Left-Dislocation in Latin: Topics and Syntax in Republican Texts: Amsterdam Studies in Classical Philology, cartea 28
Autor Hilla Halla-Ahoen Limba Engleză Hardback – 19 sep 2018
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004302471
ISBN-10: 9004302476
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.82 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Amsterdam Studies in Classical Philology
ISBN-10: 9004302476
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.82 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Amsterdam Studies in Classical Philology
Cuprins
Preface
1 Introduction1.1What Is Left-Dislocation? The Aims and Coverage of This Study1.2Genre, Text Type and Register1.3Left-Dislocation and Relative Clauses1.4The Republican Latin Corpus1.5Left-Dislocation and Early Latin Syntax
2 Defining Left-Dislocation2.1Syntactic and Pragmatic Aspects of Left-Dislocation in Latin2.2Left-Dislocation and the Latin Relative Clause2.3Earlier Studies on Left-Dislocation in Latin2.4Concluding Remarks
3 Left-Dislocation in Comedy (With an Appendix on Lucretius)3.1Introduction3.2Syntactic Description of Left-Dislocation in Comedy3.3Information Structure and Pragmatic Functions of Left-Dislocation in Comedy3.4Discussion and Conclusion3.5Information Structure and Pragmatic Organization of Head-Internal Relative Clauses (A1 and A2)3.6Comparison of LD with Sentence-Initial Relative Clauses without Resumption in the Matrix Clause (B2 and C2)3.7Appendix on LD in Lucretius
4 Left-Dislocation in the Epigraphic Material4.1Introduction4.2Senatus consultum de Bacchanalibus, Sententia Minuciorum, Lex de pariete faciendo4.3The Roman Statutes4.4Discussion on the Statutes and Other Legal Inscriptions4.5Relevant Constructions from other (Private) Inscriptions4.6Discussion and Conclusions
5 Left-Dislocation in Republican Prose5.1Introduction5.2M. Porcius Cato: De agricultura5.3Roman Historians and Orators5.4M. Terentius Varro5.5Conclusion
6 Conclusion
BibliographySubject IndexIndex Locorum
1 Introduction1.1What Is Left-Dislocation? The Aims and Coverage of This Study1.2Genre, Text Type and Register1.3Left-Dislocation and Relative Clauses1.4The Republican Latin Corpus1.5Left-Dislocation and Early Latin Syntax
2 Defining Left-Dislocation2.1Syntactic and Pragmatic Aspects of Left-Dislocation in Latin2.2Left-Dislocation and the Latin Relative Clause2.3Earlier Studies on Left-Dislocation in Latin2.4Concluding Remarks
3 Left-Dislocation in Comedy (With an Appendix on Lucretius)3.1Introduction3.2Syntactic Description of Left-Dislocation in Comedy3.3Information Structure and Pragmatic Functions of Left-Dislocation in Comedy3.4Discussion and Conclusion3.5Information Structure and Pragmatic Organization of Head-Internal Relative Clauses (A1 and A2)3.6Comparison of LD with Sentence-Initial Relative Clauses without Resumption in the Matrix Clause (B2 and C2)3.7Appendix on LD in Lucretius
4 Left-Dislocation in the Epigraphic Material4.1Introduction4.2Senatus consultum de Bacchanalibus, Sententia Minuciorum, Lex de pariete faciendo4.3The Roman Statutes4.4Discussion on the Statutes and Other Legal Inscriptions4.5Relevant Constructions from other (Private) Inscriptions4.6Discussion and Conclusions
5 Left-Dislocation in Republican Prose5.1Introduction5.2M. Porcius Cato: De agricultura5.3Roman Historians and Orators5.4M. Terentius Varro5.5Conclusion
6 Conclusion
BibliographySubject IndexIndex Locorum
Notă biografică
Hilla Halla-aho, Ph.D. (2008), University of Helsinki, has published studies on Latin syntax, pragmatics and documentary material. Her earlier publications include the monograph The Non-Literary Latin Letters. A Study of Their Syntax and Pragmatics (2009).
Recenzii
"(...) it would be a shame if the specialized nature of the study were to limit its readers to advanced philologists and linguists. The writing is clear and generally precise; the nuances separating related technical terms from different areas of specialization are consistently addressed. (...) Thus, this is a book that makes a valuable contribution to the study of early Latin, the relationship between speech and text, and the connections among genres and contexts in Latin’s first century as a literary language. (...) Scholars already familiar with those debates will find much here with which to engage, while Latinists at all levels can appreciate the window into syntax as a cultural, as much as a linguistic, phenomenon." Jessica H. Clark, Bryn Mawr Classical Review, 2019.09.33.
"The book is replete with interesting observations and demonstrating many strengths. Among the latter, first, Halla-aho sharply parses the Latin of a wide variety of authors (see e.g. the bravura analysis of a passage from Lucretius at pages 148-149), while leaving open the possibility for alternative views. She nimbly wields the tools at her disposal and employs all the available information, including, when relevant, the extralinguistic context: in inscriptions, she examines interpuncts, indentations and so on in order to determine whether LD works hand in hand with other visual devices to mark shifts in topic. Readers will be rewarded by working through this book, which sets a firm foundation for future scholarship on Left Dislocation, particularly in later periods of Latin; it also provides a model for how judicious use of linguistic theory can offer robust descriptions of some apparently familiar topics." Peter Barrios Lech, CJ Online 2021.09.03
"The book is replete with interesting observations and demonstrating many strengths. Among the latter, first, Halla-aho sharply parses the Latin of a wide variety of authors (see e.g. the bravura analysis of a passage from Lucretius at pages 148-149), while leaving open the possibility for alternative views. She nimbly wields the tools at her disposal and employs all the available information, including, when relevant, the extralinguistic context: in inscriptions, she examines interpuncts, indentations and so on in order to determine whether LD works hand in hand with other visual devices to mark shifts in topic. Readers will be rewarded by working through this book, which sets a firm foundation for future scholarship on Left Dislocation, particularly in later periods of Latin; it also provides a model for how judicious use of linguistic theory can offer robust descriptions of some apparently familiar topics." Peter Barrios Lech, CJ Online 2021.09.03