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Eloise Jelinek was a leading authority on syntactic and semantic theory, information structure, and several Native American languages (including Lummi, Yaqui, and Navajo). Thirteen of her most important papers, together with a fourteenth essay previously unpublished, are here collected, each preceded by a short introduction that provides context for the work and evidence of its subsequent influence.
List of contents
Introduction
Andrew Carnie and Heidi Harley Part I: Configurationality and the Pronominal Argument Hypothesis 1. Empty Categories, Case and Configurationality, 1984
Eloise Jelinek 2. The
bi-Construction and Pronominal Arguments in Apachean, 1989
Merton Sandoval and Eloise Jelinek 3. Predicates and Pronominal Arguments in Straits Salish, 1994
Eloise Jelinek and Richard Demers 4. Navajo as a Discourse Configurational Language, 2000
Mary Ann Willie and Eloise Jelinek 5. The Pronominal Argument Parameter,
2006
Eloise Jelinek Part II: Hierarchies, Information Structure, and Semantic Mapping 6. Auxiliaries and Ergative Splits: A Typological Parameter, 1987
Eloise Jelinek 7. The Case Split and Argument Type in Choctaw, 1989
Eloise Jelinek 8. Ergative Splits and Argument Type, 1993
Eloise Jelinek 9. Distributing Arguments, 1995
Molly Diesing and Eloise Jelinek 10. Argument Hierarchies and the Mapping Principle, 2003
Eloise Jelinek and Andrew Carnie Part III: Yaqui Morphosyntax 11. Double Accusative Constructions in Yaqui, 1989
Eloise Jelinek and Fernando Escalante 12. Voice and Transitivity as Functional Projections in Yaqui, 1998
Eloise Jelinek 13. Quantification in Yaqui Possessive Sentences, 2003
Eloise Jelinek 14. Impersonal Agreement in a non-Agreement Language: The Hiaki Impersonal Construction
Previously unpublished, Eloise Jelinek and Heidi Harley
About the author
Andrew Carnie is Professor of Linguistics and Dean of the Graduate College at the University of Arizona and works on the syntax of verb initial languages and constituent structure. He has published extensively on the syntax and experimental phonology of Modern Irish and Scottish Gaelic. He and Jelinek developed a close bond over the importance of bringing data from endangered languages to bear on controversies in formal linguistics, and he collaborated with her extensively on the role of hierarchical structure. He is the author of
Syntax: A Generative Introduction, Third Edition, The Syntax Workbook,
Modern Syntax, Constituent
Structure, Second Edition,
Irish Nouns, and is the editor of numerous other volumes, including a volume of papers he edited with Eloise Jelinek.
Heidi Harley is Professor of Linguistics at the University of Arizona, working primarily in syntax, morphology and lexical semantics. She has published research on English, Italian, Irish, Icelandic, Japanese and, most importantly for this volume, Hiaki (Yaqui), to which she was introduced by Eloise Jelinek. Dr. Jelinek introduced Harley to Hiaki speaker Maria Leyva in 2001, and showed her the basics of Hiaki grammar, and Harley's work on Hiaki with Mrs Leyva has since become central to her research agenda, funded by two NSF grants and leading to several significant publications. Jelinek's pioneering work has been an important influence throughout Harley's career. She is the author of
English Words and the co-editor of two other volumes with Andrew Carnie, including a festschrift for Eloise Jelinek:
Formal Approaches to Function in Grammar and
Verb First.