14.153, Diss: Pan "Locality, Self-Ascription..."
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LINGUIST List: Vol-14-153. Thu Jan 16 2003. ISSN: 1068-4875.
Subject: 14.153, Diss: Pan "Locality, Self-Ascription..."
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1)
Date: Wed, 15 Jan 2003 19:18:07 +0000
From: cthpan at cityu.edu.hk
Subject: Syntax: Pan "Locality, Self-Ascription..."
-------------------------------- Message 1 -------------------------------
Date: Wed, 15 Jan 2003 19:18:07 +0000
From: cthpan at cityu.edu.hk
Subject: Syntax: Pan "Locality, Self-Ascription..."
New Dissertation Abstract
Institution: University of Texas at Austin
Program: Department of Linguistics
Dissertation Status: Completed
Degree Date: 1995
Author: Haihua Pan
Dissertation Title:
Locality, Self-Ascription, Discourse Prominence, and Mandarin Reflexives
Dissertation URL: http://ctlhpan.cityu.edu.hk/haihuapan/paper/phd-abst.htm
Linguistic Field: Syntax
Subject Language: Chinese, Mandarin (code: 1220)
Dissertation Director 1: Manfred Krifka
Dissertation Director 2: Robert Simmons
Dissertation Director 3: Carl Lee Baker
Dissertation Director 4: Steven Wechsler
Dissertation Abstract:
Mandarin reflexive 'ziji' has challenged many syntacticians to probe
for its properties, specifically its relationship to Binding Condition
A (BCA), which dictates that an anaphor must be bound by a
syntactically prominent (or c-commanding) noun phrase in a very local
domain (Governing Category or GC). The basic strategy employed by most
analyses is to try to show that BCA also applies to 'ziji', even
though 'ziji' apparently violates it by allowing long-distance
binding. Based on textual search of large corpora on the usage of
'ziji', 'benren', 'beshen', zishen', and their compound forms, this
thesis claims that a semantic factor 'self-ascription' and a discourse
factor 'prominence' play an essential role in the interpretation of
Mandarin reflexives.
Following the spirit of Baker (1994) who makes a fundamenntal
distinction between syntactic binding and discourse prominence,
this thesis argues for the separation of contrastive and
non-contrastive reflexives. While members of the former are
constrained by discourse prominnence, members of the latter are
constrained by either locality or self-ascription.
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