LINGUIST List 12.2355

Sun Sep 23 2001

Review: O'Grady et al, Contemporary Ling (2nd rev)

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  • ashish mehta, Review of O'Grady et al, Contemporary Linguistics, 4th ed.

    Message 1: Review of O'Grady et al, Contemporary Linguistics, 4th ed.

    Date: Sun, 23 Sep 2001 21:16:15 +0530
    From: ashish mehta <ashishupendramehtahotmail.com>
    Subject: Review of O'Grady et al, Contemporary Linguistics, 4th ed.


    O'Grady, William, John Archibald, Mark Aronoff, and Janie Rees-Miller, ed. (2001) Contemporary Linguistics: An Introduction, 4th Edition, Bedford/St. Martin's. 751 pp + Instructor's Resource Manual and Transparency Masters.

    Ashish Mehta, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi.

    [Another review of this book may be found at http:/linguistlist.org/issues/12/12-2273.html --Eds.]

    The book under review is the fourth edition of the textbook. As such, it is meant for the beginner and no prior knowledge of the discipline is presumed. It can also be useful for short-term courses for students of other disciplines, but ideally it is meant for linguistics students. Taken together with the extra resources provided for the instructor, it forms a comprehensive package.

    The first thing that strikes the reader is unusual breadth of coverage - from the core areas of linguistics to specialized areas like psycholinguistics, first language acquisition and computational linguistics which are usually not introduced in an introductory textbook. In addition, the US edition has a chapter on `Indigenous Languages of North America' as well. Indeed, one wonders if anything is left out at all.

    Every chapter, a self-contained unit written by different authors, begins with a literary quote, followed by a list of the objectives, and then the main text of the chapter. The end of the chapter includes a summary, key terms, recommended readings, exercises and a box (called `For the Student Linguist') which presents a theme in a style meant to connect the beginner with the topic. A glossary and a language index follow seventeen chapters.

    Contents: Chapter One Language: A Preview by William O'Grady This introductory chapter presents basic notions of scientific inquiry into language- that all languages are equal, and their grammars provide a window to the human mind. It presents an overview of the insights of twentieth century linguistics. Concepts of creativity, competence, universality and change are introduced to the newcomers.

    Chapter Two Phonetics: The sounds of Language by Michael Dobrovolsky Beginning with the standard phonetic transcription, the reader is presented the broad outline of articulatory phonetics. Place and manner of articulation and suprasegmentals are explained in detail.

    Chapter Three Phonology: The Function and Patterning of Sounds by Michael Dobrovolsky and Ewa Czaykowska-Higgins Phonological analysis begins with contrasting segments, phonetically conditioned variations and leads to the supra-segmental phonology. After the basics come advanced sections on features, feature hierarchy and finally derivations and rules. From picking out minimal pairs to grouping and organizing features of sounds, this chapter covers a vast ground.

    Chapter Four Morphology: The Analysis of Word Structure by William O'Grady and Videa de Guzman Analysis of word structure begins with morphemes of various types, and then we go to common morphological phenomena like compounding and cliticization. Derivation, compounding and other types of word formation are dealt at length in separate sections. Inflection and morphophonemics are given detailed treatment.

    Chapter Five Syntax: The Analysis of Sentence Structure by William O'Grady The first section deals with Categories and phrasal structure, which forms a basis to introduce X-bar theory and mechanisms of complementation. This is followed by a section on transformations, a brief note on Deep and Surface structures. The basic philosophy of Universal Grammar and parametric variation is presented. The concluding section presents a brief on `Other Types of Syntactic Analysis,' namely, the transformational analysis, the relational analysis and the functional analysis.

    Chaper Six Semantics: The Analysis of Meaning by William O'Grady Apart from the semantics proper, the chapter also deals with pragmatics/discourse analysis. Beginning with semantic relations among words and among sentences, it moves on to the interaction between syntax and semantics, which also touches upon the Theta theory. Binding theory relating to the interpretation of pronouns is included here, and not in the earlier chapter dealing with syntax. Pragmatics is introduced in brief, ending with the conversational maxims.

    Chapter Seven Historical Linguistics: The Study of Language Change by Robert W. Murray Nature of language change is dealt with in all its four aspects, from sound level to word level to sentence and semantic levels, followed by spread of change. One section deals with language reconstruction based on existing languages and its relation with typology.

    Chaper Eight Classification of Languages by Aleksandra Steinbergs This chapter deals with two types of classification, namely, typological and genetic. The section on typological classification explains how different languages can be grouped with respect to phonology, morphology and syntax. Genetic classification involves various language families, and the leading language families are discussed in detail. The recent attempts to group these families into macrofamilies are also mentioned.

    Chaper Nine Indigenous Families of North America by Victor Golla This short chapter, added exclusively for the U.S. edition, overlaps with the two preceding chapters. The reader is introduced to the origin and classification of languages of the region, analysed on grounds of phonetics and phonology, morphology and syntax. The concluding section deals with the future of this class of languages.

