6.514 Calls: Typology, Derivational residue in phonology

The Linguist List linguist at tam2000.tamu.edu
Thu Apr 6 20:24:11 UTC 1995


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LINGUIST List:  Vol-6-514. Thu 06 Apr 1995. ISSN: 1068-4875. Lines: 192
 
Subject: 6.514 Calls: Typology, Derivational residue in phonology
 
Moderators: Anthony Rodrigues Aristar: Texas A&M U. <aristar at tam2000.tamu.edu>
            Helen Dry: Eastern Michigan U. <hdry at emunix.emich.edu>
 
Asst. Editors: Ron Reck <rreck at emunix.emich.edu>
               Ann Dizdar <dizdar at tam2000.tamu.edu>
               Ljuba Veselinova <lveselin at emunix.emich.edu>
               Annemarie Valdez <avaldez at emunix.emich.edu>
 
-------------------------Directory-------------------------------------
 
1)
Date: Tue, 4 Apr 1995 12:25:28 -0500 (CDT)
From: Edith A Moravcsik (edith at csd.uwm.edu)
Subject: ALT-1 Call for Papers
 
2)
Date:         5 Apr 95 10:15:13 MET
From: "Marc van Oostendorp"  (M.vOostendorp at kub.nl)
Subject:      Tilburg Conference on Derivational Residue
 
-------------------------Messages--------------------------------------
1)
Date: Tue, 4 Apr 1995 12:25:28 -0500 (CDT)
From: Edith A Moravcsik (edith at csd.uwm.edu)
Subject: ALT-1 Call for Papers
 
 
                        CALL FOR PAPERS
 
                       Inaugural meeting
        of the Association for Linguistic Typology (ALT)
 
            Vitoria-Gasteiz, (Spanish) Basque Country
                  Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea
                      8-10 September 1995
                   (Friday, Saturday, Sunday)
 
 Everybody - whether a member of ALT or not - is invited to attend this
 event and encouraged to consider getting on the program.
 
 - IF YOU WISH TO PRESENT A PAPER ...
   ... send a  one-page summary of your proposed talk along with your name
   and address (snail-mail and e-mail if any) to:
          Edith Moravcsik (Chairperson of the ALT-1 Programme Committee)
          - e-mail:    edith at csd.uwm.edu
          - fax:       +1-414-229-6258
          - regular mail (seven copies please):
              Department of Linguistics
              University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
              Milwaukee, WI 53201-0413
              USA
   Please specify how much time you need (30, 45, or 60 minutes; possibly
   more if you are putting on a symposium). Abstracts must be received
   by Wednesday, May 31 1995.
 
 - IF YOU WANT TO FIND OUT MORE ABOUT THE CONFERENCE AND/OR THE ASSOCIATION
   FOR LINGUISTIC TYPOLOGY ...
   ... contact either Frans Plank
                      - e-mail: frans.plank at uni-konstanz.de
                      - fax: +49-7531-882741
                      - regular mail:  Fachgruppe Sprachwissenschaft
                                       Universitaet Konstanz
                                       Postfach 5560
                                       D-78434 Konstanz
                                       Germany
               or Johan van der Auwera
                  - e-mail: auwera at reks.uia.ac.be
                  - fax: +32-3-8202776
                  - regular mail:  Linguistiek (GER)
                                   Universiteit Antwerpen (UIA)
                                   B-2610 Wilrijk
                                   Belgium
 
 
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2)
Date:         5 Apr 95 10:15:13 MET
From: "Marc van Oostendorp"  (M.vOostendorp at kub.nl)
Subject:      Tilburg Conference on Derivational Residue
 
Content-Length: 5868
 
 
                               Call for Papers
 
                      Tilburg University Conference on
 
                          The Derivational Residue
                                in Phonology
 
                                5-7 October 1995
 
The Grammatical Models Group of Tilburg University plans to organize a
conference on the Derivational Residue in Phonology. In this
conference we hope to discuss all topics which were dealt with in
standard generative phonology by derivational means such as level
ordering, (strict) cyclicity and rule ordering, in the light of the
recent shift of attention towards theories that are more
representational (or substantial) in nature. Can all the
derivational tools mentioned be replaced by representational
instruments? If they can, what should the `optimal' representational
theory look like? If they cannot, what exactly is the residue of
derivationalism that we still need?
 
