Syntax over Time
Lexical, Morphological, and Information-Structural Interactions
Edited by Theresa Biberauer and George Walkden
Author Information
Theresa Biberauer is a Senior Research Associate at the University of Cambridge, where she is also a Fellow of Churchill College, and Associate Professor Extraordinary at her South African alma mater, Stellenbosch University. Her research interests are principally in theoretical and comparative (synchronic and diachronic) morphosyntax, with Germanic generally and Afrikaans in particular being areas of specific interest. Her past work has focused on word-order variation, (null) subject phenomena, negation, information structure, and the larger question of the nature of parametric variation. She is the co-editor, with Michelle Sheehan, of Theoretical Approaches to Disharmonic Word Order (OUP 2013).
George Walkden is a Lecturer in the Department of Linguistics and English Language at the University of Manchester. His research is in historical syntax, and his doctoral dissertation focused on aspects of syntactic reconstruction as applied to the early Germanic languages. He is the author of Syntactic Reconstruction and Proto-Germanic (OUP 2014), and is also Associate Editor of Language, with responsibility for its Historical Syntax section.
Contributors:
Edith Aldridge, University of Washington
Montserrat Batllori, University of Girona
Theresa Biberauer, University of Cambridge
Ed Cormany, Cornell University
Lieven Danckaert, Ghent University
William Haddican, Queens College-CUNY
Veronika Hegedxus, Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Maria-Lluïsa Hernanz, Autonomous University of Barcelona
Virginia Hill, University of New Brunswick - Saint John
Roland Hinterhölzl, University of Venice Ca' Foscari
Daniel Ezra Johnson, Lancaster University
Marit Julien, Lund University
Katalin É. Kiss, Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Adam Ledgeway, University of Cambridge
Caitlin Light, University of York
Joan Maling, Brandeis University
Ana Maria Martins, University of Lisbon
Dimitris Michelioudakis, University of York
Krzysztof Migdalski, University of Wrocław
Susan Pintzuk, University of York
Chris H. Reintges, CNRS, University Paris 7
Sigriðdur Sigurjónsdottir, University of Iceland
Ann Taylor, University of York
George Walkden, University of Manchester
Joel C. Wallenberg, Newcastle University
Eytan Zweig, University of York