Linguistics in Britain: Personal Histories

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This landmark volume provides a fascinating overview of the evolution of the discipline of linguistics in Britain since the end of the Second World War. It consists of a series of 'linguistics autobiographies' by 23 British linguists who played a major role in the development in the subject during the second half of the twentieth century. Commissioned by the Council of the Philological Society, contributors look back over the achievements of British linguistics in the previous 50 years. They reflect on how and why they went into linguistics, what branches of the subject attracted them, what formative influences they were exposed to, and how they reacted to them. They also consider the role they personally played in the intellectual and institutional development of the subject.

Author(s): Brown, Keith (ed.); Law, Vivien (ed.)
Publisher: Blackwell
Year: 2002

Language: English
Pages: 319

Preface / Jean Aitchison / W. Sidney Allen / R. E. Asher / John Bendor-Samuel / Gillian Brown / N. E. Collinge / Joseph Cremona / David Crystal / Gerald Gazdar / M. A. K. Halliday / Richard Hudson / John Laver / Geoffrey Leech / John Lyons / Peter Matthews / Anna Morpungo Davies / Frank Palmer / Randolph Quirk / R. H. Robins / Neil Smith / J. L. M. Trim / Peter Trudgill / John Wells / General Index