商品簡介
This volume focuses on the role of the postulated derivational and filtering devices in current linguistic theory and aims to promote the exchange of ideas between the proponents of MP and OT in order to evaluate the role of these devices in the two frameworks. It sheds more light on the tenability of the often proclaimed opinion that MP and OT are incompatible frameworks given that the explanatory power of the former mainly resides on the generative device whereas the explanatory power of the latter mainly resides in the filtering device. Papers from various perspectives discuss and compare the two devices in the two frameworks. The volume thus collects a large number of the arguments in favour of more a strictly derivational approach, a more strictly filtering approach, or a more hybrid approach. The book will be of interest to any researcher or advanced student in Linguistic Theory. It is more specifically directed to syntacticians working within the current frameworks that have developed from Chomsky's minimalist program (MP) and Prince and Smolensky's Optimality Theory (OT).
作者簡介
Hans Broekhuis has worked as a researcher and assistant professor at the University of Amsterdam, the University of Tilburg, University Leiden and, currently, the Meertens Institute in Amsterdam. His theoretical work is mainly conducted within the principles-and-parameters framework. More recently he developed a more hybrid framework, which combines certain properties of the minimalist program and optimality theory (Derivations and evaluations: Object shift in the Germanic languages, Mouton de Gruyter, 2008). Ralf Vogel is professor of German linguistics at the University of Bielefeld. He mainly works within the framework of generative grammar, focusing on syntax and its interfaces with semantics and phonology, and their modeling within optimality theory. More recent work is dealing with the syntax-prosody interface and with the integration of advanced methods of empirical linguistic research with grammatical theory. He is co-editor of Minimality Effects in Syntax (with Artur Stepanov and Gisbert Fanselow, Mouton de Gruyter, 2004) and Gradience in Grammar: Generative Perspectives (with Gisbert Fanselow, Caroline Fery and Matthias Schlesewsky, Oxford University Press, 2006).