sous la rédaction de / edited by
Wiesław Banyś, Gaston Gross et Beata Śmigielska
The authors of the articles in the first part of this issue of Neophilologica came to linguistics at a time when it was regarded as a model for the human sciences. The founders of this discipline, regardless of the school to which they belong, all emphasised the fundamental role of theory in the language sciences.
A quick list of the heads of these schools is enough to illustrate the importance of theoretical concerns in their work: Ferdinand de Saussure, Roman Jakobson, Gustave Guillaume, Leonard Bloomfield and Zellig Harris (distributional grammar), Noam Chomsky (transformational grammar). We might also mention the work of Maurice Gross in the context of the LADL and that of Jean Dubois and, from a different perspective, the work of André Martinet (functionalism) as well as that of Antoine Culioli and Lucien Tesnière. These theoretical objectives are reflected in the titles of the schools they promoted: structuralism, glossematicism, distributionism, functionalism, psychomechanics, dependency grammar, generative and transformational grammar, case grammar and lexicon-grammar.
The work was organised according to the different sectors of the discipline: phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics and pragmatics.
It is therefore surprising that, over the years, these theoretical concerns have gradually faded away in favour of essentially didactic, sociological and stylistic concerns.
This volume of Neophilologica looks at various ways of reconciling essential theoretical objectives with the various applications to which linguistics can give rise.
Vol. 36 (2024)
Published: 2024-12-31
10.31261/NEO