1st Edition

Rethinking Linguistics

Edited By Hayley G. Davis, Talbot J. Taylor Copyright 2003
    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    204 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book deals with the need to rethink the aims and methods of contemporary linguistics. Orthodox linguists' discussions of linguistic form fail to exemplify how language users become language makers. Integrationist theory is used here as a solution to this basic problem within general linguistics. The book is aimed at an interdisciplinary readership, comprising those engaged in study, teaching and research in the humanities and social sciences, including linguistics, philosophy, sociology and psychology.

    Hayley Davis, Why rethink linguistics?'; Roy Harris, On redefining linguistics'; Nigel Love, Integrating languages'; Talbot J. Taylor, Reflexivity and linguistic form'; Talbot J. Taylor & Stuart Shanker, Growing up in language'; John Joseph, On redefining linguistic creativity'

    Biography

    Hayley Davis is a lecturer in the English Department at Golsmiths College. She has written numerous articles and chapters on standard English, lexicography, bad language and lay metalanguage. She is the author of Words:An Integrational Approach (Curzon 2001). Talbot Taylor is Lousie G.T. Cooley Professor of English and Lingusitics at the College of William and Mary in Virginia. He has written widely in the fields of lanugage theory, discourse analysis, and the history of linguistic thought.