Pacific Publications: Backlist


 Date:  Mon, 17 Jun 1996 14:38:42 +1000
 From:  mxk412@coombs.anu.edu.au (mira kwasik)
 Subject:  Pacific Publications Backlist

 1996
 M. ROSS,  Studies in languages of New Britain and New Ireland. Volume 1:
 Austronesian languages of the North New Guinea cluster in Northwestern New
 Britain. 1996, ix, 392pp. ISBN 0 85883 443 X.

 Pacific Linguistics Catalogue number C-135.  Key words: Oceanic,
 Austronesian, New Britain, grammar.

 This volume is the first of a set whose aim is to make available otherwise
 unpublished materials on languages of New Britain and New Ireland (Papua
 New Guinea).  The language of this volume are all Oceanic Austronesian and
 include Maleu, Kilenge, Kabana, Lusi, Kove, Amara, Mouk, Aria,, Tourai, and
 Lamongai.  Authors are Richard Goulden, Graham Haywood and William
 Thurston.  There is also a discussion by Ann Chowning of work on the
 historical relationships among the Oceanic languages of New Britain.



 1995
 Robert D. Bugenhagen, A grammar of Mangap-Mbula: an Austronesian language
 of Papua New Guinea.  1995, xii+418pp.  Softcover.  ISBN 0 85883 4216 X.
 A$ 48.00

 Pacific Linguistics catalogue number, C-101,  Key words: Austronesian
 languages; Papua New Guinea; grammar; phonology; discourse structure;
 reduplication.

 This volume presents a description of the phonology, morphology, and syntax
 of the Mangap-Mbula language, which is spoken on an island in the Morobe
 Province of Papua New Guinea.  Considerable attention is given to the
 morphophonemics of reduplication process, the structure of complex
 sentences, and mechanisms for tracking participants in narratives.


 Ariel Heryanto, Language development and development of language: the case
 of Indonesia.
 1995, v+60 pp.  Softcover.  ISBN 0 85883 429 4.  A$14.30.

 Pacific Linguistics catalogue number,  D-86,  Key words: Development;
 Indonesia; language.

 Against the common instrumentalist perspective, this volume examines the
 mutually constituting relationship between economic-oriented development
 programs in contemporary Indonesia and the mainstream scholarly endeavours
 in developing Bahasa Indonesia.  The author relates the issue to the rise
 of nation-states.


 DAVID BRADLEY, (ed.), Papers in South Asian linguistics No.13: Studies in
 Burmese Linguistics, 1995, xii, 205pp. Softcover. ISBN 0 85883 427 8.
 A$28.20

 Pacific Linguistics Catalogue number A-83,  Key words: Burmese/Myanmar,
 Arakanese, Tavoyan, Intha, Moken, reflexive.

 Three major varieties of Burmese (Arkanese, Tavoyan and Indha) are
 described as well as papers on the Burmese verb, the reflexive in Burmese,
 and the phonology of minority language of southern Burma, Moken, in papers
 by four different authors.



 1994
 A.K. Pawley and M.D. Ross (eds), Austronesian terminologies: continuity and
 change.
 1994, vii, 624 pp.  Hardcover.  ISBN 0 85883 424 3. A$75.20

 Pacific Linguistics catalogue number, C-127.  Key words: Austronesian
 languages; reconstruction; terminologies.

 This book contains the papers given at the symposium of the same title in
 Canberra in 1990. All the papers have to do with the reconstruction of
 lexicon in various Austronesian interstages.  The terminologies represented
 include Austronesian kin terms (Robert Blust, James Fox, Viktor Krupa),
 Oceanic birds (Ross Clark), Central Pacific/Polynesian fish (Paul Geraghty,
 Robin Hooper), Austronesian/Oceanic plants (Paul Li, Darrell Tryon, John
 Wolff), Micronesian physical environment (Jeff Marck), South Vanuatu
 maritime terms (John Lynch), Austronesian canoes (Medina and Andrew
 Pawley), Philippine rice agriculture (Lawrence Reid), Oceanic food
 preparation (Frank Lichtenberk), kava (Terry Crowley), sago (Tom Dutton).
 There are also papers on Maori (Bruce Biggs) and Central Papuan (Malcolm
 Ross) lexicon, some Malay etymologies (Alexander Adelaar), and an overview
 of Austronesian vocabulary by David Zorc.


 DAVID BRADLEY,  A dictionary of the northern dialect of Lisu (China and
 Southeast
 Asia), 1994, xii, 275pp.  ISBN 0 85883 423 5.  A$30.30

 Pacific Linguistics Catalogue number C-126,  Key words: Lisu, dictionary.

 Lisu, the language of 850, 000 people in China, Myanmar, India and
 Thailand, is described in this Lisu-English and English-Lisu dictionary
 using the orthography devised in China in the late 1950s.



 Pacific Linguistics publications can be obtained in any one of six easy and
 convenient ways:

 OVER-THE-COUNTER                        MAIL
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 Thank you, Mira Kwasik

 Mira Kwasik
 Publications
 RSPAS ANU
 Canberra 0200 Australia

 Ph: +61 (0)6 249 2742
 Fax:249 4896
 E-mail: mxk412@coombs.anu.edu.au