    Chapter Ten First Language Acquisition by William O'Grady and Sook Whan Cho The study of First Language Acquisition relies heavily on experimental methods apart from theoretical work, and the chapter introduces the two, related modes of inquiry. It covers the phonological, vocabulary, morphological and syntactic development. The roles played by nature (e.g., inborn knowledge) and by environment (e.g., feedback) are also discussed.

    Chapter Eleven Second Language Acquisition by John Archibald This introduction to the area of Second Language (L2) studies focusses equally on L2 teaching studies and on theoretical approaches to L2 acquisition. The role of the first language, interlanguage grammars and markedness and subset principle are discussed. Factors affecting L2 acquisition and classroom issues are detailed in the next sections.

    Chapter Twelve Psycholinguistics: The Study of Language Processing by Gary Liben The study of language processing mechanisms involves experimental work, methods of which are introduced here. Various methods dealing with lexicon, morphological and sentence processing and phonology are discussed. This is followed by a brief introduction to psycholinguistic modelling- or, how 'language is done'.

    Chapter Thirteen Brain and Language by Gary Libben The primer in neurolinguistics begins with anatomical detailing of the brain, followed by relevant findings of experiments. Then, we move over to linguistic phenomena: various types of aphasia, dyslexia and dysgraphia; and how they bear upon the linguistic theory.

    Chapter Fourteen Language in Social Context by Marjory Meechan and Janie Rees-Miller The chapter on sociolinguistics touches upon broad range of topics: discourse analysis, ethnomethodology, language and power and official languages and language planning, among others. Variation studies are discussed with reference to the case of the U.S. Chapter concludes with a note on pidgins/creoles and language mixture.

    Chapter Fifteen Writing and Language by Michael Dobrovolsky and William O'Grady Study of writing systems is a subject of a separate chapter here. The authors present an overview of the history and typology or various writing systems, wherein the case of non-European writing systems is presented separately. A section deals with history and reforms of English orthography and the chapter concludes with a discussion on how writing and reading are related.

    Chapter Sixteen Animal Communication by Michael Dobrovolsky When language is called a species-specific property, linguists have always wondered about the designs of animal communications and how it is different/similar to the human communication that is language. This chapter presents an overview of various ways in which animals communicate non-vocally. This forms the basis for raising the larger issues related to the linguistics theory: comparison between various communication systems and the human language.

    Chapter Seventeen Computational Linguistics by Judith Klavans The final chapter brings 'the cutting-edge research', as it were, to the freshers' class. It introduces the computer-aided research programs dealing with synthesis, recognition, analysis and/or generation of human speech, of morphological permutations, and of sentences. It also shows how this branch of linguistics can deal with practical problems.

    Critical Evaluation _Contemporary Linguistics_ is without doubt one of the very best textbooks we have. Going through it brought back the delights of discovering the Science of Language for the first time. Seventeen chapters of this book deal with more branches of linguistics than most other textbooks can. Moreover, the style is lucid, successfully communicating the difficult notions. One major plus-point here is the novel concept of boxes, entitled `For the Student Linguist.' If the main text were to fail in making the topic interesting, the boxes playfully appeal to the beginner's curiosity. Linguistics, unlike most areas of inquiry, is full of delightful facts around us all, and it would be a great help tp a fresher if they are brought out while discussing theoretical analysis.

    It must be appreciated that every introductory textbook has to walk on the tightrope, balancing between accessibility and theoretical rigour. However, the mammoth textbook is not without its drawbacks on many other counts. The chapter scheme raises several questions. For example, it can be argued that areas like Second Language Acquisition, Animal Communication or Writing do not merit a chapter-length treatment, and even if they do, not at the cost of many other areas. Which ones? Pragmatics and discourse analysis have emerged as a major area of investigation. Areal and geographical linguistics has witnessed proliferation of research. I believe that more justice could have been done to them. A chapter devoted to the history of linguistic thought could have proved useful.

    This chapter scheme creates another problem- each chapter is a self-contained, stand-alone unit. While this grants flexibility for tailoring courses of various durations, the vital inter-linkage is ignored. Superficially, phonology as discussed in Historical Linguistics has links with the same as discussed in other chapters. At a deeper level, methods employed in syntax bear similarity with those of phonology, and they need to be highlighted to a beginner. Every chapter strives to avoid reference to any school or theory, and thus ignoring a theoretical perspective cutting across various branches of linguistics. Prime example here is of course the generative grammar. Since the title of the volume makes reference to it, the question is how contemporary it really is. Granted that introducing Minimalist Program or Optimality Theory does not serve much purpose at this level, there is little justification in introducing transformation rule of syntax and Deep/Surface structures.

    One way to deal with most of the above objections is to include one introductory (or concluding) chapter that presents a theoretical overview or the state-of-art. It must be granted that the section on reading recommendations at the end of every chapter shows the way further, and thus answers to many of the criticisms made here.

    What I have presented here are not shortcomings, but suggestions, and they only serve to underline the fact that this textbook is an ambitious work and succeeds in keeping most of the promises made.

    Ashish Mehta is an M.Phil./Ph.D. student at the Jawaharlal Nehru University of New Delhi, India, working on syntax-semantics interface issues in generative grammar.