers, functional heads have been the
privileged object of research in generative linguistics. But over
the last two decades, two rival approaches have developed. The
cartographic project, as represented by the collections in this
Oxford series, considers evidence for a functional head in one
language as evidence for it in universal grammar. On the other
hand, minimalist accounts tend to consider structural economy as
literally involving as few heads as possible. In the present
volume, some of the most influential linguists who have
participated in this long-lasting debate offer their recent work in
short, self contained case studies. The contributions cover all the
main layers of recently studied syntactic structure, including such
major areas of empirical research such as grammaticalization and
language change, standard and non-standard varieties, interface
issues, and morphosyntax. Functional Heads attempts to map aspects
of syntactic structure following the cartographic approach, and in
doing so demonstrate that the differences between the cartographic
approach and the minimalist approach are more apparent than
substantial.
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