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This handbook explores what events are, how we perceive them, how we use language to describe them, how we reason with them, and the role they play in the organization of grammar and discourse. It takes an interdisciplinary approach with insights from linguistics, philosophy, psychology, cognitive science, and computer science.
List of contents
- 1: Robert Truswell: Introduction
- Part I: Events and Natural Language Metaphysics
- 2: Anita Mittwoch: Aspectual classes
- 3: Claudia Maienborn: Events and states
- 4: Robert Truswell: Event composition and event individuation
- 5: Richmond H. Thomason: The semantic representation of causation and agentivity
- 6: Bridget Copley: Force dynamics
- 7: Henk J. Verkuyl: Event structure without naïve physics
- 8: Berit Gehrke: Event kinds
- Part II: Events in Morphosyntax and Lexical Semantics
- 9: Nikolas Gisborne and James Donaldson: Thematic roles and events
- 10: Lisa Levinson: Semantic domains for syntactic word-building
- 11: Terje Lohndal: Neodavidsonianism in semantics and syntax
- 12: Gillian Ramchand: Event structure and verbal decomposition
- 13: Friederike Moltmann: Nominals and event structure
- 14: Rebekah Baglini and Chris Kennedy: Adjectives and event structure
- Part III: Crosslinguistic Perspectives
- 15: Beth Levin and Malka Rappaport Hovav: Lexicalization patterns
- 16: Tova Rapoport: Secondary predication
- 17: Tal Siloni: Event structure and syntax
- 18: Lisa deMena Travis: Inner aspect crosslinguistically
- Part IV: Events, Cognition, and Computation
- 19: Hans Kamp: Tense and aspect in Discourse Representation Theory
- 20: Andrew Kehler: Coherence relations
- 21: Mark Steedman: Form-independent meaning-representation for eventualities
- 22: Neil Cohn and Martin Paczynski: The neurophysiology of event processing in language and visual events
About the author
Robert Truswell is a Senior Lecturer in Linguistics and English Language at the University of Edinburgh, and Adjunct Professor in Linguistics at the University of Ottawa, where he was Assistant Professor from 2011-14. He works on many aspects of syntax, semantics, and their interface, as well as syntactic and semantic change, and topics related to the evolution of language. His previous publications include the monograph Events, Phrases, and Questions (OUP, 2011), and the edited volumes Syntax and its Limits (OUP, 2014, with Raffaella Folli and Christina Sevdali) and Micro-change and Macro-change in Diachronic Syntax (OUP, 2017, with Éric Mathieu). He is the co-author, with Daniel Altshuler, of Extraction from Coordinate Structures at the Syntax-Discourse Interface (forthcoming from OUP).
Summary
This handbook explores what events are, how we perceive them, how we use language to describe them, how we reason with them, and the role they play in the organization of grammar and discourse. It takes an interdisciplinary approach with insights from linguistics, philosophy, psychology, cognitive science, and computer science.
Additional text
The book contains supporting references and a helpful subject index at the end. Because of its interdisciplinary nature, this book will be of interest to advanced undergraduate students and above in linguistics, philosophy, psychology, cognitive science, and computer science.