The emergence of protolanguage : holophrasis vs compositionality

Bibliographic Information

The emergence of protolanguage : holophrasis vs compositionality

edited by Michael A. Arbib, Derek Bickerton

(Benjamins current topics, v. 24)

John Benjamins, c2010

  • : hbk

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and indexes

"These materials were previously published in Interaction studies 9:1 (2008), under the general editorship of James R. Hurford."--P. [ii]

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Somewhere and somehow, in the 5 to 7 million years since the last common ancestors of humans and the great apes, our ancestors "got" language. The authors of this volume all agree that there was no single mutation or cultural innovation that took our ancestors directly from a limited system of a few vocalizations (primarily innate) and gestures (some learned) to language. They further agree to use the term "protolanguage" for the beginnings of an open system of symbolic communication that provided the bridge to the use of fully expressive languages, rich in both lexicon and grammar. But here consensus ends, and the theories presented here range from the compositional view that protolanguage was based primarily on words akin to the nouns and verbs, etc., we know today with only syntax lacking to the holophrastic view that protolanguage used protowords which had no meaningful subunits which might nonetheless refer to complex but significantly recurrent events. The present volume does not decide the matter but it does advance our understanding. The lack of any direct archaeological record of protolanguage might seem to raise insuperable difficulties. However, this volume exhibits the diversity of methodologies that can be brought to bear in developing datasets that can be used to advance the debate. These articles were originally published as Interaction Studies 9:1 (2008).

Table of Contents

  • 1. Preface
  • 2. Is a holistic protolanguage a plausible precursor to language? A test case for a modern evolutionary linguistics (by Smith, Kenny)
  • 3. Proto-discourse and the emergence of compositionality (by Bowie, Jillian)
  • 4. Protolanguage in ontogeny and phylogeny: Combining deixis and representation (by Greenfield, Patricia M.)
  • 5. From metonymy to syntax in the communication of events (by Dessalles, Jean-Louis)
  • 6. The "complex first" paradox: Why do semantically thick concepts so early lexicalize as nouns? (by Werning, Markus)
  • 7. Holophrastic protolanguage: Planning, processing, storage, and retrieval (by Tallerman, Maggie)
  • 8. Protolanguage reconstructed (by Smith, Andrew D.M.)
  • 9. Growth points from the very beginning (by McNeill, David)
  • 10. The roots of linguistic organization in a new language (by Aronoff, Mark)
  • 11. Holophrasis and the protolanguage spectrum (by Arbib, Michael A.)
  • 12. But how did protolanguage actually start? (by Bickerton, Derek)
  • 13. Name index
  • 14. Subject index

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