ABSTRACT

This volume investigates the interconnections between language and literacy in terms of the structures of language as well as the linguistic contexts of literacy. The work for this book was generated in order to focus on studies of the acquisition and impact of literacy on traditional assertions of linguistic analysts. The contributors show that claims regarding descriptions of the linguistic competence of native speakers contain phonemic, morphemic, and sentential constructs applicable only to literate language users. They also suggest that syntactic formalities -- elements lacking extensional reference -- are unlikely in the absence of literacy, and that the notions of "sentencehood" and syntactic well-formedness are functions of literacy. Finally, the book reviews the basic notions of literary relativity and the role of literacy in communication and civilization.

part |164 pages

Literacy and the Constructs of Language

part |16 pages

Introduction

part |25 pages

Morphology

part |68 pages

Literacy and the Sentence

chapter 6|43 pages

Spoken and Written Language

Language Acquisition and Literacy

chapter 8|8 pages

Utterance Acceptability Criteria

A Follow-Up to Karanth and Suchitra

part |44 pages

Literacy and the Context of Language

chapter 10|17 pages

The Loneliness of the Long-Distance Writer

On the Pragmatics of Written Communication