<html><body><a href="http://infoling.org" target="_blank"><img
src="http://infoling.org/img/infoling.png" alt="" width="255"
height="50" align="left" border="0" /></a>
<br /><br /><br />
<br /><font style="font-size:80%"><table border="0" bordercolor="#FFF"
width="520px"><tr><td width="130"><a style="text-decoration:none"
target="_blank" href="http://infoling.org/revista/" title="Ir a
Infoling Revista"><img style="vertical-align:-30%;width:130px"
alt="Infoling Revista"
src="http://delicious.uab.es/infoling2/img/infolingIR.png"></a></td><td
width="100"><a style="text-decoration:none"
href="http://www.facebook.com/infoling" target="_blank"><img
border="0" src="http://infoling.org/img/facebook-icon.png" alt=""
style="vertical-align:-30%;height:16px;width:16px" /> Infoling en
Facebook</a></td><td width="180"><a style="text-decoration:none"
href="http://www.twitter.com/infoling" target="_blank"><img border="0"
src="http://infoling.org/img/t_small-b.png" alt=""
style="vertical-align:-30%;height:16px;width:16px" /> Infoling en
Twitter</a></td></tr></table></font>
<br />Moderador/a: Carlos Subirats (U. Autónoma Barcelona), Mar Cruz
(U. Barcelona)
<br />Editoras: Paloma Garrido (U. Rey Juan Carlos), Laura Romero (UB)
<br />Programación, desarrollo: Marc Ortega (UAB)
<br />Directoras/es de reseñas: Alexandra Álvarez (U. Los Andes,
Venezuela), Yvette Bürki (U. Bern, Suiza), María Luisa Calero (U.
Córdoba, España), Luis Cortés (U. Almería)
<br />Asesoras/es: Maite Taboada (Simon Fraser U., Canadá), Isabel
Verdaguer (UB), Gerd Wotjak (U. Leipzig, Alemania)
<br />Asesor legal: Daniel Birba
<br />Colaboradoras/es: Julia Bernd (Int'l Computer Science Institute,
EE.UU), Miroslava Cruz (U. Autónoma del Estado de Morelos, México),
Mercedes García de Quesada (U. Granada), Matthias Raab (UB), Antonio
Ríos (UAB)
<br />
<br />Con el patrocinio de:
<br /><table border="0" bordercolor="#FFFFFF"
width="200px"><tr><!--<td><a href="http://www.fundacioncomillas.es/"
target="_blank"><img
src="http://www.infoling.org/img/logo-comillas.png" alt="Fundación
Comillas" width="85" height="49" align="left" border="0"
/></a></td>--><td><a
href="http://www.arcomuralla.com/Arco/Shop/default.asp"
target="_blank"><img style="border:0;margin-top:10px"
src="http://www.infoling.org/img/logoarco.jpg" alt="Arco Libros"
width="62" height="34" align="left" border="0"
/></a></td></tr></table><br /><hr /><font style="font-size:90%">
<br /><b>Infoling 8.18 (2014)</b><br />ISSN: 1576-3404 </font>
<br /><font style="font-size:90%">© Infoling 1996-2014. Reservados
todos los derechos</font>
<br />
<br /><hr /><b>Novedad bibliográfica:</b><br />Dufter, Andreas;
Octavio de Toledo y Huerta, Álvaro S., eds. 2014. Left Sentence
Peripheries in Spanish. Diachronic, Variationist and Comparative
Perspectives. Amsterdam: John Benjamins (Colección: Linguistik
Aktuell / Linguistics Today, 214. Formato: Hardbound, 423 págs.,
ISBN-13: 9789027255976. Precio: 105,00 EUR; Formato: e-Book, ISBN-13:
9789027270290. Precio: 105,00 EUR)<br /><b>Compra-e:</b> <a
href="https://www.benjamins.com/#catalog/books/la.214/main"
target="_blank">https://www.benjamins.com/#catalog/books/la.214/main</a><br
/><b>Información de:</b> Andreas Dufter <dufter@lmu.de><br
/>Compartir: <a
href="http://api.addthis.com/oexchange/0.8/forward/facebook/offer?url=http://www.infoling.org/informacion/NB1003.html&pubid=ra-4def7f4a7565a706"
target="_blank" rel="nofollow"><img border="0"
src="http://infoling.org/img/facebook-icon.png" alt="Send to Facebook"
title="Send to Facebook"
style="vertical-align:-30%;height:16px;width:16px"
/></a> <a
href="http://api.addthis.com/oexchange/0.8/forward/twitter/offer?url=http://www.infoling.org/informacion/NB1003.html&template=@infoling%20Dufter,%20A.,%20et%20al.%20Left%20Sentence%20Peripheries%20in%20Spanish%20{{url}}&pubid=ra-4def7f4a7565a706&shortener=bitly&bitly.login=infoling&bitly.apiKey=R_60e1d6b1cb688030e7759b835f63d0c0"
target="_blank" rel="nofollow"><img border="0"
src="http://infoling.org/img/t_small-b.png" alt="Tweet this"
title="Tweet this" style="vertical-align:-30%;height:16px;width:16px"
/></a><hr /><p><a
href="http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Finfoling.org%2Fenglish%2Fsearch%2Fbooks%2FID%2F1003"
target="_blank">View with English headings and Google-translated
<em>Description</em></a></p><hr /><br /><b>Descripción</b><br
/><p> Since the advent of syntactic cartography, left sentence
peripheries have begun to take center stage in linguistic research.
