21.5060, Calls: Indo-European, Historical Ling, Syntax, Typology/Greece

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LINGUIST List: Vol-21-5060. Tue Dec 14 2010. ISSN: 1068 - 4875.

Subject: 21.5060, Calls: Indo-European, Historical Ling, Syntax, Typology/Greece

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1)
Date: 13-Dec-2010
From: Leonid Kulikov [L.Kulikov at hum.leidenuniv.nl]
Subject: Workshop on Proto-Indo-European Syntax and its Development
 

	
-------------------------Message 1 ---------------------------------- 
Date: Tue, 14 Dec 2010 13:34:42
From: Leonid Kulikov [L.Kulikov at hum.leidenuniv.nl]
Subject: Workshop on Proto-Indo-European Syntax and its Development 

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Full Title: Workshop on Proto-Indo-European Syntax and its Development 

Date: 01-Apr-2011 - 03-Apr-2011
Location: Thessaloniki, Greece 
Contact Person: Nikolaos Lavidas
Meeting Email: nlavidas at enl.auth.gr
Web Site: http://www.enl.auth.gr/ISTAL20/workshop.htm 

Linguistic Field(s): Historical Linguistics; Syntax; Typology 

Language Family(ies): Indo-European 

Call Deadline: 30-Dec-2010 

Meeting Description:

Keynote speakers: Georgios Giannakis (University of Thessaloniki), Giuseppe Longobardi (University of Trieste) 

December 30, 2010: deadline for submitting abstracts
January 31, 2011: notification of acceptance
April 1-3, 2011: PIE Syntax and its development 

Keynote Speakers:

Georgios Giannakis (University of Thessaloniki) 
'Tmesis and Univerbation in Indo-European'

Guiseppe Longobardi (University of Trieste) 
'How to probe history with grammars'

The last decades are marked with an increasing interest towards the study of archaic syntax of Indo-European languages and, eventually, towards reconstruction of the main features of the Proto-Indo-European syntax. Suffice it to mention, among many others (in chronological order) Lehmann 1974, Kortlandt 1983, Hettrich 1990, Giannakis 1997, Bauer 2000, Boley 2004, Barðdal & Smitherman 2009, Barðdal & Eythórsson 2010, Barðdal 2011, adding much to our knowledge based on such seminal works on the ancient Indo-European syntax as Delbrück 1893-97 or Hirt 1934-37. Although for some scholars the very opportunity of a syntactic reconstruction remains questionable, numerous studies have appeared which reconstruct a variety of basic elements of the Proto-Indo-European syntax, on the basis of evidence available from, above all, ancient and/or archaic Indo-European languages. Such aspects of the proto-language as ergative/active type of alignment, basic word order, subject and object marking and some others have given rise to vivid discussions both between Indo-Europeanists and typologists. Furthermore, the possibility of an efficient lexically blind system of syntactic comparison, precisely the parametric comparison method was first suggested in Longobardi (2003), Guardiano & Longobardi (2005).

The idea of the conference is to bring together scholars interested in these and related problems and to open new perspectives in the research of the ancient Indo-European syntax. Special attention will be paid to the development of the hypothetical reconstructed features within the documented history of Indo-European languages. 

The workshop will be part of the 20th International Symposium on Theoretical & Applied Linguistics organized by the Department of Theoretical & Applied Linguistics of Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, to be held April 1-3, 2011 in Thessaloniki, Greece. 

Call for Papers:

The issues to be addressed include: 

-Modern approaches to the analysis of the archaic Indo-European syntax and syntactic reconstruction; 
-Proto-Indo-European syntactic reconstruction and its contribution to linguistic theory; 
-Is a syntactic reconstruction possible? which syntactic features can be reconstructed? 
-Reconstruction of the alignment type (ergative/active etc.) and its morphological manifestations (cases, verbal morphology); 
-Transitivity, voice, middle, stative and related categories in early/late Proto-Indo-European and ancient Indo-European languages; 
-Can we reconstruct the labile syntactic type for Proto-Indo-European and what are the main types of the evolution of lability attested for Indo-European languages? 
-Reconstruction of PIE moods and their evolution in PIE languages; 
-IE and PIE tense, aspect and aktionsart (actionalities); 
-Word order and its evolution in PIE and IE; 
-Canonical and non-canonical subject and object marking in PIE and its development in IE languages; 
-Relative clauses and other types of subordinate clauses in PIE and their evolution; 
-Syntax of non-finite forms (infinitives, converbs, etc.). 

Please send us (nlavidas at enl.auth.gr; L.Kulikov at hum.LeidenUniv.nl) the one-page abstract of your paper no later than December 30, 2010. Please visit

http://www.enl.auth.gr/ISTAL20, where you will also find practical information.

Nikolaos Lavidas
Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
nlavidas at enl.auth.gr

Leonid Kulikov
Leiden University / Institute of Linguistics, Moscow 
L.Kulikov at hum.LeidenUniv.nl




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