22.3209, Calls: General Ling/ Southern African Linguistics and Applied... (Jrnl)

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LINGUIST List: Vol-22-3209. Thu Aug 11 2011. ISSN: 1068 - 4875.

Subject: 22.3209, Calls: General Ling/ Southern African Linguistics and Applied... (Jrnl)

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1)
Date: 11-Aug-2011
From: Mark De Vos [m.devos at ru.ac.za]
Subject: Southern African Linguistics and Applied Language Studies
 

	
-------------------------Message 1 ---------------------------------- 
Date: Thu, 11 Aug 2011 12:26:43
From: Mark De Vos [m.devos at ru.ac.za]
Subject: Southern African Linguistics and Applied Language Studies	

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Full Title: Southern African Linguistics and Applied Language Studies 


Linguistic Field(s): General Linguistics; Narrow Bantu 

Call Deadline: 15-Sep-2011 

Call for papers - Special issue
Southern African Linguistics and Applied Language Studies
Volume 30(3),2012

Subject and object marking in Bantu

Guest editors: Lutz Marten, Kristina Riedel, Ron Simango, and Jochen Zeller

One of the most salient and well-known typological characteristics of Bantu 
languages is the marking of NP/DP arguments by co-referential agreement 
morphemes on the verb, often called subject and object markers, found in the 
vast majority of Bantu languages. The morphological and syntactic analysis 
of subject and object markers has attracted considerable attention in the 
Bantu linguistics literature (e.g. Baker 2003, Beaudoin-Lietz et al. 2004, 
Bresnan & Mchombo 1987, Carstens 2005, Diercks 2010, Henderson 2006, 
Marten 2011, Morimoto 2002, Riedel 2009, Rugemalira 1993, Schneider-Zioga 
2007, Zeller 2008), and empirical evidence from subject and object marking 
has contributed to the development of different theoretical analyses of clausal 
relations between verbs and arguments, and the agreement relations holding 
between them, from a wide range of different theoretical perspectives (e.g. 
LFG, OT, GB and Minimalism, Dynamic Syntax).

Papers are invited addressing different aspects of subject and object marking 
in Bantu, including detailed studies of individual languages and comparative 
studies, from descriptive, typological and theoretical perspectives. Among 
the possible research questions for papers in the special issue are:

- the analysis of subject/object markers as either incorporated pronouns or as 
agreement markers, or whether evidence from Bantu rather points to an 
analysis which transcends this dichotomy
- the co-occurrence restrictions between NP/DP subjects/objects and their 
agreeing subject and object markers, for example, whether subject or object 
marking is required with certain kinds of NPs/DPs (e.g. those with animate 
referents), or disallowed (e.g. with non-dislocated objects) 
- restrictions on the kinds of NPs/DPs which can be expressed by subject or 
object markers (e.g. indirect objects or adjuncts), and the behaviour of 
subject and object markers in specific syntactic environments, such as in 
questions, relative clauses, or inversion constructions
- the use of subject/object markers without co-referring NP/DP, such as in 
expletive constructions 
- the choice of subject/object markers in constructions with conjoined 
subjects/objects belonging to different noun classes
- the morphological analysis of subject/object markers and their relation to 
other aspects of  Bantu nominal morphology 
- morphosyntactic microvariation between different Bantu languages with 
respect to subject/object markers

Timeline:

June 2012: Final version of the issue to printers
30 May 2012: Deadline for submission of revised papers
April 2012: Anonymised reviewers' comments sent to authors with requests 
for revisions, if applicable
Feb 2012: Papers sent out to three reviewers each with request for review 
within six weeks
31 Jan 2012: Deadline for submission of completed paper
Oct 2011: Papers to be included selected based on abstracts and notification 
of authors
15 Sept 2011: Deadline for abstract submission

Potential authors should send an abstract of maximally 1 page (excluding 
references) outlining the paper to the corresponding guest editor, Lutz Marten 
(lm5 at soas.ac.uk), by 15 September 2011. Papers accepted for inclusion in 
the issue will be due by 31 January 2012. For further information, contact 
Lutz Marten at lm5 at soas.ac.uk

Articles must accord with the SALALS policy and will be peer reviewed as per 
SALAS general policy.







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