AANL 30701 Linguistic methods for extinct languages
<p>This course explores the ways linguistic theory can be used in the study of extinct languages.</p><p>We will investigate how to use typological data and the predictive force of modern theories to critically assess claims regarding grammatical issues in extinct languages. In case of a conflict between general linguistics and grammatical descriptions arising from the philological tradition, students will be expected to indicate how to remedy this situation, or even to solve the issue.</p><p>We will also start developing a method for fact-finding in extinct languages. In the absence of native speakers it becomes nearly impossible to judge the ungrammaticality of a sentence, because the absence of a construction may simply be an accident of transmission. So, instead of using form to arrive at judgments regarding structure, meaning, or use (the semasiological approach), we will reverse the process and start with well-defined concepts from the fields of morpho-syntax, semantics and pragmatics. Through this onomasiological approach we will be able to detect phenomena that may have gone unnoticed in the philological tradition.</p><p>The course will focus on three topics that are known to be relevant for several extinct languages of the Mediterranean and Middle Eastern area, covering many extinct languages ((near)-isolates, Sumerian, Elamite, Hurrian, Semitic (Akkadian, Ugaritic, Phoenician, Hebrew Aramaic), Indo-European (Hittite, Indo-Iranian, Greek, Latin, etc. etc.), Egyptian:<ol><li>Ergativity (typology, morpho-syntax, semantics)</li><li>Topic and Focus (morpho-syntax, information structure)</li><li>Lexical and grammatical aspect (semantics, morphology, discourse grammar)</li></ol>This list of topics may be modified depending on the interests of the students. Students have worked on Chukchi (N-E Russia), Kiriri (Amazon), Old French, Ancient Greek, Egyptian, Old Persian, Hittite, and Sumerian.</p>
Course is consent only.