Historical Dialectology in the Digital Age

Author:   Rhona Alcorn ,  Joanna Kopaczyk ,  Bettelou Los ,  Benjamin Molineaux
Publisher:   Edinburgh University Press
ISBN:  

9781474430531


Pages:   440
Publication Date:   30 November 2018
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Historical Dialectology in the Digital Age


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Overview

Lays out key corpus-building strategies for working with regional data at different levels of linguistic analysis: syntax, lexicon, morphology, and phonetics/phonology. Shows how traditional methods of Historical Dialectology can benefit from new methods of data-collection to test out theoretical and empirical claims. Highlights opportunities and pitfalls for analysing the relation between sound systems and spellingsDrawing on the resources created by the Institute of Historical Dialectology at the University of Edinburgh (now the Angus McIntosh Centre for Historical Linguistics), such as eLALME (the electronic version A Linguistic Atlas of Late Medieval English), LAEME (A Linguistic Atlas of Early Middle English) and LAOS (A Linguistic Atlas of Older Scots), this volume illustrates how traditional methods of historical dialectology can benefit from new methods of data-collection to test out theoretical and empirical claims. In showcasing the results that these resources can yield in the digital age, the book highlights novel methods for presenting, mapping and analysing the quantitative data of historical dialects, and sets the research agenda for future work in this field.

Full Product Details

Author:   Rhona Alcorn ,  Joanna Kopaczyk ,  Bettelou Los ,  Benjamin Molineaux
Publisher:   Edinburgh University Press
Imprint:   Edinburgh University Press
ISBN:  

9781474430531


ISBN 10:   1474430538
Pages:   440
Publication Date:   30 November 2018
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

The present volume is a very valuable contribution to the field of English historical dialectology. It demonstrates that the door for the linguistic analysis of early and late medieval texts and their language has been opened anew. It shows that there is an opportunity for more nuanced questions and more precise insights through the options presented by digitised corpora and/or digital methods (as complements to traditional, analogue corpora and methods). The overarching question - namely how digital methods can be used to investigate diachronic variation and language change - is addressed at different linguistic levels. It is the interplay between spelling variation and pronunciation which comes to the fore, as it is at the heart of half of the contributions (chapters 4, 5, 6, 7, 8), but syntactic variation and change, as well as morphological and lexical variation, do also find their places. The individual chapters all present their data and analyses with clarity and conciseness...All in all, the volume is a very good collection of papers, and it will be a handy and useful resource for students and more experienced scholars interested in the state of the field and what one can do with digitised corpora and digital methods. --Ulrike Krischke, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitat Munchen Anglia, 2020, 138(1) Overall, Alcorn, Kopaczyk, Los, and Molineaux have brought together a great collection of papers that function as an excellent introductory work to the tools and methods available to the historical dialectologist working in the digital age. This volume both shows the value that digital methods hold for the study of historical linguistics and simultaneously underlines the need for new tools to continue to be developed. With its varied collection of contributions and contributors, this volume will appeal to both advanced scholars in the field of historical linguistics who are interested in keeping up with recent developments in the field, as well as to those wishing to acquaint themselves with the various tools and methods that are available. In short, HDDA is a valuable contribution to the field of historical dialectology and will hopefully serve to introduce its readers both to the true and tried methods of digital linguistic research as well as to new and exciting possibilities. --Berber Bossenbroek English Studies, 101:2, 252-254


"Overall, Alcorn, Kopaczyk, Los, and Molineaux have brought together a great collection of papers that function as an excellent introductory work to the tools and methods available to the historical dialectologist working in the digital age. This volume both shows the value that digital methods hold for the study of historical linguistics and simultaneously underlines the need for new tools to continue to be developed. With its varied collection of contributions and contributors, this volume will appeal to both advanced scholars in the field of historical linguistics who are interested in keeping up with recent developments in the field, as well as to those wishing to acquaint themselves with the various tools and methods that are available. In short, HDDA is a valuable contribution to the field of historical dialectology and will hopefully serve to introduce its readers both to the true and tried methods of digital linguistic research as well as to new and exciting possibilities. --Berber Bossenbroek ""English Studies, 101:2, 252-254 "" The present volume is a very valuable contribution to the field of English historical dialectology. It demonstrates that the door for the linguistic analysis of early and late medieval texts and their language has been opened anew. It shows that there is an opportunity for more nuanced questions and more precise insights through the options presented by digitised corpora and/or digital methods (as complements to traditional, analogue corpora and methods). The overarching question - namely how digital methods can be used to investigate diachronic variation and language change - is addressed at different linguistic levels. It is the interplay between spelling variation and pronunciation which comes to the fore, as it is at the heart of half of the contributions (chapters 4, 5, 6, 7, 8), but syntactic variation and change, as well as morphological and lexical variation, do also find their places. The individual chapters all present their data and analyses with clarity and conciseness...All in all, the volume is a very good collection of papers, and it will be a handy and useful resource for students and more experienced scholars interested in the state of the field and what one can do with digitised corpora and digital methods. --Ulrike Krischke, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universit�t M�nchen ""Anglia, 2020, 138(1) """


