In:Historiographia Linguistica
Vol. 35:1/2 (2008) ► pp.5–11
Miscellaneous
Kurt R. Jankowsky
A select bibliography
Published online: 7 March 2008
https://doi.org/10.1075/hl.35.1-2.02jan
https://doi.org/10.1075/hl.35.1-2.02jan
References (76)
†It so happens that Professor Jankowsky presented me – in May 1983, I believe – with a copy of a “pre-publication edition” (v + 217 typed pages) produced with the imprint of the School of Languages and Linguistics, Georgetown University, and a 1968 copyright date, which would suggest to me a longer gestation period.
(Editor.) Language and International Studies: Proceedings of the Georgetown University Round Table on Languages and Linguistics. Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press, 238 pp.
“Zur formalen Charakterisierung von Bindefunktionen zwischen Satzgefügen”. Orbis (Louvain) 221.291–304.
“Philologie-Linguistik-Literaturwissenschaft: Gedanken in historischer Perspektive zu Möglichkeit und Erfordernis ihrer Koordination”. Lingua Posnaniensis 171.21–35.
“The Psychological Component in the Work of the Early Neo-Grammarians”. Current Progress in Historical Linguistics: Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Historical Linguistics, Tucson, Arizona, 1976 ed. by William M. Christie, Jr., 267–284. Amsterdam: North-Holland.
“The European Engagement of William D. Whitney”. The Third LACUS Forum 1976 ed. Robert J. Di Pietro & Eduard L. Blansitt, Jr., 29–38. Columbia, S.C.: Hornbeam Press.
“On the Role of Presupposition in the Interrelationship of Sentences”. Orbis 261.5–13.
“The Presuppositional Link in German-English and English-German Translation”. Proceedings of AILA [Association Internationale de Linguistique Appliquée]. Special volume on Translation. Stuttgart.
“Typological Studies in the 19th Century and the Neogrammarian Sound Law Principle”. Forum Linguisticum 41.159–173.
Review of Terence H. Wilbur, ed. & introd., The ‘Lautgesetz’-Controversy: A documentation (Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 1977). Historiographia Linguistica 6:1.116–123.
“Max Müller and the Development of Linguistic Science”. Historiographia Linguistica 6:3. 339–359.
“The Missing Link in the Interrelationship of Sentences”. The Seventh LACUS Forum 1980 ed. by James E. Copeland & Philip W. Davis, 205–216. Columbia, S.C.: Hornbeam Press.
(Co-Editor, with Ernst S. Dick.) Festschrift für Karl Schneider. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins, xx1, 595 pp.
“Germanic Time Concepts and their Indo-European Antecedents”. Ibid., 95–110.
Review Article on volume 100 (1978) of (Paul & Braune’s) Beiträge zur Geschichte der deutschen Sprache und Literatur. Forum Linguisticum 71.239–259. [Commemorative issue on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the periodical’s foundation.]
(Editor.) Scientific and Humanistic Dimensions of Language: Festschrift for Robert Lado. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins, iii1, 614 pp.
“On the Interrelationship of Language and Thought”. Ibid., 361–374.
“On the Concept of ‘History’ in 19th-Century Linguistic Theories”. Collectanea Philologica: Festschrift für Helmut Gipper ed. by Günter Heintz & Peter Schmitter, 319–333. Baden-Baden: Valentin Koerner.
“Wilhelm Scherer’s Zur Geschichte der deutschen Sprache: A milestone in 19th-century linguistics”. Papers from the 6th International Conference on Historical Linguistics ed. by Jacek Fisiak, 301–311. Poznań: Adam Mickiewicz University Press; Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
Review of T. Craig Christy, Uniformitarianism in Linguistics (Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins, 1983). Historiographia Linguistica 12:1/2.198–205.
“Classical Philology, Comparative Studies, and the Emergence of Linguistic Science: The case of Georg Curtius (1820–1885)”. The Twelfth LACUS Forum 1985 ed. by Mary C. Marino & Luis A. Pérez, 158–169. Lake Bluff, Ill.: Linguistic Association of Canada and the United States.
“A Comparison of Attitudes Concerning the Causes of Language Change as Expressed by Paul, Sievers, and Jespersen”. Lingua Posnaniensis 291.3–9.
