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E-raamat: Control in Generative Grammar: A Research Companion

(Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel)
  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Feb-2013
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781139610384
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Feb-2013
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781139610384
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The subject of nonfinite clauses is often missing, and yet is understood to refer to some linguistic or contextual referent (e.g. 'Bill preferred __ to remain silent' is understood as 'Bill preferred that he himself would remain silent'). This dependency is the subject matter of control theory. Extensive linguistic research into control constructions over the past five decades has unearthed a wealth of empirical findings in dozens of languages. Their proper classification and analysis, however, have been a matter of continuing debate within and across different theoretical schools. This comprehensive book pulls together, for the first time, all the important advances on the topic. Among the issues discussed are: the distinction between raising and control, obligatory and nonobligatory control, syntactic interactions with case, finiteness and nominalization, lexical determination of the controller, and phenomena like partial and implicit control. The critical discussions in this work will stimulate students and scholars to further explorations in this fascinating field.

Arvustused

'Professor Landau, already a leading contributor to the theoretical literature on control, provides here an incisive, accessible, balanced guide to what is known and what needs to be known: essential reading for anyone interested in this central area of inquiry.' Ken Safir, Distinguished Professor of Linguistics, Rutgers University 'Landau has written authoritatively on the issue of control, showing that deep semantic factors such as partial control have a syntactic origin. He is one of the pre-eminent experts on this issue, and I have no doubt that those who read this work, regardless of theoretical perspective, will profit from his wide-ranging knowledge of and insight into this topic.' Mark Baltin, New York University '[ This] book is an invaluable guide for anyone interested in control. It is what one would call a 'critical survey'. It offers a complete coverage of the contexts where control is attested [ and] provides a wealth of references The presentation is clear, detailed [ and] meticulous Landau is an expert on the topic; his own work has helped researchers view control from a new angle, and this is evident in the book. a useful companion for students but also for researchers. It is also relevant to anyone interested in the structure of grammar in general ' Anna Roussou, Journal of Linguistics 'A dense, technical and thoroughly argued book, CiGG [ Control in Generative Grammar] will be highly useful to researchers and advanced graduate students that need to get up to speed on the details of control; whatever their specific objectives, they can be certain to find what they are looking for Given that the phenomenon of control is inextricably linked to a host of equally prominent phenomena, CiGG should thus appeal to a wide range of researchers in formal syntax and semantics. If Landau's exceptional achievement inspires future research companions of comparable depth on other topics aiming to tread in its footsteps, as I expect it to do, its service to the field will be even greater.' Dennis Ott, LINGUIST List

Muu info

This is the first comprehensive survey of control theory, covering the results of five decades of research in generative grammar.
Preface vii
1 Background 1(46)
1.1 A historical sketch: the rise and fall of Equi-NP Deletion
1(7)
1.2 Raising-control contrasts
8(20)
1.2.1 Interpretive contrasts
11(7)
1.2.2 Structural contrasts
18(10)
1.3 The OC signature
28(6)
1.4 Bogus criteria for OC or NOC
34(4)
1.5 Configurations of OC and NOC
38(5)
1.6 Are there nonfinite NOC complements?
43(4)
2 Control theories: a typology 47(22)
2.1 Predication
47(7)
2.2 Binding
54(4)
2.3 Lexical-functional grammar
58(4)
2.4 A-movement
62(3)
2.5 Agree
65(4)
3 Empirical arguments for PRO 69(10)
3.1 Infinitives are clausal (hence, contain a subject)
70(2)
3.2 Syntactic evidence for PRO
72(7)
4 Predicting the distribution of PRO 79(45)
4.1 Finiteness ingredients
80(23)
4.1.1 The naive years (only nonfinite control)
80(7)
4.1.2 The crosslinguistic picture: finiteness and control
87(11)
4.1.3 Mood and control
98(1)
4.1.4 Open problems: DP/PRO free alternation
99(4)
4.2 Case marking and case transmission
103(5)
4.3 Is PRO necessarily a subject?
108(7)
4.3.1 Theoretical accounts for the subjecthood of PRO
108(3)
4.3.2 Nonsubject PRO: actor control in Tagalog
111(4)
4.4 Nullness of PRO
115(9)
4.4.1 Control of pronouns and reflexives
117(2)
4.4.2 Backward and copy control
119(2)
4.4.3 Theoretical implications
121(3)
5 The phenomenology of obligatory control 124(97)
5.1 Controller choice and control shift
124(31)
5.1.1 Theories of controller choice
125(11)
5.1.2 Control shift
136(13)
5.1.3 The Minimal Distance Principle
149(6)
5.2 Partial control
155(17)
5.3 Split control
172(3)
5.4 Implicit control
175(11)
5.4.1 Eliminating Bach's generalization and restating Visser's generalization
178(5)
5.4.2 The representational status of implicit controllers
183(3)
5.5 PRO-gate
186(15)
5.6 Control in DP
201(20)
5.6.1 Evidence for a null subject in DPs
202(6)
5.6.2 Control into DP: PRO or pro?
208(5)
5.6.3 Control inside DP
213(8)
6 Adjunct control 221(9)
6.1 A quick survey of controlled adjuncts
221(4)
6.2 The mechanism of adjunct OC: predication
225(5)
7 Non-obligatory control 230(27)
7.1 The NOC signature
230(7)
7.2 Distance effects and intervention: the failure of structural constraints
237(8)
7.3 Logophoricity in NOC
245(6)
7.4 Topicality in NOC
251(3)
7.5 Interaction and competition
254(3)
8 Conclusion 257(2)
References 259(20)
Language index 279(1)
Name index 280(5)
Subject index 285
Idan Landau is an Associate Professor in the Department of Foreign Literatures and Linguistics at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel.