LINGUIST List 23.1803
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Mon Apr 09 2012
Review: Semantics, Syntax, Typology: Malchukov and Siewierska (2011)
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Date: 09-Apr-2012
From: Peter Arkadiev <alpgurev gmail.com>
Subject: Impersonal Constructions
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Announced at http://linguistlist.org/issues/22/22-3152.html EDITORS: Andrej Malchukov, Anna Siewierska TITLE: Impersonal Constructions SUBTITLE: A Cross-Linguistic Perspective SERIES TITLE: Studies in Language Companion Series 124 PUBLISHER: John Benjamins YEAR: 2011 Peter M. Arkadiev, Institute of Slavic Studies, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow SUMMARY Impersonal constructions have only recently become an important topic in cross-linguistic studies (cf. Lehmann et al. 2000, Creissels 2007, Siewierska ed. 2008), especially in a European perspective (cf. Lambert 1998, Cabredo Hofherr 2006). The volume "Impersonal Constructions: A Cross-Linguistic Perspective" edited by Anna Siewierska (1955-2011) and Andrej Malchukov is the first large-scale collection of papers on impersonal constructions assuming a typological perspective and aiming at widest possible coverage of languages of different genetic and areal provenance and structural type. In addition to such a broad data-base, the book under review is comprehensive in a no less important respect, representing a variety of approaches to impersonal constructions (both functional-typological and generative) and different problems pertaining to this field, such as the lexical-semantic fields and discourse-pragmatic circumstances favouring the occurrence of impersonal constructions, the functional-semantic typology of impersonal constructions, their structural types and relation to such independently occurring properties of languages as case-marking of nominals, verbal cross-reference, passive and anticausative, classification of intransitive verbs into unaccusative and unergative, zero and overt anaphora, grammatical encoding of animacy etc. In the Introduction (p. 1-15) Andrej Malchukov and Anna Siewierska give a succinct and useful general discussion of the conceptual, terminological and cross-linguistic problems of impersonal constructions and provide a detailed overview of the structure of the volume and of individual contributions. The main portion of the book consists of three major part comprising is sum twenty articles. Part 1 "Typological and theoretical aspects" contains four papers addressing problems of different degree of generality arising in the cross-linguistic and theoretical study of impersonal constructions. Andrej Malchukov and Akio Ogawa in "Towards a typology of impersonal constructions. A semantic map approach" (pp. 19-56) propose a general functional typology of impersonal constructions viewing them as encoding certain deviations from the universal subject prototype (Keenan 1976). Three functional-semantic types of impersonal constructions are postulated: R-impersonals with non-referential or indefinite subjects, T-impersonals with non-topical (rhematic) subjects and A-impersonals with non-agentive (non-volitional, inanimate) subjects. Malchukov and Ogawa show that different functional types of impersonal constructions show propensity towards different kinds of morphosyntactic encoding: R-impersonals often lack a subject argument altogether or use some sort of expletive subject, or a specialized pronoun with generic reference like German "man"; T-impersonals (such as presentational constructions) often involve word order inversion and lack of subject-verb agreement; A-impersonals often display non-canonical encoding of subject by means of case marking, verbal agreement or both. A semantic map of "non-prototypical subjecthood" is drawn on p. 42, showing how different encoding strategies are distributed over inanimate, non-referential, non-topical etc. subjects. "Transimpersonal" constructions (Malchukov 2008) with an experiencer object and an indefinite/dummy subject are also discussed at length, and it is argued that such construction constitute a diachronic link between R-impersonals and A-impersonals. In "Overlap and complementarity in reference impersonals. Man-constructions vs. third person plural-impersonals in the languages of Europe" (pp. 57-89) Anna Siewierska discusses the areal patterning of two major types of referential impersonal constructions in the European languages: those involving the specialized impersonal pronoun like German "man" or French "on", and those using a third person plural pronoun or verbal affix. As Siewierska shows, man-impersonals constitute a trait of the "Standard-Average European" area, being mostly characteristic of French, German, Dutch, Frisian and Mainland Scandinavian languages, while third person-plural impersonals mostly occur outside this