“Carl Friedrich Lottner (1835–[18]73)”. Neue Deutsche Biographie 151.250–251. München: Verlag der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften.
“Old English mael and sael in the All-Germanic Environment: A comparative study”. Germania: Comparative studies in the old Germanic languages and literatures ed. by Daniel G. Calder & T. Craig Christy, 67–84. Wolfeboro, N.H.: D. S. Brewer. [Proceedings of a Conference held at the Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, University of California, Los Angeles.]
“OE staefn/stefn in Old Germanic and Indo-European Environment”. In hôhem prîse: A festschrift in honor of Ernst S. Dick ed. by Winder McConnell, 199–221. Göppingen: W. Kümmerle.
“On Intersentential Relationship”. Ways and Byways of American Culture: Essays in honor of Gustav H. Blanke ed. by Renate von Bardeleben, 351–368. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang.
Review of Werner Bahner & Werner Neumann, eds., Sprachwissenschaftliche Germanistik (Berlin: Akademie-Verlag, 1985). Historiographia Linguistica 16:1/2. 173–179.
“Literary Criticism and Text Linguistics: Bridging the gulf at last?”. Kunstgriffe: Auskünfte zur Reichweite von Literaturtheorie und Literaturkritik. Festschrift für Herbert Mainusch ed. by Ulrich Horstmann & Wolfgang Zach, 175–185. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang.
“Justus Georg Schottelius (1612–76) and the Development of the German Language”. The Fifteenth LACUS Forum 1988 ed. by Ruth M. Brend & David G. Lockwood, 331–342. Lake Bluff, Ill.: Linguistic Association of Canada and the United States.
“Theoretical Models of Change: The neogrammarian hypothesis”. Research Guide on Language Change ed. by Edgar C. Polomé (=
Trends in Linguistics; Studies and Monographs, 48), 223–239. Berlin & New York: Mouton de Gruyter.
“Foreign Language Instruction and Its Impact on the Shaping of the University College Curriculum”. Pensamiento, Lengua, Acción: Actas del Septimo Encuentro Nacional de Profesores de Lenguas Extranjeras en la Enseñanza Superior, 7–23. Santiago: Facultad de Humanidades, Universidad de Santiago de Chile.
Language / 30: German. [Complete Revision of]. Phrase Dictionary and Study Guide. Washington, D.C.: Educational Services Corporation.
“Linguistic Hierarchies”. Language and Civilization: A concerted profusion of essays and Studies in honour of Otto Hietsch ed. by Claudia Blank, 618–633. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang.
“Wilhelm Wackernagel (1806–1869)”. Dictionary of Literary Biography, vol. 1331: Nineteenth-Century German Writers to 1840 ed. by James Hardin & Siegfried Mews, 297–302. Detroit & London: Bruccoli Clark Layman.
“Rudolf Haym (1821–1901)”. Ibid., 341–347.
“Max Stirner [Johann Kaspar Schmidt] (1806–1856)”. Ibid., 369–377.
“OE sîth and stund in Old Germanic and Indo-European Environment”. Comparative-Historical Linguistics: Indo-European and Finno-Ugric. Papers in honor of Oswald Szemerényi ed. by Bela Brogyanyi & Reiner Lipp, 353–405. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
“Sound Change: The neogrammarian approach”. Encyclopedia of Language & Linguistics ed. by R. E. Asher [ et al.], vol. VIII1, 4057–4061. Oxford: Pergamon Press.
(Editor.) Wilhelm Scherer, Zur Geschichte der deutschen Sprache. New edition of 1868 text, with an introductory article, bibliographies, and an index of biographical names. (=
Amsterdam Classics in Linguistics, 16.) Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins, lv1, 492 pp. [two pages reproduced on one].
(Editor.) History of Linguistics 1993: Papers from the 6th International Conference on the Language Sciences (ICHoLS VI). Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins, xix1. 380 pp.
“Early Historical and Comparative Studies in Scandinavia, the Low Countries, and the German-Speaking Lands”. Concise History of the Language Sciences ed. by E. F. K. Koerner & R. E. Asher, 179–182. Oxford: Pergamon Press.
