Jakobson's zero and the pleasure and pitfalls of structural beauty
In 'Signe zero ' (1939) Jakobson suggests a radical application of the zero notion in analysis of linguistic structure, arguing that 'nothing ' is a relevant structural component not only on the expression plane, but also on the content plane, i.e. zero content as the signifie of...
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Veröffentlicht in: | SKASE journal of theoretical linguistics 2015-09, p.398 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | In 'Signe zero ' (1939) Jakobson suggests a radical application of the zero notion in analysis of linguistic structure, arguing that 'nothing ' is a relevant structural component not only on the expression plane, but also on the content plane, i.e. zero content as the signifie of a sign. The paper examines how this idea is rooted in the structuralist tradition of analysing difference and significant distinctions and how it is motivated by the pleasure of structural beauty. Focusing on one of Jakobson's examples of zero signs, the analysis of gender in the Russian declension system, the paper criticises the simplification of empirical facts in Jakobson's analysis and the reasoning behind accepting 'nothing ' as a kind of content coding. This critical assessment draws on the description of sign distinctions in the structural-functional paradigm model of Norgard-Sorensen et al. (2011) and Andersen's (2001) critique of Jakobson's conception of markedness. Keywords: Roman Jakobson, zero sign, structuralism, morphology, Russian, gender. |
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ISSN: | 1336-782X 1336-782X |