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Systemic View as a Basis for Philological Thought [Hardback]

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"In A Systemic View as the Base of Philological Thought, Olga Valentinova, Vladimir Denisenko, Sergey Preobrazhenskii, and Mikhail Rybakov explore the interrelation of language material, structure, and functions in various subjects of philological research, such as grammatical systems of language, semantics, linguistic personality, literary text, and formal aspects of verse. Their systemic approach is rooted in the theories of Wilhelm von Humboldt and his followers, including Russian scholars Alexander Potebnya, Gustav Shpet, and more recently Gennadii Prokop'evichMel'nikov (1928-2000). The authors use the concept of systemicity as an opportunity to see the studied whole in development, to show the functional interaction of linear and supra-linear connections, to explain their interdependence, and to predict further changes within the system. This book displays the scientific potential of the systemic approach to linguistics and related spheres, employing the framework of systematicity to revise the modern trends of philology and to map out an alternative paradigm for linguistic and philological thought that could restore the status of philology as a holistic science"--

The authors advocate for innovative, systemicity-based ideas in philology. They reveal explanatory aspects of linguistic typology, model a concept sphere as a complex linguistic object, construct a causal typology of literary texts, and provide systemic analysis of poetic speech.

Recenzijas

"It is difficult to say whether this book is 'an outstanding contribution to modern linguistics.' But! It is very interesting, very useful, and...highly systematic. The systematic approach to the study of language and linguistic identity is the idea that permeates all parts of the monograph. This would sound very banal if the system were understood only as a set of units connected with each other by certain types of relations. The authors of the monograph 'animate' and 'humanize' the language system, viewing it throughout as a continuously changing object. The causes and conditions of such changes also enter into their research." -- Igor V. Ruzhitsky, Lomonosov Moscow State University

List of Figures and Tables

Acknowledgements

Introduction

Part 1: How to Classify Languages: Autonomous Classifications or a
Comprehensive One? (by Mikhail Rybakov)

Chapter 1: The Main Problems of Linguistic Typology

Chapter 2: Can a Linguistic Classification Explain Anything about a
Language?

Chapter 3: The Prospects of Creating a Semantic Language Typology

Chapter 4: Fundamental Concepts of Systemic Methodology and G. P. Melnikovs
Systemic Typology

Chapter 5: The Typological Analysis of the Category of Case

Chapter 6: The Systemic Theory of Predication: The Internal Form of
Morphological Types

Part 2: Modelling the System of Language (by Vladimir Denisenko)

Chapter 7: Modelling the System of Language with Regard to the Linguistic
Personality

Chapter 8: Research Potential of the Semantic Field Method

Part 3: The Systemic Approach to Investigating Text and Style: The Rationale
of the Causal Typology of Texts (by Olga Valentinova)

Chapter 9: The Medieval Model of Correlation Between Form and Content

Chapter 10: The Secularized Consciousness and Overcoming the Medieval
Principle of FormContent Correlation

Chapter 11: Desacralization as the Main Vector of Historical Change in the
Semantic Structure of the Russian Literary Language

Chapter 12: Stylistic Signs of Our Time: Visible Changes in the Public
Consciousness

Chapter 13: The Potential of the Systemic Approach in the Study of Literary
Texts

Part 4: The Systemic Analysis of Verse (by Sergei Preobrazhenskii)

Chapter 14: G. P. Melnikov: A Linguist for the 21 Century

Chapter 15: Shevchenkos Hexasyllable as a Common Slavic Two-Accent and
Two-Word Verseme

Chapter 16: The Hypothesis of the Typological Proximity of Micropolymetry and
Devotional Verse

Chapter 17: The Logaoedic Adoneus as an International Two-Word Verseme

Glossary

Bibliography

Essential Terms Index

Names Index

About the Authors
Olga Ivanovna Valentinova is professor of linguistics at RUDN University.

Vladimir Nikiforovich Denisenko is professor and Head of the General and Russian Linguistics Department at RUDN University.

Sergei Iurevich Preobrazhenskii taught at RUDN University.

Mikhail Anatolevich Rybakov is associate professor of linguistics at RUDN University.