area. However, Siewierska shows that "all man-imp languages also display 3pl-imps" (p. 73), so that in such languages as French and Dutch the two kinds of impersonal constructions are often in competition. Another typological issue discussed is the putative correlation of the type of impersonal with the pro-drop parameter (Holmberg 2005); Siewierska shows that though in Europe the correlation mostly holds, the theory linking the presence of specific impersonal pronouns to the requirement of overt subject can account neither for the exact distribution of man-impersonals nor for the very existence of 3pl-impersonals. Instead, Siewierska shows that "there is a correlation between pro-drop properties and the range of uses the different types of non-referential subjects display" (p. 79): in non-pro-drop languages man-impersonals occur not only in generic but also in episodic contexts with both non-specific and specific reference, while in pro-drop languages man-impersonals are usually confined to generic contexts. 3pl-impersonals show the opposite behaviour. Werner Abraham in "Verbs of motion. Impersonal passivization between unaccusativity and unergativity" (p. 91-125) discusses a variety of issues having to do with the dual classification of verbs of motion in such European languages as Italian, German and Dutch, where they show properties of both unaccusative and unergative predicates. Abraham proposes to resolve this paradox by assuming that verbs of motion, being agentive, are unergative in their imperfective uses giving rise to impersonal passives, but are unaccusative in the passive (resultative) participles occurring in perfect constructions. Another claim by Abraham, now of a more empirical than theoretical nature, is that impersonal passives occur in languages having several different strategies for encoding of the passive, e.g. "sein"-passive vs. "bleiben"-passive in German or synthetic vs. periphrastic passive in Scandinavian languages. However, this claim is refuted by Lithuanian, which arguably has just one passive strategy and simultaneously is the language with the widest and most productive use of impersonal passives (e.g. Timberlake 1982; Wiemer 2006). Volker Gast and Holger Diessel in "On the distribution of subject properties in formulaic presentationals of Germanic and Romance. A diachronic-typological approach" (pp. 127-166) propose a detailed structural typology of presentational impersonal constructions in Romance and Germanic. The typology is based on three main parameters: (i) type of existential predicate (one-place vs. copular vs. transitive); (ii) type of expletive (no expletive vs. weak pronominal expletive vs. locative expletive) and (iii) whether the language allows verb-initial order in thetic sentences. Gast and Diessel focus on the synchronic distribution and diachronic evolution of subject properties (case marking, agreement, raising) in these constructions, i.e. on the question how these properties are distributed between the expletive and the referential noun phrase introducing the new discourse participant. They show that (i) languages where thetic sentences allow verb-initial order (Romanian, Italian, Portuguese, Catalan) either do not have expletives in impersonal presentational constructions or such expletives do not show subject properties, and (ii) that in languages with an obligatory preverbal constituent (French, English, Norwegian) expletives have acquired subject properties via the reanalysis of an original transitive predicate denoting possession as an existential predicate. Part II "Diachronic studies" contains three articles dealing with the history of impersonal constructions in Indo-European languages. Michela Cennamo in "Impersonal constructions and accusative subjects in Late Latin" (pp. 169-188) shows how the loss of voice contrasts in Latin has led to an emergence of rather peculiar patterns of case marking with accusative case appearing first on semantic patients of passives, then on the patientive subjects of unaccusative verbs, and then on the agentive subjects of unergative and even transitive verbs. Anna Giacalone Ramat and Andrea Sansò in "From passive to impersonal. A case study from Italian and its implications" (pp. 189-228) present a detailed corpus-based study of the development of the reflexive-based si-passive to a si-impersonal from late Mediaeval to Modern Italian. They pin down the contexts which could lead to the reanalysis of a passive construction with a generic agent into an impersonal construction and document the gradual spread of si-impersonals to different types of predicates and contexts. Giacalone-Ramat and Sansò also discuss the emergence of the so-called inclusive si-impersonal construction where the generic/indefinite subject necessarily includes the speaker. They conclude (p. 226) that "a reanalysis of the passive marker as a marker of generic human