Contrast and Representations in Syntax
Edited by Bronwyn M. Bjorkman and Daniel Currie Hall
Author Information
Edited by Bronwyn M. Bjorkman, Assistant Professor of Linguistics, Queen's University, and Daniel Currie Hall, Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Program in Linguistics, Saint Mary's University
Bronwyn M. Bjorkman is Assistant Professor of Linguistics at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario. She completed her PhD in Linguistics at MIT in 2011, and prior to arriving at Queen's was a Banting Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Toronto. Her research focuses on the morphosyntax of tense and aspect, in particular auxiliary verb constructions, as well as on the representation and manipulation of features in syntax. Her work has appeared in journals including Linguistic Inquiry, Glossa, and Natural Language & Linguistic Theory, and in several edited volumes.
Daniel Currie Hall is Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Program in Linguistics at Saint Mary's University in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Before taking up his current position, he completed a PhD. at the University of Toronto in 2007 and worked as a postdoctoral researcher at the Meertens Instituut in Amsterdam. His research deals with features and contrasts in both phonology and morphosyntax, the latter primarily in a long-standing collaboration with Elizabeth Cowper, and has appeared in journals such as Linguistic Variation, Glossa, Nordlyd, Lingue e linguaggio, and Phonology. He is an associate editor of the Canadian Journal of Linguistics.
Contributors:
Gabriela Alboiu, York University
Michael Barrie, Sogang University
Bronwyn M. Bjorkman, Queen's University
Andrew Carnie, University of Arizona
Daniel Currie Hall, Saint Mary's University
Maria Kyriakaki, Deree, The American College of Greece
Martha McGinnis, University of Toronto
Elizabeth Ritter, University of Calgary
Leslie Saxon, University of Victoria
Sylvia L. R. Schreiner, George Mason University
Carson T. Schütze, University of California Los Angeles