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Clause Structure and Word Order in the History of German [Kõva köide]

Edited by (Professor of Historical German Linguistics, University of Cologne), Edited by (Professor for German Linguistics and German as a Foreign Language, University of Bamberg), Edited by (Professor of Historical German Linguistics, University of Frankfurt)
This volume presents the first comprehensive generative account of the historical syntax of German. Leading scholars in the field survey a range of topics and offer new insights into central aspects of clause structure and word order, outlining the different stages of their historical development. Each chapter combines a solid empirical basis with descriptive generalizations, supported by a detailed discussion of theoretical analyses couched in the generative framework. Reference is also made throughout to the more traditional descriptive model of the German clause.

The volume is divided into three parts that correspond to the main parts of the clause. Part I explores the left periphery, looking at verb placement (verb second and competing orders), the prefield, and adverbial connectives, while Part II discusses the middle field, including pronominal syntax, the order of full NPs, and the history of negation. The final part examines the right periphery with chapters covering basic word order (OV/VO), prosodic and information-structural factors, and the verbal complex. The book will be a valuable resource for researchers and students in historical syntax and the Germanic languages, and for both descriptive and theoretical linguists alike.
Series preface vii
Preface and acknowledgements viii
List of figures and tables
ix
List of abbreviations
xi
List of contributors
xv
1 Introduction
1(14)
Agnes Jager
Gisella Ferraresi
Helmut Weiß
Part I The Left Periphery
2 Introduction to Part I
15(7)
Svetlana Petrova
3 Origins of verb-second in Old High German
22(26)
Katrin Axel-Tober
4 Verb-initial declaratives in Old High German and in later German
48(16)
Svetlana Petrova
5 The prefield after the Old High German period
64(18)
Augustin Speyer
Helmut Weiß
6 Adverbial connectives
82(43)
Gisella Ferraresi
Part II The Middle Field
7 Introduction to Part II
125(7)
Gisella Ferraresi
Agnes Jager
8 The Wackernagel complex and pronoun raising
132(23)
Helmut Weiß
9 Serialization of full noun phrases in the history of German
155(26)
Augustin Speyer
10 History of negation in High and Low German
181(42)
Anne Breitbarth
Agnes Jager
Part III The Right Periphery
11 Introduction to Part III
223(7)
Eric Fuß
12 The OV/VO alternation in Early German: Diagnostics for basic word order
230(33)
Eric Fuß
13 OV versus VO in Old High German: The case of thaz-clauses
263(14)
Svetlana Petrova
Helmut Weiß
14 Prosodic and information-structural factors in word order variation
277(12)
Roland Hinterholzl
Svetlana Petrova
15 Periphrastic verb forms
289(13)
Augustin Speyer
16 On the history of the IPP construction in German
302(22)
Agnes Jager
17 The ACI construction in the history of German
324(25)
Augustin Speyer
Sources 349(11)
References 360(37)
Index 397
Agnes Jäger is Professor of Historical German Linguistics at the University of Cologne. Her research interests include diachronic syntax and its interfaces with semantics and morphology, dialectal variation, and theories of language change. She is the author of History of German Negation (Benjamins, 2008) and of Vergleichskonstruktionen im Deutschen: Diachroner Wandel und synchrone Variation (de Gruyter, 2018), as well as numerous journal articles and book chapters on the topics of negation, indefinites, and comparatives, among others. She is the co-editor, with Chiara Gianollo and Doris Penka, of Language Change at the Syntax-Semantics Interface (de Gruyter, 2015).

Gisella Ferraresi is Professor of German Linguistics and German as a Foreign Language at the University of Bamberg. After receiving her Ph.D in 1997 from the University of Stuttgart, she held positions at the Universities of Hamburg, Hannover, and Frankfurt am Main. She has (co-)edited several volumes on language change and language contact and is the author of three monographs and many articles on language change, grammaticalization, Gothic syntax, language contact, and second language acquisition. Her current research explores topics such as connectives, particles and clause structure, and aspectuality from a diachronic and acquisitional perspective.

Helmut Weiß is Full Professor of Historical German Linguistics at the University of Frankfurt. He is one of the leading experts in the syntax of German dialects, and is co-editor, with Jürg Fleischer and Alexandra Lenz, of The Syntactic Atlas of Hessian Dialects and, with Günther Grewendorf, of Bavarian Syntax (Benjamins 2014). He is the author of Syntax des Bairischen (Niemeyer 1998) and of multiple journal articles and book chapters on subjects including complementizer agreement, negative concord, possessive constructions, and pronominal syntax.