We invite all papers with these or related topics (a more complete
description of the conference topic can be found below) both for and
against purely representational approaches to phonology.
 
We expect to be able to (partially) reimburse travelling expenses and
lodging for our speakers. Furthermore we are proud that Bruce Hayes,
Rene Kager and Geert Booij have already agreed to be our invited
speakers.
 
Deadline
 
Those interested in presenting a paper (40 minutes talks, 15 minutes
discussion) should send 5 copies of a two page abstract (4 anonymous;
1 camera-ready, with name(s), affiliation(s) and contact address,
including e-mail) to: Marc van Oostendorp or Ben Hermans,
Grammaticamodellen, Tilburg University, Postbus 90153, 5000 LE,
Tilburg, The Netherlands.
 
Abstracts must be received by 1 May 1995. Abstracts with page text
considered too condensed to be read will be rejected without review.
No email submissions accepted. For information contact
B.J.H.Hermans at kub.nl or M.vOostendorp at kub.nl.
 
Topic of the Conference
 
During the past few years the main focus of attention in phonology
seems to have been shifted from derivational to representational
models, such as Prince and Smolensky's Optimality Theory, Goldsmith's
Harmonic Phonology and Burzio's PES-Model.
 
Yet generative phonologists have accumulated substantial evidence for
derivational analysis. In standard Lexical Phonology, for instance,
derivationalism plays a role in several ways: the model is divided
into a lexical and a postlexical component, the lexical component
itself is divided into several lexical levels, some lexical levels
are cyclic and every affix starts its own cycle and, finally, the
phonologicals rule within every cycle are ordered. The question is
how we have to evaluate all these derivational instruments in a
representational theory of phonology.
 
The distinction between Lexical and Postlexical Phonology seems to be
least controversial. Most Optimality Theory analyses, for instance,
seem to accept at least this remnant of derivationalism. Yet one
could imagine a more radical version of a purely representational
theory in which the distinction between word-level and phrasal
phonology is accounted for in an appropriate theory of phonological
domains. In any case, the question remains as to how we have to
evaluate the traditional criteria for lexical-postlexical distinction
(exceptions, sensitivity to morphological and syntactic boundaries,
etc.) in a theory of constraints and constraint ranking.
 
Similar questions could be asked about the internal level ordering
within the Lexical component. Can all analyses which used to be
framed in terms of lexical levels be reframed in representational
terms? And to what extent can a theory which makes extensive use of
lexical levels still be called `representational'?
 
Most discussion on derivationalism within Optimality Theory seems to
have been concentrated on the issue of cyclicity. It has been
demonstrated that some cyclic analyses can be replaced by an adequate
theory of Alignment between phonological and morphological structure.
Is this everything that needs to be said about this issue? Are, for
instance, cyclic versions of OT feasible and desirable?
 
Similarily, considerable effort has been put by several researchers
into showing that strict cyclicity as a theoretical concept is
superfluous or that it can be replaced by a theory of
underspecification. Whether this is an adequate answer to all derived
environment effects is another topic we hope to address.
 
Finally, we expect that even at the finest grained level of
derivationalism, viz. phonological rule ordering (both intrinsic and
extrinsic) interesting questions remain unanswered. In particular all
cases of what used to be known as counter-feeding and counter-
bleeding relations seem to us still to be open for discussion.
 
All of these questions have considerable conceptual import, yet it
seems to us that they can ultimately be answered empirically. The
issue of derivationalism is one of the interesting challenges that
Optimality Theory and the other models mentioned earlier pose. We
hope to receive many abstracts dealing with it.
 
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