Beschreibung
This series promotes specialist language studies, both in the fields of linguistic theory and applied linguistics, by publishing volumes that focus on specific aspects of language use and provide valuable insights into language and communication research. A cross-disciplinary approach is favoured and most European languages are accepted.
Autorenportrait
Mihhail Lotman is Professor of Cultural Theory at Tallinn University and Senior Researcher at the University of Tartu. He has published two monographs and more than 200 papers. His research interests are general semiotics and semiotics of culture; text theory and Russian literature (esp. 20th-century poetry); poetics and rhetoric; general, comparative and Russian verse studies. He is co-editor of
and a member of the scientific board of
.
Maria-Kristiina Lotman is Associate Professor at the University of Tartu. She obtained her PhD in 2003. She has published ca 50 publications. Her research interests are ancient verse, its metre, rhythm, versification systems; typological analysis of quantitative verse; semantics of verse. She is co-editor of the on-line journal
.
Leseprobe
Leseprobe
Inhalt
Contents: Maria-Kristiina Lotman/Mihhail Lotman: Preface – Mihhail Lotman: Introduction: Linguistics and Poetics Revisited – Reuven Tsur: Metricalness and Rhythmicalness. What Our Ear Tells Our Mind – Ilse Lehiste: Relationship between the Prosody and the Metrical Structure of Poetry in Different Languages – Marina Krasnoperova/Evgeniy Kazartsev: Reconstructive Simulation of Versification in the Comparative Studies of Texts in Different Languages (Theoretical Aspects and Practice of Application) – Marina Tarlinskaja: Shakespeare Among Others in Sir Thomas More: Verse Form and Attribution – Ashwini Deo/Paul Kiparsky: Poetries in Contact: Arabic, Persian, and Urdu – Yasuko Suzuki: Metrical Structure as a Reflection of Linguistic Structure: A Comparative Study of Germanic Alliterative Poetry and Japanese Tanka – Artem Kozmin: Syllabic Verse and Vowel Length in Polynesian Languages: Tongan, Tuvaluan, Hawaiian, Mangarevan, Marquesan and Rapanui – Mari Sarv: Language or Culture: Possible Foreign Influences on the Estonian
Metrics – Triinu Ojamaa: Searching for Structural Boundaries in Forest Nenets Songs: A Cross-cultural Case Study – Gregory Nagy: Reading the Homeric Hexameter Aloud While Following the Accentual Markings of a Diorth?t?s – Lev Blumenfeld: Abstract Similarities between Latin and Greek Dialogue Meters – David Chisholm: Prosodic Feature Analysis of German Hexameter Verse – Maria-Kristiina Lotman: The Typology of Estonian Hexameter – Geoffrey Russom: Word Patterns and Phrase Patterns in Universalist Metrics – Seiichi Suzuki: Catalexis, Suspension of Resolution, and the Organization of the Cadence in Eddic Meters – Rolf Noyer: The Rhyme Quotient, Syntactic Inversion and Metrical Tension in the Verse of Edmund Spenser. Inhaltsverzeichnis