Buch, Englisch, 460 Seiten, Format (B × H): 140 mm x 216 mm, Gewicht: 577 g
Reihe: Longman Linguistics Library
Nineteenth-Century Linguistics
Buch, Englisch, 460 Seiten, Format (B × H): 140 mm x 216 mm, Gewicht: 577 g
Reihe: Longman Linguistics Library
ISBN: 978-0-582-29478-3
Verlag: Routledge
In Volume IV: Nineteenth Century Linguistics, Anna Morpurgo Davies shows how linguistics came into its own as an independent discipline separated from philosophical and literary studies and enjoyed a unique intellectual and institutional success tied to the research ethos of the new universities, until it became a model for other humanistic subjects which aimed at 'scientific status'. The linguistics of the nineteenth century abandons earlier theoretical discussions in favour of a more empirical and historical approach using new methods to compare languages and to investigate their history. The great achievement of this period is the demonstration that languages such as Sanskrit, Latin and English are related and derive from a parent language which is not attested but can be reconstructed.
This book discusses in detail the theories developed and the individual findings obtained. In contrast with earlier historiographical trends it denies that the new approach originated entirely from German Romanticism, and highlights a form of continuity with the eighteenth century, while stressing that a deliberate break took place round the 1830s. By the end of the century the results of comparative and historical linguistics had been generally accepted, but it soon became clear that a historical approach could not by itself solve all questions that it raised. At this point the new interest in description and theory which characterizes the twentieth century began to gain prominence.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Foreword
1. Historiography and institutions
2. The old and the new: data collection and data comparison
3. The discovery of Sanskrit and Friedrich Schlegel
4. Historicism, organicism and the scientific model
5. Wilhelm von Humboldt, General Linguistics and Linguistic Typology
6. Comparative and historical grammar: Rask, Bopp and Grimm
7. Comparative studies and the diffusion of linguistics
8. Theoretical discussions of the mid century
9. The Neogrammarians and the new beginnings
10. The end of the century: general perspectives
References
Index