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E-grāmata: Agreement in Language Contact: Gender development in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle

(TU Dortmund University)
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Gender in English changed dramatically from the elaborate system found in Old English to the very simple he/she/it-alternation in use from (late) Middle English onwards. While either system is well described and understood, the change from one to the other is anything but: more than 120 years of research into the matter provided no prevailing opinion – let alone a consensus – regarding how it proceeded or why it occurred. The present study is the first to address this issue in the context of language contact with Old Norse, assessing this contact influence in relation to both language-formal and semantico-cognitive factors. This empirical, functional account uses rigorous, innovative methodology, interdisciplinary evidence, and well-established models of synchronic variation in diachronic application to draw a fine-grained picture of the variation, change, and loss of gender from Old to Middle English and its underlying mainsprings. The resulting plausible and parsimonious explanations will prove relevant to students and scholars of historical linguistics, morpho-syntax, language variation and change, or language contact, to name but a few.
List of figures
ix
List of tables
xv
List of examples
xvii
List of abbreviations
xxi
Chapter 1 Introduction
1(4)
Chapter 2 Aims and objectives
5(4)
2.1 Hypotheses
5(2)
2.2 Structure of this study
7(2)
Chapter 3 Gender
9(70)
3.1 Nature, origin and function of gender
9(16)
3.2 Gender in Old and Middle English
25(14)
3.2.1 Gender assignment
26(9)
3.2.2 Gender exponence
35(4)
3.3 Approaches to English gender development
39(35)
3.3.1 The `Genuswechsel' theory
44(1)
3.3.2 Formal sources of gender development
45(12)
3.3.3 Functional and semantic sources of gender development
57(5)
3.3.4 Language contact, language change and gender development
62(12)
3.4
Chapter summary
74(5)
Chapter 4 Viking influence in England
79(40)
4.1 Character, extent and time of Viking settlement
79(36)
4.1.1 `Fill the earth and subdue it': Place-name evidence
80(7)
4.1.2 Turning hammers into crosses: Christianising the Vikings
87(6)
4.1.3 Unearthing evidence: Archaeological records
93(1)
4.1.4 In the blood: Evidence from (molecular) genetics
94(7)
4.1.5 Speaking volumes: Evidence from language and documents
101(14)
4.2
Chapter summary
115(4)
Chapter 5 Methodology
119(44)
5.1 How to measure historical language change
119(3)
5.2 Desiderata and candidates for a textual basis
122(7)
5.2.1 Resembling spoken language
122(2)
5.2.2 Anglo-Saxon originals rather than translations
124(1)
5.2.3 Frequent reference to non-human entities
125(1)
5.2.4 Reliably dated and placed
126(2)
5.2.5 Diachronically stable text type
128(1)
5.3 Manuscripts contributing to the textual basis
129(3)
5.3.1 Resulting database
130(2)
5.4 Description and motivation of variables investigated
132(19)
5.4.1 Formal variables
132(5)
5.4.2 Semantic and cognitive variables
137(9)
5.4.3 Extralinguistic variables
146(5)
5.5 Coding and data classification
151(6)
5.6 Statistical modelling
157(1)
5.7
Chapter summary
158(5)
Chapter 6 Analysis
163(88)
6.1 Orosius
163(11)
6.2 Early southern Chronicle
174(13)
6.3 Late southern Chronicle
187(20)
6.4 Early northern Chronicle
207(12)
6.5 Late northern Chronicle
219(29)
6.6 Overview
248(3)
Chapter 7 Discussion
251(74)
7.1 Orosius
251(5)
7.2 Early southern Chronicle
256(7)
7.3 Late southern Chronicle
263(8)
7.4 Early northern Chronicle
271(9)
7.5 Late northern Chronicle
280(14)
7.6 General discussion
294(24)
7.6.1 Variation in gender agreement
294(9)
7.6.2 Change in gender assignment
303(8)
7.6.3 Loss of gender exponence
311(7)
7.7 The `Viking Connection'
318(7)
Chapter 8 Conclusion and outlook
325(6)
References 331(20)
Index 351