[Lingtyp] most important works in generative typology
Wal, G.J. van der (Jenneke)
g.j.van.der.wal at hum.leidenuniv.nl
Wed Jul 2 13:30:14 UTC 2025
Hi Adam,
1. Can I also suggest the work by Pino Longobardi and Christina Guardiano and their groups?
Langelin project: https://www.york.ac.uk/language-linguistic-science/research/projects/completed/langelin/
Parametric Comparison project: http://www.parametricomparison.unimore.it/site/home.html
1. The *ABA generalisation by Jonathan Bobaljik (and work inspired by it) should also be mentioned: https://linguistics.fas.harvard.edu/publications/universals-comparative-morphology-suppletion-superlatives-and-structure
3. Apart from Robert’s book, please also look at work by the members of the ReCoS project more generally (Anders Holmberg, Theresa Biberauer, Michelle Sheehan, András Bárány, Georg Höhn, Tim Bazalgette, Alison Biggs, and myself).
The FOFC is another great generalisation coming out of earlier research by some of these researchers:
Sheehan, M., Biberauer, T., A. Holmberg & I. Roberts. The Final over Final Condition. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
(I could go on about others such as Sam Wolfe’s V2 typology and many other publications and projects but will leave it at this…)
Best,
Jenneke
Hi all,
Trying to make a bibliography for my typology class. I was wondering what
people thought the most important works (say top 5-10) in generative
typology are in the past 20 years. In my mind this is mostly dominated by
Mark Baker's work, but I feel this impression might be out of date. I'd be
very interested in PhD theses (or work derived from these) in particular.
best regards,
Adam
--
Adam J.R. Tallman
Post-doctoral Researcher
Friedrich Schiller Universit?t
Department of English Studies
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