Overall, Alcorn, Kopaczyk, Los, and Molineaux have brought together a great collection of papers that function as an excellent introductory work to the tools and methods available to the historical dialectologist working in the digital age. This volume both shows the value that digital methods hold for the study of historical linguistics and simultaneously underlines the need for new tools to continue to be developed. With its varied collection of contributions and contributors, this volume will appeal to both advanced scholars in the field of historical linguistics who are interested in keeping up with recent developments in the field, as well as to those wishing to acquaint themselves with the various tools and methods that are available. In short, HDDA is a valuable contribution to the field of historical dialectology and will hopefully serve to introduce its readers both to the true and tried methods of digital linguistic research as well as to new and exciting possibilities. --Berber Bossenbroek English Studies, 101:2, 252-254 The present volume is a very valuable contribution to the field of English historical dialectology. It demonstrates that the door for the linguistic analysis of early and late medieval texts and their language has been opened anew. It shows that there is an opportunity for more nuanced questions and more precise insights through the options presented by digitised corpora and/or digital methods (as complements to traditional, analogue corpora and methods). The overarching question - namely how digital methods can be used to investigate diachronic variation and language change - is addressed at different linguistic levels. It is the interplay between spelling variation and pronunciation which comes to the fore, as it is at the heart of half of the contributions (chapters 4, 5, 6, 7, 8), but syntactic variation and change, as well as morphological and lexical variation, do also find their places. The individual chapters all present their data and analyses with clarity and conciseness...All in all, the volume is a very good collection of papers, and it will be a handy and useful resource for students and more experienced scholars interested in the state of the field and what one can do with digitised corpora and digital methods. --Ulrike Krischke, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitat Munchen Anglia, 2020, 138(1)


Author Information

Rhona Alcorn is an Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Edinburgh and CEO of Scots Language Dictionaries Ltd. She is also Deputy Director of the Angus McIntosh Centre for Historical Linguistics. She was the first receipient of the Richard M. Hogg Prize, awarded annually by the International Society for the Linguistics of English since 2008. Joanna Kopaczyk is Lecturer in English Language & Linguistics at the University of Glasgow. She is a historical linguist with an interest in formulaic language, the history of Scots and historical multilingualism, which she approaches from pragmaphilological and corpus-driven perspectives. She previously worked at the University of Edinburgh, where she was one of the compilers of the From Inglis to Scots (FITS) corpus, and at the Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań. Her recent co-edited volumes include Applications of Pattern-driven Methos in Corpus Linguistics (John Benjamins 2018) and Binomials in the History of English (Cambridge University Press 2017). Bettelou Los is Forbes Professor of English Language at the University of Edinburgh. She graduated from the University of Amsterdam in 1986 and has since held teaching and research positions at the University of Amsterdam, the Vrije Universiteit, the University of Nijmegen, Radboud University Nijmegen and other colleges of high education. She participates in the research program The Diachrony of Complex Predicates in West Germanic, and has published several papers on diachronic syntax. Previous publications include The Handbook of the History of English, Blackwell, as co-editor (2006), and The Rise of the To-Infinitive, Oxford University Press (2005). Benjamin Molineaux is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at the Angus McIntosh Centre for Historical Linguistics, the University of Edinburgh. His interests are in synchronic and diachronic phonology and morphology, with special emphasis on stress systems. He has published on these topics as applied to the history of English, Scots and Mapudungun (a language of Chile and Argentina). As one of the compilers of the From Inglis To Scots (FITS) database he has applied corpus methods to mapping the earliest sound-to-spelling correspondences in the history of Scots (1380-500). He is currently using the same methods to explore the 400-year history of Mapudungun, as part of the Corpus of Historical Mapudungun. He holds a doctorate from the University of Oxford.

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