Chomsky′s Universal Grammar: An Introduction

Chomsky′s Universal Grammar: An Introduction

by Mark Newson (Author), Vivian Cook (Author)

Synopsis

The theory of Universal Grammar is central to the concerns of present-day linguistics. The book is intended as an introduction for those who want a broad overview of the theory with sufficient detail to see how its main concepts work. The new edition of this highly successful textbook incorporates recent developments in the field. Chomsky's Universal Grammar introduces both the general concepts of the theory, particularly its goals of describing the knowledge of language and of accounting for how it is acquired, and the main areas of syntax such as X-bar theory, movement and government. Like the first edition, it puts the technicalities of the theory in the context of its wider ideas in a manner that makes them accessible to the student. The new edition is based on the current model of syntax that is most widely accepted, incorporating Barriers syntax, functional categories, and Relativized Minimality, and their implications for language acquisition. Further, it provides a sketch of the model in the process of development, the Minimalist Programme, with its attempt to reduce the theory to the minimal essentials.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 384
Edition: 2
Publisher: Wiley–Blackwell
Published: 22 Dec 1995

ISBN 10: 0631195564
ISBN 13: 9780631195566

Media Reviews
Cook and Newson have written an extremely clear and highly comprehensible introduction to current syntactic theory. This text makes accessible many subtleties of linguistic argumentation, and explains in plain English the reasoning involved. The second edition greatly improves on the first edition, both in depth and scope, with much new material added and many confusing points clarified. The chapter on the Minimalist Programme is the most lucid explication of Chomsky's recent writings that I am aware of. Steven Franks, Indiana University
Author Bio
Vivian Cook is Reader in Linguistics at the University of Essex and Mark Newson is Senior Lecturer in the School of English and American Studies at Eotuos Lorand University, Hungary.