agency is a necessary precondition motivating its extension to intransitive verbs" and the subsequent emergence of the impersonal construction. Leonid Kulikov in "Passive to anticausative through impersonalization. The case of Vedic and Indo-European" (pp. 227-254) discusses a rare pathway of change leading from passive to anticausative on the basis of the Vedic Sanskrit data and shows that impersonal passives have served as an intermediate stage in the reanalysis of the passives of such verbs as "see", "hear", "know", and "say" into one-place anticausatives. The third and largest part of the book ("Cross-linguistic variation in Impersonal constructions: case studies") comprises thirteen papers devoted to impersonal constructions in individual languages and language families from all over the world. Two papers deal specifically with meteorological predicates. Amina Mettouchi and Mauro Tosco in "Impersonal configurations and theticity: The case of meteorological predications in Afroasiatic" (pp. 307-322) develop a typology of meteorological expressions based on the notion of partial vs. total backgrounding of processes or entities resulting in different morphosyntactic patterns with the atmospheric event expressed either as a verb or as a noun or both, and make a strong argument for the recognition of theticity as a primary factor determining grammatical properties of this type of sentences. Merja Salo in "Meteorological verbs in Uralic languages - are there any impersonal structures to be found" (pp. 395-438) shows on the basis of the data from 14 languages that though many meteorological expressions in Uralic contain some sort of (not necessarily agentive) subject argument and thus are not structurally impersonal, they are close to impersonal constructions functionally. Unfortunately, these two papers do not refer to each other. Two more papers dealing not with a single language but with a group of related languages are devoted to the languages of Oceania. Claire Moise-Faurie in "Impersonal constructions in some Oceanic languages" (pp. 581-606) discusses the data of Polynesian and Kanak (New Caledonia) languages, where the following strategies of encoding impersonal constructions occur: subjectless clauses with avalent predicates (mostly for natural events), dummy pronouns (for some modal predicates), agentless use of otherwise transitive verbs, encoding of the notional agent as a possessor or an obliquely marked adjunct, zero anaphora, and, rarely, specialized impersonal pronouns. An important distinction is drawn between impersonal verbs which are not able to occur in syntactic structures implying a referential subject or agent, and impersonal uses of otherwise regular transitive and intransitive verbs. Jean-Christophe Verstraete in "Impersonal constructions in Umpithamu and Lamalamic languages" (pp. 607-625) describes a non-trivial kind of subjectless construction attested in several Pama-Nyungan languages of northeastern Australia. In these languages, experiencer predicates denoting "sudden, involuntary physical processes" (p. 613) are encoded as transitive verbs with an absolutive noun phrase expressing the body-part and an accusative or oblique personal enclitic referring to the experiencer. These structures are shown to be impersonal even in the presence of an inanimate ergative noun phrase, since they do not admit a nominative personal enclitic, which is otherwise able to cross-reference an ergative subject. Verstraete draws functional parallels between such impersonal constructions and voice, showing that they mostly occur when "an inanimate agent-like element affects a human undergoer-like element" (p. 622). Several papers discuss in detail just one particular construction. Doris L. Payne in "The Maa (Eastern Nilotic) Impersonal constructions" adduces morphosyntactic evidence showing that the "passive" construction in this language does not contain a subject argument. Payne's argumentation largely repeats that of Mel'čuk's (1997) discussion of the same construction. A large part of this paper is devoted to a detailed corpus-based account of the semantic-pragmatic functions of the Maa impersonal. Anna Kibort in "The elephant in the room: The impersonal -ne/-te construction in Polish" (pp. 357-393) provides a detailed description of a little studied construction, whose main peculiarity is its underspecification with respect to the exact syntactic structure it instantiates (verbal passive or non-passive adverbial). Anna Bugaeva in "A diachronic study of the impersonal passive in Ainu" (pp. 517-546) presents an account of morphological and syntactic properties of a peculiar impersonal passive construction showing non-trivial dialectal variation, and proposes a grammaticalization scenario for its development. Synchronically, the impersonal in the Ishikari dialect is interesting in that it employs two different impersonal