30.4662, Calls: General Linguistics, Historical Linguistics, Morphology, Typology/Germany
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LINGUIST List: Vol-30-4662. Mon Dec 09 2019. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.
Subject: 30.4662, Calls: General Linguistics, Historical Linguistics, Morphology, Typology/Germany
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Date: Mon, 09 Dec 2019 13:09:38
From: Eduard Sebastian Lukasiewicz [eduard.lukasiewicz at uni-goettingen.de]
Subject: Workshop ‘Analogical Patterns in Inflectional Morphology’
Full Title: Workshop ‘Analogical Patterns in Inflectional Morphology’
Short Title: APIM 2020
Date: 16-Apr-2020 - 17-Apr-2020
Location: Göttingen, Germany
Contact Person: Sascha Gaglia
Meeting Email: sascha.gaglia at phil.uni-goettingen.de
Web Site: https://www.uni-goettingen.de/de/workshop+apim+2020/616746.html
Linguistic Field(s): General Linguistics; Historical Linguistics; Morphology; Typology
Call Deadline: 31-Dec-2019
Meeting Description:
The investigation of analogies constitutes a longstanding tradition in the
field of inflectional morphology. Contributions that treat analogies with
respect to wider areas within an inflectional paradigm (and not only as
proportions between single forms) were made early (see, among others,
Kuryłowicz's work on levelling from Old to Middle French), but it was
especially the focus on the morpho-syntactic paradigm as an object of
theoretical linguistic research that intensified the research on different
kind of patterns that serve as domains for analogical processes, which have
been defined by some authors as the ''central locus of analogy in grammar''.
Some of the major contributions that influenced, either directly or at least
to a considerable extent, the field of analogical patterns are Bybee (1985),
where they are treated from a frequency-based perspective, Aronoff's seminal
work on so-called 'morphomes' (Aronoff 1994; see also Maiden 2018 on morphomes
in Romance languages) and Stump (2001), where paradigmatic patterns are
consistently formalized. The workshop aims at bringing together morphologists
working on analogical patterns and paradigms in inflectional morphology,
taking into consideration different language areas and theoretical
backgrounds, to discuss, among other aspects:
- the temporal and structural dynamics of analogies within and between
patterns, especially, but not exclusively, from a quantitative diachronic
perspective
- the circumstances that favour or disfavour analogies partaking in pattern
formation, for example those contributing to a relative stability of certain
patterns against analogy (see, for example, Esher 2016)
- proposals on modelling analogical patterns, e.g. feature-based approaches,
also including architectural paradigmatic issues as in Plank (2016) as well as
frequency-based and computational approaches (etc.)
- the predictability and learnability of analogical patterns (e.g. according
to Albright 2009)
- analogical, especially morphomic, patterns that are not restricted to
Romance languages (e.g. Round 2015)
- typological aspects in general
The workshop is part of a research grant offered by the German Research
Council (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft) to Sascha Gaglia (Project title:
''Temporal analysis and modelling of the paradigmatic extension of verbal
roots in French and Italian''; Department of Romance Philology, Göttingen)
References:
Albright, A. 2009. Modeling analogy as probabilistic grammar, in J. P. Blevins
& J. Blevins (eds.): Analogy in Grammar. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
185-213.
Aronoff, M. 1994. Morphology by Itself. Stems and Inflectional Classes.
Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Bybee, J. L. 1985. Morphology. A Study of the Relation between Meaning and
Form. Amsterdam: Benjamins.
Carstairs, A. 1987. Allomorphy in Inflexion. London, New York, Sydney: Croom
Helm.
Esher, L. 2016. Morphome death and transfiguration in the history of French.
Journal of Linguistics 53: 51-84.
Maiden, M. 2018. The Romance verb. Morphomic structure and diachrony. Oxford:
Oxford University Press.
Plank, F. 2016. Vom Suppletiv(un)wesen, in Beziehung zur Paradigmenstruktur,
in A. Bittner & K.- M. Köpcke (Hrsg.): Regularität und Irregularität in
Phonologie und Morphologie. Berlin: De Gruyter. 1-28.
Round, E. 2015. Rhizomorphomes, meromorphomes and metamorphomes, in G. G.
Corbett, D. Brown & M. Baerman (eds.): Understanding and measuring
morphological complexity. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 29-52.
Stump, G. 2001. Inflectional Morphology. A Theory of Paradigm Structure.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Call for Papers:
Invited Speakers:
Louise Esher (CNRS/Toulouse)
Frans Plank (Konstanz)
Erich Round (University of Queensland/MPI-SHH Jena/Surrey Morphology Group)
Abstract Submission:
For an oral presentation (30 minutes + 15 min discussion) please provide an
abstract of max. 2 pages of length (including examples, references, tables,
etc.) in PDF form to: sascha.gaglia at phil.uni-goettingen.de
The abstract must include the author's name(s) and affiliation(s). The
deadline for submission is December 31, 2019. The workshop will be held in
English, whence it follows that all abstracts must be also written in English.
A notification of acceptance or rejection will be sent out by January 15,
2020.
Futher information:
Workshop website:
https://www.uni-goettingen.de/de/workshop+apim+2020/616746.html
Contact: sascha.gaglia at phil.uni-goettingen.de
References:
Aronoff, M. 1994. Morphology by Itself. Stems and Inflectional Classes.
Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Bybee, J. L. 1985. Morphology. A Study of the Relation between Meaning and
Form. Amsterdam: Benjamins.
Stump, G. 2001. Inflectional Morphology. A Theory of Paradigm Structure.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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