“On the Need to Unlearn in the Foreign Language Learning Process”. Georgetown University Round Table on Languages and Linguistics 1995 ed. by James E. Alatis et al., 605–617. Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press.
“Appreciation: Robert Lado (1915–1985)”. Bulletin No. 161 of the Linguistic Society of America, March 1996. Washington, D.C.
(Editor.) Multiple Perspectives on the Historical Dimensions of Language. Münster: Nodus, 302 pp.
“Wilhelm Wackernagel (1806–[18]69): A philologist in need of being rediscovered”. Ibid., 115–128.
“The Description of Grammar in the Tradition of Comparative Linguistics”. Sprachtheorien der Neuzeit II: von der Grammaire de Port-Royal (1660) zur Konstitution moderner linguistischer Disziplinen ed. by Peter Schmitter (=
Geschichte der Sprachtheorie, 5), 178–192. Tübingen: Gunter Narr.
“Development of Historical Linguistics from Rask and Grimm to the Neogrammarians”. Ibid., 193–215.
(Editor.) Conceptual and Institutional Developments in the Linguistic History of Europe and the United States. Münster: Nodus, 163 pp.
“American Structuralism and Its European Roots”. Ibid., 39–56.
“The Works of Ernst Wilhelm Brücke (1819–1892) and Johann N. Czermak (1828–1873): Landmarks in the history of phonetics”. History of Linguistics 1996, vol. II1: From Classical to Contemporary Linguistics ed. by David Cram et al., 241–255. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
“Sound Physiology in the Making: On the role of Henry Sweet (1845–1912) and Eduard Sievers (1850–1932) in the development of linguistic science”. The Emergence of the Modern Language Sciences: Studies on the transition from historical-comparative to structural linguistics in honour of E. F. K. Koerner ed. by Sheila Embleton, John E. Joseph & Hans-Josef Niederehe, vol. I1: Historical Perspectives, 77–91. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
“Joachim Heinrich Campe (1746–1818) und sein Wörterbuch im vergleich zu Johann Leo Weisgerbers sprachtheoretischen Arbeiten: Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der deutschen Sprache”. Proceedings of Interpretation und Re-Interpretation: XII. Internationales Kolloquium aus Anlass des 100. Geburtstages von Johann Leo Weisgerber (1899–1985) ed. by Klaus D. Dutz, 67–86. Münster: Nodus.
“The Renewal of the Study of the Classical Languages within the University System, Notably in Germany”. History of the Language Sciences: An international handbook on the evolution of the study of language from the beginnings to the present / Geschichte der Sprachwissenschaften: Ein internationales Handbuch zur Entwicklung der Sprachforschung von den Anfängen bis zur Gegenwart / Histoire des Sciences du Langage: Manuel international d’histoire des études linguistiques des origines à nos jours ed. by Sylvain Auroux, E. F. K. Koerner, Hans-Josef Niederehe & Kees Versteegh, tome II1, 1164–1181. Berlin & New York: Walter de Gruyter.
“The Establishment of Oriental Language Studies in France, Germany, and Britain”. Ibid., 1182–1197.
“The Crisis of Historical-Comparative Linguistics in the 1860s”. Ibid., 1326–1338.
“The Consolidation of the Neogrammarian Framework”. Ibid., 1350–1368.
“On the Universal Power of Language as Expressed in Germanic Poetry”. The Words of the Bible / The Words of Poetry, 227–254. Tokyo: PHP Press. [Published in both English and Japanese.]
“Friedrich Max Müller and Japan”. Festschrift Shoichi Watanabe ed. by Norio Tsuchiya et al., 437–448. Tokyo: Taishukan Shoten.
“Karl Ferdinand Becker’s (1775–1849) Concept of Word Formation within the Framework of His General Linguistic Theory”. Beiträge zur Geschichte der Sprachwissenschaft (Münster) 141.89–106.
(Biographies Editor.) Encyclopedia of Language & Linguistics. Keith Brown, editor-in-chief. Second edition, 141 vols. Oxford: Elsevier.
“Early Historical and Comparative Studies”. Ibid., vol. IV1, 43–49.
“Neogrammarians”. Ibid., vol. VIII1, 582–586.
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2021. Bibliography of writings by E. F. Konrad Koerner. Historiographia Linguistica 48:2-3 ► pp. 152 ff.
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