30.3374, Calls: Historical Linguistics, Morphology, Semantics / Lexis (Jrnl)

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LINGUIST List: Vol-30-3374. Fri Sep 06 2019. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 30.3374, Calls:  Historical Linguistics, Morphology, Semantics / Lexis (Jrnl)

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Date: Fri, 06 Sep 2019 13:04:42
From: Denis Jamet [lexis at univ-lyon3.fr]
Subject: Historical Linguistics, Morphology, Semantics / Lexis (Jrnl)

 
Full Title: Lexis 


Linguistic Field(s): Historical Linguistics; Morphology; Semantics 

Subject Language(s): English (eng)

Call Deadline: 31-Jan-2020 

Call for Papers:

Lexical semantics is a field of semantics dealing with the study of meaning in
words and expressions. The diachronic perspective allows for the study of
meaning through time, and therefore holds the additional benefit of
considering lexical meaning as being subject to change rather than being
purely conventional. The timescale of diachronic study can naturally span as
little as a few decades or, alternatively, can cover several centuries. As far
as the semantic approach is concerned, it is of course understood that all
approaches to meaning are equally acceptable and interesting, and that
includes cognitive semantics, componential feature-based semantics,
structuralist semantics and other approaches as can be found in the overview
of semantic theories in Geeraerts [2009].

This edition welcomes papers of exploratory descriptive, or theoretical
nature. Both onomasiological and semasiological approaches may be used, and
potentially combined, for this edition, which purports to provide an overview
of research in a field which is growing rapidly.

Papers may focus on how to identify instances of semantic change, which
methods and techniques can be used to detect change reliably, and how to
assess change both quantitatively and qualitatively (see Allan & Robinson
[2012]).

Naturally, the question of the motivation behind semantic change will be a key
aspect. In particular, it will be worth identifying and distinguishing
occurrences of so-called natural change such as metaphor and metonymy from
change which is viewed as irregular or sporadic (see Blank [1999], Traugott et
Dasher [2005], Koch [1999], [2012]). Discussions regarding the relative
prominence of metaphorical and metonymical change will be welcome, and in
particular any papers addressing formal issues, such as the following. How do
metaphor and metonymy relate to one another (see Koch [1999], [2012], Kovecses
& Radden [1998]) and is one more essential, or systematic, than the other ?
Can either metonymy or metaphor account for other types of less systematic,
less frequent, sporadic change such as sound symbolic change? (For issues of
semantic change see Koch [1999], and for issues of phonosymbolic change see
Smith [2016]). Another question worth pondering is how essential mechanisms of
lexical semantic change such as metonymy and metaphor relate to
grammaticalisation (Traugott & Dasher [2005]), and what is the relation
between major mechanisms of semantic change with analogical or sporadic change
in the lexicon (see Joseph [1998], Miller [2014])?

These questions lead to the essential issue of propagation of change, methods
for quantifying patterns of change, and assessing the importance or regularity
of trajectories of change, as with the theory of S-curve propagation (Blythe &
Croft [2012]).

See full CFP at https://journals.openedition.org/lexis/3487




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