markers for transitive verbs with 1st person vs. non-1st person objects. From a historical perspective, Bugaeva shows that the most productive impersonal marker in Ainu goes back to an existential verb attaching to a nominalized predicate. The remaining papers describe and discuss whole classes of impersonal constructions in particular languages. Alain-Christian Bassène and Denis Creissels in "Impersonal constructions in Jóola-Banjal" (pp. 285-306) provide an overview of the morphosyntactic and semantic properties of different kinds of impersonal constructions in an Atlantic language where such constructions can be easily defined in structural terms as those lacking a subject cross-referencing prefix on the verb. Ruth A. Berman in "Revisiting impersonal constructions in Modern Hebrew" (pp. 323-355) addresses several kinds of impersonal constructions from a discourse-pragmatic and developmental perspective, discussing such issues as the correlation between grammatical impersonality and expository genres of discourse, speaker's age and education level, etc. Three papers discuss impersonal constructions in polysynthetic languages with highly complex verbal morphology. Edward Vajda, Andrey Nefedov and Andrej Malchukov in "Impersonal constructions in Ket" (pp. 439-458) show how several of the numerous intransitive conjugations in this endangered Yenisseyic language well-known for its idiosyncratic verbal morphology can be accounted for as involving impersonal (more precisely, transimpersonal) patterns using a frozen 3pl inanimate agent marker da-. "Impersonal verbs in Central Alaskan Yupik (Eskimoan)" by Osahito Miyaoka (pp. 459-488) gives a comprehensive account of how two kinds of impersonal verbs (simplex and derived) interact with a complex system of valency changing derivations in Yupik. Simplex ("primary") impersonals in Yupik include meteorological verbs as well as predicates denoting colors and qualities. The derived impersonal structure is created by the productive necessitative suffix; interestingly, such complex predicates are undergoing reanalysis and losing their impersonal morphosyntax. Lynn Drapeau in "Impersonals in Innu" also draws a distinction between lexical and derived impersonals in this Algonquian language with direct-inverse marking and an important role of animacy distinctions in morphosyntax and verbal morphology. The class of lexical impersonals in Innu, in addition to cross-linguistically recurrent predicates denoting natural events, contains many lexemes which correspond to nouns in the languages of Europe, e.g. expressing topographic notions such as 'bay'. A clear link between morphosyntactic impersonality and pragmatic theticity as observed in Innu as well: "event-centered" statements not forming a topic-comment structure are often expressed via impersonal structures, and this is the main discourse function of the derived impersonals formed by affixes, different for transitive and intransitive stems, suppressing the subject. In contrast to many languages where impersonals are marked by special verbal morphology, in Mandarin, as show Yi Yan and Anna Siewierska in "Referential impersonal constructions in Mandarin" (pp. 547-580), subject/agent backgrounding is manifested by use of various nominal strategies, such as special generic nouns and pronouns, including zero pronouns, or a cross-linguistically non-trivial construction involving an existential predicate and a generic noun. Interestingly, the typologically common strategy of forming referential impersonals with the help of 3Pl pronouns is uncommon in Mandarin. The paper contains a useful table (p. 578) comparing Mandarin and English impersonal constructions. EVALUATION The book is undoubtedly a welcome and useful contribution to language typology. Impersonal constructions have not been subject to a detailed and comprehensive cross-linguistic analysis before, and this volume successfully fills this gap. The editors can be praised for having been able to establish a good balance between descriptive and theoretical studies, as well as between synchronic and diachronic perspectives. The cross-linguistic coverage of the volume is almost comprehensive, with a slight bias towards Africa and Eurasia and a regrettable lack of Papuan and South and Meso American languages. Inclusion of several papers dealing with whole language families or areas instead of individual languages, thus addressing issues of intra-genetic and areal typology, is also an example to be followed. Of the problems addressed in the volume that concerning the very definition of "impersonal construction" is among the hardest to solve. From a eurocentric perspective, usually reproached in contemporary typological studies, an impersonal construction is one that lacks a "canonical" referential subject. However, since the notion of subject itself has been rejected as not applicable to all languages