This book provides an overview of the phonology of Italian. It covers the different levels of analysis from individual sounds up to the phrasal level. It focuses on the most widely dispersed features of the language reflecting its significant regional and social variation and its most prominent regionally restricted patterns. Martin Kramer provides a critical survey of the generative literature on Italian phonology. He reports on current debates in the field, considers their particular and general theoretical interest, and provides both syntheses and original analyses. His accounts of the main aspects and characteristics of Italian phonology are couched in the framework of Optimality Theory, but he keeps formal aspects and theory-internal matters to a minimum and separate from the presentation and description of the data. His exposition is thus fully accessible to students and researchers who are not familiar with or do not subscribe to the tenets of the theory. Individual chapters may thus serve as starting points for in-depth investigations into particular aspects of Italian phonology in whatever framework the reader chooses to employ. The Phonology of Italian is the first fully comprehensive account of its subject for many years. It will interest scholars and advanced students of Italian, Romance phonology, and phonology as a system.
About the AuthorMartin Kramer is Associate Professor of General Linguistics at the University of Tromso. From 2001-2004 he was lecturer in Phonetics and Phonology at the University of Ulster. His University of Dusseldorf PhD thesis, Vowel Harmony and Correspondence Theory, was published in Studies in Generative Grammar in 2003 by Mouton de Gruyter. The anthology Freedom of Analysis?, which he edited together with Sylvia Blaho and Patrik Bye, was published in the same series in 2007.
ReviewsThis book provides theoretical linguists and readers within the broader linguistic community with an analysis of the main aspects of contemporary Italian phonology... The book is a very rich sources of data; it is also an intriguing research mine for the curious reader, since the author frequently points to interesting research questions that still need to be addressed. * Maria Giavazzi, The Journal of Phonology 27:2010 *
Book InformationISBN 9780199290796
Author Martin KramerFormat Hardback
Page Count 300
Imprint Oxford University PressPublisher Oxford University Press
Weight(grams) 614g
Dimensions(mm) 240mm * 161mm * 22mm