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"Reading this volume transported me back to Harvard and MIT lecture
halls of the 1960s, where weekly Roman Jakobson would spellbind his
audience (this reviewer included), developing his vision of
language through impassioned exposition, deft and devastating
allusions to critical literature, anecdotes with the force of
parables, metaphors of mythic imagery, and above all else
overriding verbal artistry: truly in his own phrase, 'In the poetry
of grammar'. The Sound Shape of Language, his collaboration with
Linda R. Waugh, a scholar who has devoted considerable attention to
an exposition and elaboration of Jakobsonian views, fortunately has
preserved in print the authoritative lectorial voice." Michael
Silverstein in Journal of Communication
"Jakobson and Halle's initial statement of the principles of
linguistic organization should be made available to all future
generations of linguists. It builds a solid foundation for
Saussurean thinking about linguisic oppositions and establishes
distinctive feature theory as the basis of their formal treatment."
Prof. Dr. William Labov, University of Pennsylvania, Department of
Linguistics
This volume consists of two studies. The first is a joint essay
presenting a critical survey of the author's views on phonology, a
theory of sound patterns, and their stratification. The second is
an individual contribution from Roman Jakobson ranging widely over
many problems of language and its disturbances, literature and
general symbolic behaviour.
First published in Great Britain in 1973, Main Trends in the
Science of Language was part of a series of books that resulted
from a study carried out by UNESCO in collaboration with national
and international research centres in the social sciences, as well
as with groups of individual scholars. The book examines the
position of linguistics in the years surrounding the publication of
the book before considering the subject's potential, future
development. It looks at linguistic vistas, the place of
linguistics among the sciences of man and linguistics and natural
sciences. This book will be of interest to the educated reader,
research workers, and professional associations as well as to
national and international institutions that organize, plan and
finance scientific research.
First published in Great Britain in 1973, Main Trends in the
Science of Language was part of a series of books that resulted
from a study carried out by UNESCO in collaboration with national
and international research centres in the social sciences, as well
as with groups of individual scholars. The book examines the
position of linguistics in the years surrounding the publication of
the book before considering the subject's potential, future
development. It looks at linguistic vistas, the place of
linguistics among the sciences of man and linguistics and natural
sciences. This book will be of interest to the educated reader,
research workers, and professional associations as well as to
national and international institutions that organize, plan and
finance scientific research.
This work attempts to describes the ultimate discrete components
of language, their specific structure, and their articulatory,
acoustic, and perceptual correlates, and surveys their utilization
in the language of the world. First published in 1951, this edition
contains an added paper on Tenseness and Laxness.
"Verbal Art, Verbal Sign, Verbal Time " was first published in
1985. Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make
long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published
unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press
editions.
Roman Jakobson, one of the most important thinkers of our
century, was bet known for his role in the rise and spread of the
structural approach to linguistics and literature. His formative
structuralism approach to linguistics and literature. His formative
years with the Russian Futurists and subsequent involvement in the
Moscow and Prague Linguistic Circles (which he co-founded) resulted
in a lifelong devotion to fundamental change in both literary
theory and linguistics. In bringing each to bear upon the other, he
enlivened both disciplines; if a literary work was to a him a
linguistic fact, it was also a semiotic phenomenon - part of the
entire universe of signs; and above all, for both language and
literature, time was an integral factor, one that produced momentum
and change. Jakobson's books and articles, written in many
languages and published around the world, were collected in a
monumental seven-volume work, "Selected Writings "(1962 -1984),
which has been available only to a limited readership. Not long
before his death in 1982, Jakobson brought together this group of
eleven essays--"Verbal Art, Verbal Sign, Verbal Time " -- to serve
as an introduction to some of his linguistic theories and
especially, to his work in poetics.
Jakobson's introductory article and the editor's preface
together suggest the range of his work and provide a context for
the essays in this book, which fall into three groups. Those in the
first section reflect his preoccupation with the dynamic role of
time in language and society. Jakobson challenges Saussure's rigid
distinction between language as a static (synchronic) system and
its historical (diachronic) development - a false opposition, in
his view, since it ignores the role of time in the present moment
of language. The essays on time counter the notion that
structuralism itself, as heir to Saussure's work, has discarded
history; in Jakabson's hands, we see a struggle to integrate the
two modes. In central group essays, on poetic theory, he shows how
the grammatical categories of everyday speech become the
expressive, highly charged language of poetry. These essays also
deal with the related issues of subliminal and intentional
linguistic patterns of poetry. These essays also deal with the
related issues of subliminal and intentional linguistic patterns in
poetry--areas that are problematic in structural analysis--and
provide exemplary readings of Pushkin and Yeats. The last essays,
on Mayakovsky and Holderlin, make clear that Jakobson was aware of
the essential (and in these instances, tragic) bond between a
poet's life and art. The book closes with essays by Linda Waugh,
Krystyna Pomorska, and Igor Melchuk that provide a thoughtful
perspective on Jakobson's work as a whole.
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