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Roman Osipovich Jakobson (1896–1982) famously characterized himself as a “Russian philologist. Period.” He arranged for his gravestone to be engraved simply with the words “Roman Jakobson—RUSSKIJ FILOLOG.” Jakobson’s Russianness, and his love of language and literature, are beyond dispute.
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Acta Linguistica Hafniensia, 1997
L'histoire de la linguistique du 20 e siecle est remarquable pour le nombre de linguistes qui ont initialement accepte un cadre theorique particulier pour conduire leurs etudes, et qui ont finalement trouve que le cadre en question constituait une entrave dont il fallait se liberer.
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L'histoire de la linguistique du 20 e siecle est remarquable pour le nombre de linguistes qui ont initialement accepte un cadre theorique particulier pour conduire leurs etudes, et qui ont finalement trouve que le cadre en question constituait une entrave dont il fallait se liberer.
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Contributions Of Roman Jakobson
Annual Review of Anthropology, 1987ions imposed on the data or of signs standing for something else; they are real, concrete relations. [Some descriptive linguists in America did not heartily embrace Jakobson's binary notions of sound structure. Martin Joos (I50) argued that "polar" opposition is no more than a "metaphor" that Jakobson imported from poetics.
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1996
Abstract In this chapter we turn to the work of some of Jakobson’s intellectual descendants, linguists working in the broad structuralist tradition who use the opposition between marked and unmarked to inform linguistic or semiotic analysis.
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Abstract In this chapter we turn to the work of some of Jakobson’s intellectual descendants, linguists working in the broad structuralist tradition who use the opposition between marked and unmarked to inform linguistic or semiotic analysis.
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2014
Russian philologist Roman Jakobson (1896–1982) incubated his ideas within a sequence of “Circles”, self-consciously established groups of scholars who crossed institutional affiliations to discuss shared interests and support each others’ (and sometimes, the group’s communal) work. Jakobson’s experiences within various Circles differed: those in Moscow
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Russian philologist Roman Jakobson (1896–1982) incubated his ideas within a sequence of “Circles”, self-consciously established groups of scholars who crossed institutional affiliations to discuss shared interests and support each others’ (and sometimes, the group’s communal) work. Jakobson’s experiences within various Circles differed: those in Moscow
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Journal of English Linguistics, 2000
Un des postulats fondamentaux qui regit les travaux de Jakobson depuis 1985 est le lien particulierement etroit entre les deux domaines d'etude que constituent la linguistique et la litterature. Les travaux de Jakobson ont ainsi marque ces deux disciplines et ont suscite de nombreuses polemiques. L'A.
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Un des postulats fondamentaux qui regit les travaux de Jakobson depuis 1985 est le lien particulierement etroit entre les deux domaines d'etude que constituent la linguistique et la litterature. Les travaux de Jakobson ont ainsi marque ces deux disciplines et ont suscite de nombreuses polemiques. L'A.
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2017
Chapter 6 treats the transformation to which the Russian structuralist linguist Roman Jakobson, following the deflationary tradition of Saussure, subjects the neo-Pythagorean acoustic poetics discussed in Chapter 5. The focus rests on a new reading of what Jakobson calls the “linguistic zero,” which he defines as the featureless half of a binary ...
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Chapter 6 treats the transformation to which the Russian structuralist linguist Roman Jakobson, following the deflationary tradition of Saussure, subjects the neo-Pythagorean acoustic poetics discussed in Chapter 5. The focus rests on a new reading of what Jakobson calls the “linguistic zero,” which he defines as the featureless half of a binary ...
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