LINGUIST List 29.489
Mon Jan 29 2018
Diss: Kwakiutl; Semantics: Katie Sardinha: ''The Semantics of Kʷak̓ʷala Object Case''
Editor for this issue: Sarah Robinson <srobinsonlinguistlist.org>
Date: 23-Jan-2018
From: Katie Sardinha <katie.sardinha
berkeley.edu>
Subject: The
Semantics of Kʷak̓ʷala Object Case
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message to a friend Institution: University of California, Berkeley
Program: Department of Linguistics
Dissertation Status: Completed
Degree Date: 2017
Author: Katie Sardinha
Dissertation Title: The
Semantics of Kʷak̓ʷala Object Case
Dissertation URL:
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/14r9s7t2
Linguistic Field(s): Semantics
Subject Language(s):
Kwakiutl (kwk) Dissertation
Director:
Line Mikkelsen
Amy Rose Deal
William Hanks
Dissertation Abstract:
In this dissertation, I investigate factors
underlying the distribution of object case in Kʷak̓ʷala, an endangered Northern
Wakashan language of British Columbia, Canada. Kʷak̓ʷala has two types of objects,
instrumental (=s) and accusative (=x̌). To account for their distribution, I develop
a semantic theory of object case that is grounded in event structure. The first
central claim of this theory is that instrumental case marks internal arguments
which participate in initiating subevents (Co-initiators), while accusative case
marks internal arguments which participate in non-initiating subevents
(Non-initiators). Concomitantly, any internal argument which participates in both
the initiating and non-initiating subevents of an event can undergo
instrumental/accusative case alternation. The second central claim of this theory is
that instrumental case adds semantic value, while accusative case is a meaningless
default.
Supporting evidence for these claims comes from field data.
On the one hand, object case realization is constrained by verb meaning, as shown by
the existence of correlations between particular semantic verb classes and
particular case frames. On the other hand, evidence that case realization is
determined by event structure comes from data showing that modifying event structure
affects case realization. Three types of event structure modification which license
case alternation include the Direct Manipulation Alternation, the Caused Motion
Alternation, and semantic incorporation with the affixal verb -(g)ila ‘make’. The
event-structural basis of object case is also revealed in the vicinity of weak verbs
(Ritter & Rosen 1996) where the semantic value of object case is communicated
independently of lexical entailments.
This analysis allows us to see
how Kʷak̓ʷala’s object case system manifests a wider cross-linguistic tendency for
languages to grammaticalize a link between object-encoding and event structure. I
illustrate this by showing that Kʷak̓ʷala’s object case system is semantically the
mirror image of the object case system in Finnish, in which the final bound of
events is grammaticalized as an interpretable accusative case (Leino 1982, Heinämäki
1984, 1994, Kratzer 2004). Taking an even wider view, Kʷak̓ʷala fits squarely within
the event-structural typology proposed in Ritter & Rosen (2000), where languages are
divided according to whether they grammaticalize the initial or final bound of
events. Kʷak̓ʷala’s object case system thereby fits into existing cross-linguistic
patterns, while also expanding our notions of what a possible case system looks
like.
Page Updated: 29-Jan-2018