In:Theory Groups and the Study of Language in North America: A social history
Stephen O. Murray
[Studies in the History of the Language Sciences 69] 1994
► pp. vii–xii
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Published online: 28 November 1994
https://doi.org/10.1075/sihols.69.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/sihols.69.toc
Table of contents
List of Tablesxiii
List of Figuresxv
Introductionxvii
1. Theory groups in science1
2. Early work on American languages27
3. Franz Boas and the Institutionalization of Academic Anthropology47
4. Boas's students67
5. Edward Sapir77
6. Was Bloomfield a Bloomfieldian113
7. Neo-Bloomfieldians137
8. Structuralist Diversification during the 1950s185
9. Transformational-Generative Grammar before the1964-66 Revelations225
10. Language contact and early sociolinguistics249
11. The Ethnography of Speaking289
12. Related perspectives341
13. Ethnosciene391
14. The sociology of language419
15. Permanent Chomskian civil war in linguistics431
16. The third generation of University of California sociolinguists447
17. The turn away from linguistic interest in contemporary American anthropology473
18. Conclusions479
An Appendix on Methods491
Bibliography503
Index of Names577
