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Table of Contents
The Handbook of Phonological Theory
Contributors
Preface
1. Phonological Theory
2. The Organization of the Grammar
3. The Cycle in Phonology
4. Underspecification and Markedness
5. Skeletal Positions and Moras
6. The Syllable in Phonological Theory
7. The Internal Organization of Speech Sounds
8. Phonological Quantity and Multiple Association
9. Prosodic Morphology
10. The Metrical Theory of Word Stress
11. General Properties of Stress and Metrical Structure
12. Tone: African Languages
13. Tone in East Asian Languages
14. Vowel Harmony
15. Syntax-phonology Interface
16. Sentence Prosody: Intonation, Stress, and Phrasing
17. Dependency Relations in Phonology
18. Diphthongization in Particle Phonology
19. Rule Ordering
20. Sign Language Phonology: ASL
21. The Phonological Basis of Sound Change
22. Phonological Acquisition
23. Language Games and Related Areas
24. Experimental Phonology
25. Current Issues in the Phonology of Australian Languages
26. Hausa Tonology: Complexities in an ÐEasyÑ Tone Language
27. Phonology of Ethiopian Languages
28. Current Issues in French Phonology: Liaison and Position Theories
29. Japanese Phonology
30. Current Issues in Semitic Phonology
31. Representations and the Organization of Rules in Slavic Phonology
32. Projection and Edge Marking in the Computation of Stress in Spanish
Bibliography
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Title Information
The Handbook of Phonological Theory
The Handbook of Phonological Theory
Edited by:
Edited by:
Edited by: John A. Glodsmith
eISBN:
eISBN:
eISBN: 9780631201267
Print publication date:
Print publication date: 1996
Print publication date:
Theoretical Linguistics
Ç
Pholonogy
Subject
10.1111/b.9780631201267.1996.x
DOI:
This volume brings together for the first time a detailed examination
of the state of phonological theory in this decade. In a series of
essays on topics as varied as underspecification theory, prosodic
morphology, and syllable structure, 38 leading phonologists offer a
critical survey of the guiding ideas that lie behind this active area of
linguistic research. In all cases, the contributions have been written
by leading researchers, and in many cases, the chapters of this
Handbook are the first published expositions of new perspectives
which have already begun to shape the climate of research in the
field.
Cite this title
Glodsmith, John A. The Handbook of Phonological Theory. Blackwell
Publishing, 1996. Blackwell Reference Online. 31 December 2007
<http://www.blackwellreference.com/subscriber/book?
id=g9780631201267_9780631201267>
The Handbook of Phonological Theory
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Contributors
Theoretical Linguistics
Ç
Pholonogy
Subject
10.1111/b.9780631201267.1996.00001.x
DOI:
Bruce Bagemihl
Bruce Bagemihl, Department of Linguistics, University of British Columbia, Vancouver.
Juliette Blevins
Juliette Blevins, Department of Linguistics, University of Western Australia, Nedlands.
Diane Brentari
Diane Brentari, Linguistics Program, University of California, Davis.
Ellen Broselow
Ellen Broselow, Department of Linguistics, State University of New York, Stony Brook.
G. N. Clements
G. N. Clements, Institute of Phonetics, Paris.
Jennifer Cole
Jennifer Cole, Department ofLinguistics, University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana
Nicolas Evans
Nicolas Evans, Department of Linguistics and Language Studies, Univesity. of Melbourne, Parkville,
Victoria.
Colin J. Ewen
Colin J. Ewen, Vakgroep Engels, Rijksuniversiteit, Leiden.
John Goldsmith
John Goldsmith, Department of Linguistics, University of Chicago, Chicago.
Morris Halle
Morris Halle, Department of Linguistics and Philosophy, MIT, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
James W. Harris
James W. Harris, Department of Linguistics and Philosophy, MIT, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Robert D. Hoberman
Robert D. Hoberman, Department of Comparative Studies, State University of New York, Stony Brook.
Grover Hudson
Grover Hudson, Department of Linguistics, Michigan State University, East Lansing.
Harry van der Hulst
Harry van der Hulst, Holland Institute of Generative Linguistics, University of Leiden.
Elizabeth V. Hume
Elizabeth V. Hume, Department of Linguistics, Ohio State University, Columbus.
William Idsardi
William Idsardi, Department of Linguistics, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware.
Sharon Inkelas
Sharon Inkelas, Department of Linguistics, University of California, Berkeley.
Junko It
, Department of Linguistics, University of California Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz.
Gregory K. Iverson
Gregory K. Iverson, Department of Linguistics, Univesity of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.
Ren
Ren
Kager
Kager
Kager, Onderzoeksinstituut voor Taal en Spraak, Utrecht.
Paul Kiparsky
Paul Kiparsky, Department of Linguistics, University of Massachusetts, Amherst.
Marlys A. Macken
Marlys A. Macken, Department of Linguistics, University of Wisconsin, Madison.
John J. McCarthy
John J. McCarthy, Department of Linguistics, University of Massachusetts, Amherst.
