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E-raamat: Syntax-Information Structure Interface: Evidence from Spanish and English

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In the last decade, the notions of topic and focus have come to play an increasingly relevant role in theoretical linguistics. Although these notions are often taken for granted, they are still poorly understood. This study offers a detailed analysis of the precise definitions of these and related terms (theme, topic, background, given information, focus, contrast, etc.) as well as of their combination into information structures such as the topic-focus and background-focus articulations. It recommends pursuing a feature-based typology of topics and argues against a dual nature of focus (i.e. presentational vs. contrastive). Central questions addressed are the analysis of subjects in Spanish and English (DP vs NP and null vs. preverbal vs. postverbal) and the nature of constructions such as topicalization, left-dislocation, and focus preposing. Further, it is proposed that in Spanish information structure can be read off the syntax: while an overt DP in the preverbal specifier subject position is interpreted as the topic in a topic-focus articulation, one or more left-or right-dislocated phrases are interpreted as part of the background in background-focus/focus-background structures.
PREFACE xi
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS xiii
CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION 3(12)
CHAPTER 2: TOPICS 15(38)
2.1 Introduction
15(1)
2.2 Brief Historical Survey
16(6)
2.3 Analysis of Topic Characterizations
22(31)
CHAPTER 3: TOPICAL PHRASES AND TOPICALIZING CONSTRUCTIONS 53(48)
3.1 Introduction
53(1)
3.2 Topical Phrases
54(17)
3.3 Topicalizing Constructions
71(18)
3.4 Towards a Typology of Topics
89(12)
CHAPTER 4: BARE NOMINALS 101(26)
4.1 Introduction
101(2)
4.2 A Syntactic View
103(16)
4.3 A TFA View
119(2)
4.4 Towards a TFA-syntactic View
121(6)
CHAPTER 5: FOCUS 127(44)
5.1 Introduction
127(1)
5.2 Focus, Accent, New Information and Sentence-final Position
128(6)
5.3 Types of Focus
134(29)
5.4 The Projection of Focus
163(1)
5.5 Some Conclusions
164(7)
CHAPTER 6: FOCUS PREPOSING 171(22)
6.1 Introduction
171(1)
6.2 FP as a Topical Focus
172(9)
6.3 FP as a Nontopical Focus
181(12)
CHAPTER 7: INFORMATION STRUCTURE AND SYNTACTIC STRUCTURE 193(26)
7.1 Introduction
193(1)
7.2 The Topic-Focus Articulation
194(15)
7.3 The TFA and Syntactic Structure
209(3)
7.4 Overall Conclusions
212(7)
REFERENCES 219(10)
INDEX 229
Eugenia Casielles-Suárez received her Ph.D. in Linguistics from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. She currently teaches at Wayne State University.