21.2310, Calls: Historical Ling, Syntax/Germany

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LINGUIST List: Vol-21-2310. Fri May 21 2010. ISSN: 1068 - 4875.

Subject: 21.2310, Calls: Historical Ling, Syntax/Germany

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1)
Date: 20-May-2010
From: Roland Meyer < roland.meyer at sprachlit.uni-regensburg.de >
Subject: Grammatical Change and the Expression of Subjects
 

	
-------------------------Message 1 ---------------------------------- 
Date: Fri, 21 May 2010 16:47:16
From: Roland Meyer [roland.meyer at sprachlit.uni-regensburg.de]
Subject: Grammatical Change and the Expression of Subjects

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Full Title: Grammatical Change and the Expression of Subjects 
Short Title: GCES 

Date: 02-Dec-2010 - 04-Dec-2010
Location: Regensburg, Germany 
Contact Person: Roland Meyer
Meeting Email: roland.meyer at sprachlit.uni-regensburg.de
Web Site: http://www-slavistik.uni-regensburg.de/gces 

Linguistic Field(s): Historical Linguistics; Syntax 

Call Deadline: 15-Jul-2010 

Meeting Description:

Diachronic grammatical change in the realm of subject expressions involves 
phenomena like the loss of pro-drop, alternations in thematic alignment, and 
the rise of various new passive and impersonal constructions. The 
conference seeks to bring together researchers working on these and 
closely related topics. Attention shall also be devoted to annotated historical 
corpora which facilitate the treatment of the above issues.

Meeting URL: http://www-slavistik.uni-regensburg.de/gces 

Call For Papers

Diachronic grammatical change affects verbal arguments through an 
interplay of various semantic and structural factors, leading to new 
alternations and structural patterns. In the realm of subject expressions, 
important documented changes include loss of pro-drop, alternations in 
thematic alignment, and the rise of various new passive and impersonal 
constructions. The notion of subject itself is, of course, a notoriously multi-
faceted one, involving factors like referential relations, structural position, 
case, agreement, and thematic roles, the specifications of which certainly do 
not always harmonise. Precisely this state of affairs has often given rise to 
important and fascinating research questions, as e.g. in the case of null and 
expletive subjects, or of oblique/quirky subjects. 

Research on grammatical change has made a considerable leap forward by 
the exploitation of annotated corpora. Not only has its empirical base 
become more accessible in general, but methodological progress has made 
feasible new, exciting research questions, especially involving quantitative 
distributions of linguistic features. Historical and diachronic corpora of an 
increasing number of languages are being constructed and annotated with 
syntactically relevant information in order to address these and related 
issues.

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

- Diachronic development of null subjects
- Changes in subject expletives
- Diachrony of oblique and quirky subjects
- History of impersonal constructions
- Development of diatheses affecting the external argument
- Change in unaccusatives
- History of subjects in root infinitives and modal constructions
- Empirical methodology in diachronic syntax
- Historical and diachronic corpora annotated for syntactic structure and 
syntactic relations

The conference will seek a comparative and typological view. Papers will be 
given precedence which address grammatical change in a theoretically 
explicit way, aiming at an explanatory account, and/or demonstrate 
methodological advancement.

Invited speakers:

Elly van Gelderen (University of Arizona) 
Anthony Kroch (University of Pennsylvania) 
Ian Roberts (Cambridge University) 
David Willis (Cambridge University)

Meeting URL: http://www-slavistik.uni-regensburg.de/gces

Abstract specifications:
Anonymous abstracts for 25 min. presentations (+10 min. discussion) 
should be submitted as an email attachment to gces at sprachlit.uni-
regensburg.de until 15 July 2010. Abstracts may be up to 2 pages long, 
including examples and references, in pdf format, with fonts embedded. If 
you have difficulties at producing pdf, you may also submit a doc file. Please 
include your contact information (name, affiliation, address, email address 
for correspondence), as well as the title of your abstract, in the body of the 
email. Every abstract will be reviewed anonymously by two external 
referees. Accepted papers will be published in a proceedings volume after 
the conference.

Programme Committee:

Katrin Axel (University of Göttingen)
Karin Donhauser (Humboldt University Berlin)
Hanne Martine Eckhoff (University of Oslo) 
Rafa? Górski (Polish Academy of Sciences, Kraków)
Dag Haug (University of Oslo)
Roland Hinterhölzl (Humboldt University Berlin) 
Uwe Junghanns (University of Göttingen) 
Anna Kibort (University of Surrey)
Petr Karlík (Masaryk University Brno)
Karel Ku?era (Charles University Prague)
Anke Lüdeling (Humboldt University Berlin) 
Krzysztof Migdalski (University of Wroc?aw)
Florian Schleburg (University of Regensburg)
Maria Selig (University of Regensburg) 
Ioanna Sitaridou (Cambdrige University)
Augustin Speyer (University of Marburg)
Achim Stein (University of Stuttgart)
Luka Szucsich (Humboldt University Berlin)
Carola Trips (University of Mannheim)
Daniel Weiss (University of Zürich)

Organisers:

Roland Meyer (University of Regensburg)
Björn Hansen (University of Regensburg)





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