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Mind-Bending Grammars: The dynamics of correlated multiple grammatical changes in Early Modern English writers

Descrizione del progetto

Studiare la plasticità cognitiva attraverso i cambiamenti grammaticali

Si dice che con l’età sia più difficile cambiare. Tuttavia, quanto è vera questa affermazione in relazione ai cambiamenti dei modelli grammaticali di un individuo? Pur essendo stati effettuati studi sui processi di cambiamento grammaticale, ci si è fermati al livello di lingua come oggetto monolitico. In che misura gli individui adottano le innovazioni grammaticali nel corso della loro vita e quali fattori influenzano tale cambiamento? Il progetto MindBendingGrammars, finanziato dal CER, intende comprendere la modellazione cognitiva della grammatica confrontando i modelli comportamentali di diverse generazioni con lo sviluppo della durata della vita. I casi di studio saranno basati su 50 scrittori inglesi prolifici del XVII secolo, le cui opere coprono cinque generazioni.

Obiettivo

Mind-Bending Grammars examines change in mental grammars of 17th century individuals across their lifespan as attested in their writings. The project treats grammar as a self-organizing network of form-meaning schemas continuously fine-tuning itself, where activating one schema may prime formally or functionally associated ones. In analyzing multiple grammar changes in healthy adults it aspires to make a breakthrough in the cognitive modelling of grammar, and is expected to bear on views of cognitive plasticity and self-organizing systems (e.g. ecosystems). To reach these goals it will determine (i) how change in one part of an individual’s grammar relates to change in another; (ii) to what extent grammar change in individuals is possible and attested beyond childhood. This is still unsettled. Formal models hold that change occurs in language acquisition, social ones that it mainly results from adult interaction. The first ignore too much adult usage, the second grammar as a system.

Seven cases are examined:
i. Progressive (I’m loving it)
ii. Future [going to] (he’s going to love it)
iii-iv. (Pseudo)clefts (it’s Eve he loves)
v. Rare passives (Eve was sent for)
vi. Subject-raising (he’s said to be nice)
vii. New copulas (get/grow hot)
Each case changes much in the 17th century, warranting separate study. Yet the changes may also be linked. Formally, going to for example started as a progressive, and this may have resulted in sustained mutual influence. Functionally all but the last may be responses to changing word order. Until c1500 time adverbs (THEN ran he), focal elements (EVE loves he) or empty subjects (THEY say he’s nice) could precede the verb. After, this position got restricted to subjects that are topics (HE ran). Progressives need no time adverbs, clefts move the focal element, and passivization/subject-raising align topic & subject; all of this helped to realize the new order. Grow & get are unassociated to other cases, and serve as a control group.

Meccanismo di finanziamento

ERC-STG - Starting Grant

Istituzione ospitante

UNIVERSITEIT ANTWERPEN
Contribution nette de l'UE
€ 1 208 025,00
Indirizzo
PRINSSTRAAT 13
2000 Antwerpen
Belgio

Mostra sulla mappa

Regione
Vlaams Gewest Prov. Antwerpen Arr. Antwerpen
Tipo di attività
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Collegamenti
Costo totale
€ 1 208 025,00

Beneficiari (1)