Historical phonology and morphology in the nineteenth century: abstractness vs. empiricism

In the first half of the nineteenth century comparative and historical linguistics focused mainly on morphological structure. Although important phonological discoveries were made, phonology played a subsidiary role to morphology. What could be called the models of language were all theories of morp...

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Main Author: András Cser
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh 2016-11-01
Series:Papers in Historical Phonology
Online Access:http://journals.ed.ac.uk/pihph/article/view/1692
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spelling doaj-4ce2fe87ba6945a9ad8822e5ab4215af2020-11-24T21:23:14ZengUniversity of EdinburghPapers in Historical Phonology2399-67142016-11-011374910.2218/pihph.1.2016.16921692Historical phonology and morphology in the nineteenth century: abstractness vs. empiricismAndrás CserIn the first half of the nineteenth century comparative and historical linguistics focused mainly on morphological structure. Although important phonological discoveries were made, phonology played a subsidiary role to morphology. What could be called the models of language were all theories of morphology. These speculations were targets the Neogrammarians attacked vigorously, mainly in the spirit of uniformitarianism. Phonology was different in terms of abstractness. Sounds were treated in a superficially abstract manner, but this was based on the phonetically imprecise littera-tradition, the emphasis on correspondences, the focus on dead languages, and the impact of the Indian tradition. The Neogrammarians, by contrast, strove to make phonology more phonetic and more rigorous and, paradoxically, earned the contempt of their opponents for introducing a different kind of abstractness by reconstructing a segment not attested in unchanged form in any of the Indo-European languages. In turn, while the Neogrammarians admitted that de Saussure’s analysis in the Mémoire is highly logical, they dismissed it as lacking sufficient empirical motivation. It appears that the argument reminded them of the analyses of the previous generation, and de Saussure’s formulation, which they found unduly abstract, was superficially just the kind they wanted to purge linguistics of at last.http://journals.ed.ac.uk/pihph/article/view/1692
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author András Cser
spellingShingle András Cser
Historical phonology and morphology in the nineteenth century: abstractness vs. empiricism
Papers in Historical Phonology
author_facet András Cser
author_sort András Cser
title Historical phonology and morphology in the nineteenth century: abstractness vs. empiricism
title_short Historical phonology and morphology in the nineteenth century: abstractness vs. empiricism
title_full Historical phonology and morphology in the nineteenth century: abstractness vs. empiricism
title_fullStr Historical phonology and morphology in the nineteenth century: abstractness vs. empiricism
title_full_unstemmed Historical phonology and morphology in the nineteenth century: abstractness vs. empiricism
title_sort historical phonology and morphology in the nineteenth century: abstractness vs. empiricism
publisher University of Edinburgh
series Papers in Historical Phonology
issn 2399-6714
publishDate 2016-11-01
description In the first half of the nineteenth century comparative and historical linguistics focused mainly on morphological structure. Although important phonological discoveries were made, phonology played a subsidiary role to morphology. What could be called the models of language were all theories of morphology. These speculations were targets the Neogrammarians attacked vigorously, mainly in the spirit of uniformitarianism. Phonology was different in terms of abstractness. Sounds were treated in a superficially abstract manner, but this was based on the phonetically imprecise littera-tradition, the emphasis on correspondences, the focus on dead languages, and the impact of the Indian tradition. The Neogrammarians, by contrast, strove to make phonology more phonetic and more rigorous and, paradoxically, earned the contempt of their opponents for introducing a different kind of abstractness by reconstructing a segment not attested in unchanged form in any of the Indo-European languages. In turn, while the Neogrammarians admitted that de Saussure’s analysis in the Mémoire is highly logical, they dismissed it as lacking sufficient empirical motivation. It appears that the argument reminded them of the analyses of the previous generation, and de Saussure’s formulation, which they found unduly abstract, was superficially just the kind they wanted to purge linguistics of at last.
url http://journals.ed.ac.uk/pihph/article/view/1692
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