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Frans Van Coetsem, Linda R. Waugh - Cornell Linguistic Contributions, Volume 5 - Panter - 08.01.2025 Frans Van Coetsem, Linda R. Waugh - Contributions to Sino Tibetan Studies (Cornell Linguistic Contributions, V. 5) John McCoy, Timothy Light English | 1986 | E. J. Brill | ISBN: 9004078509 | 485 pages | PDF | 81 MB ISBN-13 : 978-9004078505 This volume on Sino-Tibetan studies is respectfully dedicated to our teacher, colleague, and friend, Professor Emeritus of Linguistics Nicho- las Cleaveland Bodman. It will be clear to all who know him that the contents of this book define in most appropriate fashion the linguistic and geographic boundaries of Professor Bodman's prime research interests over the past several decades. He has expressed these interests in his close association from the beginning with the International Conference on Sino-Tibetan Languages and Linguistics, in his courses on Sino-Tibetan linguistics and Chinese linguistics given at Cornell University, and in his research and publications. He has worked to make a more coherent unity out of the extremely numerous and diverse materials that constitute the Sino-Tibetan field. He has encouraged Sino-Tibetanists to go beyond the Worter-und-Sacher phase and to deal with their field in a more holistic and coherent manner, reminding us that the tenets of modern historical linguistics require attention to families and related groups of words rather than only to isolated individual correspondences which may not neces- sarily demonstrate a genetic relationship. Through his own work and that of several of his students, he has led a rigorous reanalysis of the earlier forms of Chinese. This means that in the Sino-Tibetan field, Chinese, with the oldest and most complete records, has continually improved as a base for contrasts and comparisons. Professor Bodman's own field work in modern Chinese dialects and other Sino-Tibetan languages fostered an interest at Cornell in doing the hunting and gathering of the field linguist, in collecting the living language data that make up the building blocks of historical method. In the textual reconstructions based on the Chinese rime books, in the linguistic recon- structions based on dialect data, and in the comparative work in the non- Chinese languages of our field, Professor Bodman's work has thus di- rected attention to both the scope and the methodology of Sino-Tibetan studies. The papers collected in this volume are presented both as a greeting to Professor Bodman and as a statement of the vigor and growth seen in Sino-Tibetan studies in recent years. The authors here represent five who studied under Professor Bodman and others who were drawn together with him to the natural forum formed by the International Conference of Sino-Tibetan Languages and Linguistics. This congruence of people and ideas is a product of academic critical mass, a natural phenomenon whose time had come. We hereby acknowledge Professor Bodman's role in these developments. The articles are separated by category and sequenced as follows: gener- al compilation and analysis, South and Southeast Asian languages, early recorded forms of Chinese, early reconstructed forms of Chinese, and modern Chinese dialect descriptions. We, the editors, wish to thank the various contributors for their efforts and their patience as this volume came slowly to completion. Our edi- torial goal was not in any way to make the papers uniform in style and phrasing, but simply to work for a unified layout and a standardized format for the bibliography. We are indebted to the Hull Memorial Pub- lication Fund, the Provost, the Department of Asian Studies, the Depart- ment of Modern Languages and Linguistics, and the China-Japan Pro- gram, all of Cornell University, for the financial support necessary to publish this collection. We also wish to offer our sincere thanks to Sally Serafim, who provided the final editing of the volume under great pressure at the last minute, and to the staff of the Composing Room of Michigan, Inc., who managed the production of this very complicated volume with good humor and an extraordinary degree of accuracy. THE EDITORS John McCoy Cornell University Timothy Light The Ohio State University 22fb177e3811abef8ac8d115f8ee54e5 Download from RapidGator |