Following the lead of Rizzi (1997), much work on left peripheries has
been focused on Italian, whereas other Romance languages have
attracted somewhat less attention. This volume offers a well-balanced
set of articles investigating left sentence peripheries in Spanish.
Some articles explore the historical evolution of left dislocation and
fronting operations, while others seek to assess the extent – and
the limits – of variation found between different geographical
varieties and registers of the contemporary language. Moreover, the
volume comprises several case studies on the interfaces between
syntax, semantics, and information structure, and the implications of
these for pragmatic interpretation and the organization of discourse.
Cross-linguistic and typological perspectives are also provided in due
course in order to position the analyses developed for Spanish within
a larger research context.</p><br /><b>Temática:</b> Lingüística
histórica, Pragmática, Semántica, Sintaxis<br /><br
/><b>Índice</b><br /><p>Preface<br />Andreas Dufter and Álvaro S.
Octavio de Toledo<br /><br />Introduction<br />Andreas Dufter and
Álvaro S. Octavio de Toledo<br /><br /><b>Section 1. Left Sentence
Peripheries in Old Spanish</b><br /><br />Left Dislocation phenomena
in Old Spanish: An examination of their structural properties<br
/>Miriam Bouzouita<br /><br />Revisiting stylistic fronting in Old
Spanish<br />Susann Fischer<br /><br />Left forever: Subject datives
and clitic doubling in Old Spanish<br />Javier Elvira<br /> <br
/><b>Section 2. Syntactic variation in Modern Spanish</b><br /><br
/>Spanish predicative verbless clauses
and the left periphery<br
/>Javier Gutiérrez-Rexach and Melvin González-Rivera<br /><br
/>Fronting and contrastively focused secondary predicates in
Spanish<br />Steffen Heidinger<br /><br />The left periphery of
Spanish comparative correlatives<br />Cristina Sánchez López<br
/><br />The article at the left periphery<br />Silvia Serrano<br
/> <br /><b>Section 3. Syntax, semantics, and pragmatics</b><br /><br
/>Evidentiality and illocutionary force: Spanish matrix que at the
syntax-pragmatics interface<br />Violeta Demonte and Olga
Fernández-Soriano<br /><br />On the grammaticalization of the
Assertion Structure: A view from Spanish<br />María Luisa
Zubizarreta<br /><br />Informational status and the semantics
of
mood in Spanish preposed complement clauses<br />Martin G. Becker<br
/><br />Fronting and irony in Spanish<br />Victoria Escandell-Vidal
and Manuel Leonetti<br /> <br /><b>Section 4. Spanish among the
Romance languages</b><br /><br />Left periphery in discourse: Frame
Units and discourse markers<br />Margarita Borreguero Zuloaga<br /><br
/>A comparative look at Focus Fronting
in Romance<br />Eva-Maria
Remberger</p><br /><b>Información en la web de Infoling:</b><br /> <a
href="http://www.infoling.org/informacion/NB1003.html"
target="_blank">
http://www.infoling.org/informacion/NB1003.html</a></body></html>