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The History of Linguistics in Europe
From Plato to 1600
This book, first published in 2003, examines the history of western linguistics from ancient Greece up to the Renaissance.
Vivien Law (Author)
9780521563154, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 30 January 2003
326 pages, 25 b/w illus. 5 maps
24.4 x 17 x 1.9 cm, 0.72 kg
"...a book very useful for scholars. Each chapter is readable, entertaining, and full of background information needed to put things in context. Anthropologists will find this book of particular interest because of its emphasis on understanding people different from oneself."
Anthropological Linguistics
Anthropological Linguistics
This authoritative and wide-ranging book, first published in 2003, examines the history of western linguistics over a 2000-year timespan, from its origins in ancient Greece up to the crucial moment of change in the Renaissance that laid the foundations of modern linguistics. Some of today's burning questions about language date back a long way: in 1400 BC Plato was asking how words relate to reality. Other questions go back just a few generations, such as our interest in the mechanisms of language change, or in the social factors that shape the way we speak. Vivien Law explores how ideas about language over the centuries have changed to reflect changing modes of thinking. A survey chapter brings the coverage of the book up to the present day. Classified bibliographies and chapters on research resources and the qualities the historian of linguistics needs to develop, provide the reader with the tools to go further.
Preface
1. Getting ready to study the history of linguistics
2. Greek philosophy and the origins of western linguistics
3. Towards a discipline of grammar: the transition from philosophy
4. From literacy to grammar: describing language structure in the ancient world
5. Christianity and language
6. The early Middle Ages
7. The Carolingian Renaissance
8. Scholasticism: linking language and reality
9. Medieval vernacular grammars
10. The Renaissance: discovery of the outer world
11. And what happened next? Linguistics since 1600 - in brief
12. Becoming a historian of linguistics.
Subject Areas: History of ideas [JFCX], Philosophy [HP], Linguistics [CF]