R. Armin Mester
R. Armin Mester, Department of Linguistics, University of California, Santa Cruz.
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K. P. Mohanan
K. P. Mohanan, Department of English Language and Literature, National University of Singapore,
Singapore.
Paul Newman
Paul Newman, Department of Linguistics, Indiana University, Bloomington.
David Odden
David Odden, Department of Linguistics, Ohio State University, Columbus.
John J. Ohala
John J. Ohala, Department of Linguistics, University of California, Berkeley.
David Perlmutter
David Perlmutter, Department of Linguistics, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY.
Alan S. Prince
Alan S. Prince, Department of Linguistics, Rutgers University, New Brunswick.
Alan S. Prince
Jerzy Rubach
Jerzy Rubach, Department of Linguistics, University of Iowa/Institute of English Studies, University of
Warsaw.
Sanford A. Schane
Sanford A. Schane, Department of Linguistics, University of California, San Diego.
Elisabeth Selkirk
Elisabeth Selkirk, Department of Linguistics, University of Massachusetts, Amherst.
Donca Steriade
Donca Steriade, Department of Linguistics, University of California, Los Angeles.
Bernard Tranel
Bernard Tranel, Department of Linguistics, University of California, Irvine.
Jeroen Van De Weijer
Jeroen Van De Weijer, Holland Institute of Generative Linguistics, University of Leiden.
Moira Yip
Moira Yip, Linguistics Department, University of California, Irvine.
Draga Zec
Draga Zec, Department of Linguistics, Cornell University, Ithaca.
Cite this article
"Contributors." The Handbook of Phonological Theory. Glodsmith, John A. Blackwell Publishing, 1996.
Blackwell Reference Online. 31 December 2007 <http://www.blackwellreference.com/subscriber/tocnode?
id=g9780631201267_chunk_g97806312012671>
Bibliographic Details
The
The Handbook of Phonological Theory
Handbook of Phonological Theory
Edited by:
Handbook of Phonological Theory
Edited by: John A. Glodsmith
eISBN:
Edited by:
eISBN:
eISBN: 9780631201267
Print publication date:
Print publication date:
Print publication date: 1996
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Preface
Theoretical Linguistics
Ç
Pholonogy
Subject
10.1111/b.9780631201267.1996.00002.x
DOI:
This is a handbook of phonological theory, and is thus neither a textbook nor a collection of research
papers. Its goal is to provide its readers with a set of extended statements concerning mainstream
conceptions of phonological theory in the first half of the 1990s, and perhaps beyond. The
contributors have taken as their charge to bring together the leading ideas in the areas that they
describe; in general, their aim has not been to provide new approaches so much as to offer a new
synthesis of the ideas that are currently in the field.
This handbook is thus ideally suited for the reader who has a background in phonology but who
wants to know more about a particular subarea. A book such as my Autosegmental and Metrical
Phonology (1990) or Kenstowicz's Phonology in Generative Grammar (1993), or the older Generative
Phonology (1979) by Kenstowicz and Kisseberth, would be more than adequate background for the
present volume.
Most of the topics covered in this book need no explanation. It will come as no surprise to see articles
on syllable structure, on metrical structure, and on feature geometry. Some topics have not been
addressed directly for want of a general consensus at the time the book was constructed. For
example, while there has been considerable discussion regarding the correct relationship between
constraints on representations and phonological rules, there is no single chapter that focuses on this
question. The reader concerned with this issue will find discussions in several of the chapters
(especially
chapter 1
,
chapter 2
, and
chapter 9
), and more generally, the reader will find theoretical
issues discussed in several chapters, with referencing through the index. A smaller set of issues,
however, that might be expected to merit a chapter in this volume do not appear because of
unforeseen misadventures and calamities over which authors and editors have no control. In the
event, we have tried to make up for the losses with additional details in the chapters that are present.
The final eight chapters have a somewhat different character than the earlier material. They were
submitted in response to invitations to write chapters for this handbook which would focus not so
much on theoretical issues as on the aspects of particular languages (or language families) which have
been particularly important in recent theoretical literature. If it had been possible, I would have liked
to extend this section to include a hundred essays of this sort, but editorial limitations have precluded
that possibility, and I hope that the reader will not regret the absence of an additional chapter on (for
example) the phonology of Native American languages, or South American languages, for they too
would have served well here. It simply was not possible to cover all of the areas of the world.
In a book of any size, but especially one of this length, there will have been many people who have
helped it along to its completion. The kind people at Blackwell Publishers have put in a great deal of
work and enthusiasm, beginning with Philip Carpenter, whose brainchild it was in the first place. Steve
Smith and Andrew McNeillie are also to be thanked for their editorial work, as is Ginny Stroud-Lewis
as picture researcher. On this side of the Atlantic, Charlene Posner, copy editor extraordinaire,
improved the grammar and exposition in ways too numerous to count. Iretha Phillips, here in the
Linguistics Department at the University of Chicago, came to the rescue several times when needed.
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