and not allowing for cross-linguistic identification (cf. e.g. Dryer 1997, Haspelmath 2010), the typological validity of the notion "impersonal construction" is subject to doubt, too. However, the editors and authors of the volume have decided to assume this formal-syntactic definition of impersonal construction and to test its applicability to different languages. The results are very instructive, showing (i) that it is possible to identify constructions with "defective" subjects or no subjects at all in typologically very different languages and do so on a non-arbitrary basis, and (ii) that constructions so identified show a striking degree of similarity across languages with respect to the lexical-semantic types of predicates usually occurring in such constructions (e.g. meteorological verbs or experiencer predicates) and discourse-pragmatic functions associated with them (e.g. agent-defocusing and theticity). This suggests that appropriately defined syntactic structures and morphosyntactic patterns may indeed serve as basis for cross-linguistic comparison. What the editors, however, to my regret have not done is to make the volume more coherent. There are almost no mutual cross-references among the individual contributions, even when the authors address similar issues. It would have been also very useful if the volume contained an afterword summarizing the findings of all the contributions and making typological generalizations about various features of impersonal constructions. The other serious drawback of this otherwise excellent book is a huge number of typos and typesetting lapses, both in the text and in the examples. To mention just one, ex. (5) on p. 58 (the only example from Lithuanian found in the whole book) contains a typo ("mayt" instead of "matyt") and three (sic!) wrong glosses: "her" instead of "he:instrumental", "was" instead if "will be" and "complaining" instead of "complained". Sometimes it looks as if the articles have not been proof-read by the authors or editors. REFERENCES Cabredo Hofherr, Patricia. 2006. 'Arbitrary' pro and the theory of pro-drop. In Arguments and Agreement, P. Ackema, P. Brandt, M. Schoorlemmer, and F. Weerman (eds.), 230-261. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Creissels, Denis. 2007. Impersonal and anti-impersonal constructions: A typological approach. Ms., Université Lyon 2. Dryer, Matthew. 1997. Are grammatical relations universal? In Essays on Language Function and Language Type: Dedicated to Talmy Givón, J.L. Bybee, J. Haiman, S.A. Thompson (eds.), 115-143. Amsterdam, Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Haspelmath, Martin. 2010. Comparative concepts and descriptive categories in cross-linguistic studies. Language 86 (3): 663-687. Holmberg, Anders. 2005. Is there a little pro? Evidence from Finnish. Linguistic Inquiry 36 (4): 533-564. Keenan, Edward L. 1975. Towards a universal definition of subject. In Subject and Topic, Ch. Li (ed.), 303-333. New York etc.: Academic Press. Lambert, P.-Y. 1998. L'impersonnel. In Actance at valence dans les langues de l'Europe, J. Feuillet (éd.), 295-347. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Lehmann, Christian, Shin, Yong-Min, Verhoeven, Elisabeth. 2000. Person Prominence and Relation Prominence. On the Typology of Syntactic Relations with Particular Reference to Yucatec Maya. München, Newcastle: LINCOM Europa. Malchukov, Andrej. 2008. Split intransitives, experiencer objects and 'transimpersonal' constructions: (re‑)establishing the connection. In Typology of Semantic Alignment, M. Donohue and S. Wichman (eds.), 76-101. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Mel'čuk, Igor. 1997. Grammatical cases, basic verbal construction, and voice in Maasai: Towards a better analysis of the concepts. In Advances in Morphology, W. Dressler, M. Prinzhorn & J. Rennison (eds.), 131-170. Berlin, New York: Mouton de Gruyter. Siewierska, Anna (ed.). 2008. Impersonal Constructions in Grammatical Theory. Special Issue of Transactions of the Philological Society, 106 (2). Timberlake, Alan. 1982. The impersonal passive in Lithuanian. In Proceedings of the 8th Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society: 508--524. Wiemer, Björn. 2006. Relations between Actor-demoting devices in Lithuanian. In Passivization and Typology. Form and Function, W. Abraham, L. Leisiö (eds.), 274-309. Amsterdam, Philadelphia: John Benjamins. ABOUT THE REVIEWER Peter M. Arkadiev, PhD in linguistics (2006), is a senior research fellow in the Department of Typology and Comparative Linguistics of the Institute of Slavic studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow. His main interests are linguistic typology with a focus on case marking and argument structure and its formal realization, and tense-aspect-modality. He works mainly on Lithuanian and Adyghe.
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