In:The Emergence of the Modern Language Sciences: Studies on the transition from historical-comparative to structural linguistics in honour of E.F.K. Koerner
Edited by Sheila Embleton, John E. Joseph and Hans-Josef Niederehe
[Not in series EMLS 1] 1999
► pp. v–viii
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Published online: 15 October 1999
https://doi.org/10.1075/z.emls1.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/z.emls1.toc
Table of contents
Introduction: Problems of structuralist beginnings (and endings)ix
I. Before Saussure
6. Sound Physiology in the Making: On the role of Henry Sweet (1845–1912) and Eduard Sievers (1850–1932) in the development of linguistic science77
7. First Language Acquisition and the Ontogenetic Development of Self-Consciousness in the Work of Ivan Georgov93
II. Saussure
11. Identity, Similarity, and Continuity: Saussure’s and Wittgenstein’s searh for linguistic units151
III. After Saussure
15. “Das Glockenspiel des Ablauts”: National tones in German linguistic publications between 1914 and 1945219
16. Linguistic Theory in Historical Perspective: A study of J.R. Firth’s The Tongues of Men237
17. Between Structure and History: The search for the specificity and the originality of Brazilian linguistic production247
18. How The Logical Structure of Linguistic Theory Didn’t Get Published During the 1950s and 60s261
19. How the Anti-Mentalistic Skeletons in Chomsky’s Closet Make Psychological Fictions of his Grammars267
20. The Origins of Modern Japanese Psycholinguistics within the Japanese Psychological Tradition283
Koerner Tabula Gratulatoria295
Name Index297
Subject Index303
Contents of Volume Two309
