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Course, academic year 2023/2024
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The History of Linguistics in Europe - AAA500179
Title: The History of Linguistics in Europe
Guaranteed by: Department of the English Language and ELT Methodology (21-UAJD)
Faculty: Faculty of Arts
Actual: from 2020
Semester: summer
Points: 0
E-Credits: 5
Examination process: summer s.:
Hours per week, examination: summer s.:0/2, C [HT]
Capacity: unknown / unknown (unknown)
Min. number of students: unlimited
4EU+: no
Virtual mobility / capacity: no
Key competences:  
State of the course: not taught
Language: English
Teaching methods: full-time
Teaching methods: full-time
Level:  
Additional information: https://dl1.cuni.cz/course/view.php?id=8741
Note: course can be enrolled in outside the study plan
enabled for web enrollment
Guarantor: András Cser, DSc.
Is interchangeable with: AAA5E0155
Schedule   Noticeboard   
Annotation -
Last update: Bc. et Bc. Andrea Mudrová (13.01.2020)
The general goal of the course is to provide a survey of the history of linguistics as a series of
chapters from general European (and American) intellectual history, with an emphasis on links to
related fields of inquiry. Grading is based on a written test at the end of the term.
Descriptors -
Last update: Bc. et Bc. Andrea Mudrová (13.01.2020)

Topics covered:
• The beginnings: early reflections on language
• Ancient Greece: Plato and Aristotle, the Stoics and Alexandrian philology
• Roman grammarians: the Greek inheritance and the emerging systematic grammars (Varro,
Quintilian, artes and regulae, Donatus and Priscian)
• The Christian dimension of words, meaning and grammar (St Augustine)
• The Middle Ages: reassessing and repositioning the tradition (insular grammars, the
Carolingian renaissance, modistic grammar, pedagogical grammar)
• Renaissance and humanism: the empirical turn and the beginnings of vernacular grammar
• The early modern period: the return of philosophical issues in the study of language
(artificial languages, abstract approaches to natural languages; Leibniz, Wilkins)
• The origins of language: the Cartesian view and reactions to it
• The typology and the classification of languages: the rationalist tradition and its opponents;
syntactic structure and the structure of thought
• The comparative and typological study of languages; The beginnings of Finno-Ugric and
Indo-European comparative linguistics (Sajnovics, Jones, Schlegel, Bopp)
• Historical linguistics as a maturing discipline (Grimm, Schleicher, Humboldt)
• The Neogrammarian movement and the great debates of the late nineteenth century
(Brugmann, Verner, Osthoff, Paul)
• The horizon at the turn of the century (dialectology, semantics, theoretical phonology,
syntax and psychology: Schmidt, Schuchardt, Wundt, Baudouin de Courtenay;
institutionalisation and professionalisation)
• Saussure and his place in the history of linguistics (the Mémoire, the Cours and their
afterlife)
• Early structuralism and its major trends in Europe and America (functionalism vs.
descriptive linguistics; the Prague School, French functionalism)
• The second half of the twentieth century: generative linguistics, its variants and its
competitors

Literature -
Last update: Bc. et Bc. Andrea Mudrová (13.01.2020)

Recommended readings: 


Amsterdamska, Olga (1987) Schools of Thought. Dordrecht: Reidel


Anna Morpurgo Davies (1998) Nineteenth-century linguistics. London: Longman


Covington, Michael (1984) Syntactic Theory in the High Middle Ages. Cambridge: CUP


Gardt, Andreas (1999) Geschichte der Sprachwissenschaft in Deutschland. Berlin/New York:Walter de Gruyter


Law, Vivien (1997) Grammar and Grammarians in the Early Middle Ages. London: Longman


Matthews, Peter H. (1994) Greek and Latin linguistics. In Giulio C. Lepschy (ed.) History of Linguistics. London: Longman, volume II. 1–133


Matthews, Peter H. (1993) Grammatical Theory in the United States from Bloomfield to Chomsky. Cambridge: CUP


Matthews, Peter H. (1998) A Short History of Structural Linguistics. Cambridge: CUP


Murray, Stephen (1994) Theory Groups and the Study of Language in North America: A Social History. Amsterdam: John Benjamins


Padley, G. A. (1985, 1988) Grammatical Theory in Western Europe 1500–1700. Trends in Vernacular Grammar. 2 vols. Cambridge: CUP


Percival, W. Keith (1975) The grammatical traditionand the rise of the vernaculars. In Historiography of Linguistics (Current Trends in Linguistics 13., ed.Thomas A. Sebeok) The Hague: Mouton. 231–275


Pinborg, Jan (1967) Die Entwicklung der Sprachtheorie im Mittelalter. Münster-Kopenhagen


Pinborg, Jan (1975) Classical Antiquity: Greece. In Historiography of Linguistics (Current Trends in Linguistics 13., ed. Thomas A. Sebeok) The Hague: Mouton; 69–126


Pinborg, Jan (1988) Speculative grammar. In NormanKretzmann et al. (eds.) The Cambridge History of Later Medieval Philosophy. Cambridge: CUP. 254–269


Rosier, Irène (1983) La grammaire spéculative des Modistes. Lille: Presses Universitaires de Lille


Simone, Raffaele (1998) The Early Modern Period. In Giulio C. Lepschy (ed.) History of Linguistics. London: Longman, volume III. 149–236


Tavoni, Mirko (1998) Renaissance linguistics: western Europe. In Giulio C. Lepschy (ed.) History of Linguistics. London: Longman, volume III. 1–108


Vivien Law (2003) The history of linguistics in Europe from Plato to 1600. Cambridge: CUP


Wilbur, Terence H. (ed. 1977) The Lautgesetz-Controversy: A Documentation (1885–86). Amsterdam: Benjamins

 
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