1st Edition

Language and History Integrationist Perspectives

Edited By Nigel Love Copyright 2006
254 Pages
by Routledge

240 Pages
by Routledge

When linguistics was first established as an academic discipline in the nineteenth century, it was envisaged as an essentially historical study. Languages were to be treated as historical objects, evolving through gradual but constant processes of change over long periods of time. In recent years, however, there has been much discussion by historians of a 'linguistic turn' in their own discipline,... Read more

Contributors  Preface  1. Language, history and Language and History  2. The end of linear narrative? Reflections on the historiography of English  3. History and comparative philology  4. Word-stories: etymology as history  5. Language: object or event? The integration of language and life  6. Indeterminacy of meaning and semantic change  7. On the cusp: Antoine Meillet as a sociologist of language  8. ‘The grammatical being called a nation’: history and the construction of political and linguistic nationalism  9. How to make history with words  10. Talking about what happened  11. Part of the meaning/history of euro: integrational corpus linguistics  12. Language and prehistory  13. Bridges to history: biomechanical constraints in language

 

Biography

Nigel Love