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This dissertation provides a comprehensive account of the grammar of relative clause extraposition in English. Based on a systematic review and evaluation of the empirical generalizations and theoretical approaches provided in the literature on generative grammar, it is shown that none of the previous theories is able to account for all the relevant facts. Among the most problematic data are the Principle C and scope effects of relative clause extraposition, cases with obligatory relative clauses, and relative clauses with elliptical NPs as antecedents.
I propose a new analysis of relative clause extraposition within the constraint-based, monostratal grammatical framework of Head-driven Phrase Structure Grammar (HPSG), enhanced with the semantic theory of Lexical Resource Semantics (LRS). Crucially, it is a general analysis of relative clause attachment, since both canonical and extraposed relative clauses are licensed by the same syntactic and semantic constraints. The basic assumption is that a relative clause can be adjoined to any phrase that contains a suitable antecedent of the relative pronoun. The semantic information that licenses the relative clause is introduced by the determiner of the antecedent NP. The techniques of underspecified semantics and the standard semantic representation language used by LRS make it possible to formulate constraints which yield the correct intersective interpretation of the relative clause (arbitrarily distant from its antecedent NP) and at the same time link the scope of the antecedent NP to the adjunction site of the relative clause.
In combination with the revised HPSG binding theory developed in this dissertation, the proposed analysis is able to capture the major properties of relative clause attachment within a unified and internally consistent monostratal constraint-based grammatical framework.
[Rezension zu: Lewe, Christiane; Othold, Tim und Nicolas Oxen (Hg.): Müll. Interdisziplinäre Perspektiven auf das Übrig-Gebliebene. Bielefeld: Transcript, 2016.]”.
Der von Christiane Lewe, Tim Othold und Nicolas Oxen herausgegebene Band Müll. Interdisziplinäre Perspektiven auf das Übrig-Gebliebene eröffnet in Schlaglichtern Zugänge zu ‚übrig-gebliebener‘ Materialität in kulturwissenschaftlicher Perspektive. Ausgehend von der Annahme, bei nicht mehr gebrauchten Dingen handele es sich um das Ergebnis sozio-kultureller Zuschreibungsprozesse, interessieren sich die Beiträge für so unterschiedliche Phänomene wie die Inszenierung von Müll im Fernsehen, Gender und Schmutz, Gebäuderecycling, Self-Storage oder künstlerische Auseinandersetzungen mit Müll. Als gemeinsamer Schnittpunkt der Fallstudien stellt sich dabei das Vorhaben heraus, den als konventionell unterstellten Abwertungen des Übrig-Gebliebenen entgegenzuarbeiten. Eine literaturwissenschaftliche Perspektive fehlt hingegen.
This paper discusses the syntax of relative clauses in European Portuguese (EP) by focussing on the status of the relativizer que in restrictive and appositive relative clauses. We propose a unified account of que in terms of a D-element and discuss the syntactic implications of this assumption for an adequate analysis of relative clauses in EP. We assume that relative que has properties of demonstrative and interrogative determiners. In restrictive object and subject relative clauses, que occurs as a transitive determiner [DP que [NP e]], which selects for a nominal complement, whereas in prepositional and appositive relative clauses, [DP que] is an intransitive determiner parallel to an e-type pronoun. We discuss the position of restrictive relative clauses in the DP containing the modified noun, and propose that they are merged pre-nominally, in the same fashion as demonstratives.
Languages in general have various possibilities to express one and the same propositional content. One of these possibilities is grammatical variation. This thesis is concerned with the variation of the linear word order in a clause and the effects triggered by word order alternations. Although sharing the same propositional content, different word order variants can carry different functions; word order variation can be used to achieve certain stylistic effects. The dissertation looks at functional and stylistic preferences of English regarding variation from the canonical word order in (1).
(1) [Ernie]S [sits]V [on the table]O. (SVO)
The variation under consideration is locative inversion (LOCI), exemplified in (2).
(2) On the table sits Ernie.
As any variation from the canonical word order is said to strongly depend on the grammatical system of the language a sentence is realized in, the perspective is extended to the word order equivalent of the sentence above in German (3). The goal is to highlight possible differences/similarities between English and German with respect to one specific word order variant in a declarative main clause.
(3) Auf dem Tisch liegt ein Brief.
On the table lies a letter
‘On the table lies a letter’.
As the variation from the canonical word order is not expected to be coincidental in both languages, the features that favor the pattern under consideration are examined. This is done through a statistical analysis by employing two comparable corpora, the BNC for English and the TÜPP D/Z for German. The central questions for the thesis therefore are: What are the functions of the inverted constructions in English and German, what features favor their use in the respective languages, and how are they realized syntactically?
One finding is that German uses the syntactic pattern PP-V-NP for very similar reasons this pattern is used for in English. There seems to be a general tendency to order shorter before longer constituents. The syntactic pattern under consideration fulfills similar discourse functions in both languages. Both languages show similar preferences, they are driven by similar factors when having to decide on whether to stay with the canonical order or to prepose (respectively invert) the canonically postverbal PP.
Comics sind ein überaus beliebtes Genre, vielleicht mehr denn je. Manga, aber auch Graphic Novels haben heute in jedem Buchladen ihre eigenen Regale. Aber worum handelt es sich eigentlich: um Bilder, die mit Text ergänzt werden, oder vice versa? Lesen wir oder schauen wir Comics, und warum lohnt es sich, dieses Misch-Genre zu erforschen? Darüber hat Dirk Frank mit Bernd Dolle-Weinkauff, Literaturwissenschaftler und Comic-Experte am Institut für Jugendbuchforschung, gesprochen.