Contents Introduction 1. The
'Classical Period' of the Prague School 2. Later
Developments Conclusion Footnotes Bibliography |
Introduction
All
metaphysical questions are historical questions, and all metaphysical
propositions are historical propositions. Every metaphysical question either is
simply the question what absolute presuppositions were made on a certain
occasion, or is capable of being resolved into a number of such questions
together with a further question or further questions arising out of these.
Collingwood, An
Essay on Metaphysics, p. 49
Linguistics in the twentieth
century has the absolute presupposition, stemming from Ferdinand de Saussure'
s Cours de linguistique générale, that language should be studied
as a system; this implies a step towards abstraction and is a complete reversal
of what Pos 1939:71 calls the nineteenth century's nominalism which was
concerned with the sheer description and accumulation of facts, isolated from
one another (cf. Trnka 1948: 154). This tendency towards abstraction implies
another presupposition, namely that it should be possible to provide a formal
analysis of language and was best illustrated in the inter-war period by
Trubetzkoy's Grundzüge der Phonologie. This last presupposition was
carried out by J. Cantineau, in accordance with a major trend in
American structuralism, to the point of virtually eliminating meaning from
linguistic description. Another presupposition, which will be recurrent
throughout this paper, is that the structure of 1anguage should be described in
terms of binary features (e.g., langue/parole, markedness/unmarkedness).
This essay will deal with works
on structural verbal morphology which use the formal apparatus originally
devised by Trubetzkoy and his collaborators of the 'Cercle linguistique de
Prague' for the analysis of phonology; in accordance with the very concept of
structuralism, this means viewing language as a system of oppositions. This
will entail a presentation of the so-called 'classical period' (1929-1939) of
the Prague School, which culminated in the publication of Trubetzkoy's Grudzüge
der Phonologie, and of the influence that these seminal ideas had on other
members of the group when faced with the description of particular aspects of
the verbal syntax. The second part will be devoted to an analysis of J. Cantineau's
generalisation of Trubetzkoy's ideas about phonology to other fields of
linguistics. There will also be an exposé of how the teachings of the Prague
School have been synthesized by the Spanish scholar Martin Sánchez Ruipérez in
a coherent doctrine which he applied to the description of Greek verbal
morphology(l). This essay could also be viewed as a study of the concept of
markedness from the early 1930's to the early 1950's, in a fraction of European
structuralism.
The notion of a formal apparatus
used in describing morphological phenomena will be considered a crucial one for
the purpose of the present study. As for the goal of morphology, one can use a
definition given in 1958 by representatives of the new Prague School :
The role of
structural morphology is (1) to state morphological oppositions (e.g., that of
the number of substantives, that of the common case — adnominal case, etc. in
English) and their neutralisations (e.g., ... the
neutralisation of grammatical genders in plural in German... ), (2)
to state the phonemic means (often homonymous) implementing the morphological
oppositions of a language, such as prefixes, suffixes, and alternations of
phonemes (so-called morphonemics). (Vachek1960:50)
1. The 'Classical Period' of
the Prague School
The first meeting of the 'Cercle
linguistique de Prague' was held on 6 October 1926, under the presidency of
Vilém Mathesius. Historically, the Prague movement can be divided into three
periods : the first one, called the 'Classical Period', from 1929 to 1939,
when occupation and war interrupted the activities of the Prague Circle; in
fact the date 1939 coincides with the death of N. S. Trubetzkoy. The
second period is one of stagnation, characterised in the late forties by
ideological squabbles around N. J. Marr's doctrine (Vachek 1966:13;
Lepschy 1975:890). There was a revival of interest in the late fifties and
early sixties which led to the publication of a new journal, Travaux
linguistiques de Prague (1964) (on this ternary division, cf. Vachek
1961:67). In the present paper, we will be concerned only with the classical
period, which acknowledged the combined influence of Baudouin de Courtenay and
Ferdinand de Saussure (Mathesius 1932:6). Saussure's influence is also
acknowledged by Trnka 1958:36 and Vachek 1966:18 who mentions the importance of
S. I. Karcevskij, a pupil of Saussure, in the first days of the Prague
Circle (cf. also Martinet 1953: 577) but the importance of this influence has
been questionned by G. Lepschy 1970:53. One may also add the influence of
the Czech Joseph Zubatý and the Russians Šachmatov and Ščerba (Trnka 1958:36).
From the very beginning, the
Prague linguists were mainly concerned with phonology, though they also
approached questions such as literary criticism, problems of the standard
language, etc.; they intended to test their theses first in phonology and afterwards
at higher levels of language (Vachek 1966:77-8).
Many scholars contributed during
these years to the theory of phonology : for example, Martinet's
contributions to the discussion of neutralisation and segmentation (Martinet
1936, 1939) are important historically but for the present purpose, it will
suffice to set out the main theoretical assumptions made by the Prague
linguists as they appear in Trubetzkoy's Grundzüge der Phonologie (published
posthumously in 1939) and how they have been applied during this period to the
analysis of morphology. This simplification in the presentation of the Prague
linguists' doctrine is justified by the fact that Trubetzkoy was the most
impressive personality in the group (Lepschy 1970:57).
Trubetzkoy calls phonological
oppositions those phonetic oppositions which, in a given language, serve to
differentiate meanings (Trubetzkoy 1976:33). The sounds which enter in such a
relation, he calls phonemes(2). A phoneme has phonological content inasmuch as
it is a member of a phonological opposition (Ibid.:69). These
phonological oppositions can be classified according to the logical relation
uniting their two members : such a classification is crucial in evaluating
how the phonological system works (Ibid.:76). A privative opposition is
one in which one member is characterised by the presence of a mark or feature,
the other by the absence of the mark : for instance, in the pair b/p,
b is characterised by the feature 'voice', p by its absence; the
member of the opposition characterised by the presence of the mark will be
called marked term, the other unmarked term. Trubetzkoy adds that
this type of opposition is extremely important in phonology (Ibid.:77).
A gradual opposition is one in which its members (here, by definition,
can be more than two) are characterised by different degrees of the same
feature : for example, o and in German have different degrees of
opening. Trubetzkoy adds : "Les oppositions graduelles sont
relativement rares et moins importantes que les privatives" (Ibid.).
We shall have the opportunity to criticise this judgement later and see
how it must be amended if the theoretical framework outlined by Trubetzkoy is
to be applied to higher levels of linguistics. The third category is composed
of equipollent oppositions, in which the two terms are logically
equivalent, in other words these two terms cannot be viewed as having a
different degree of the same feature nor as the affirmation or the negation of
a feature. These last oppositions are held to be the most numerous in every
system (Ibid.). And Trubetzkoy adds : "La valeur équipollente,
graduelle ou privative d'une opposition phonologique dépend donc du point de
vue auquel on se place pour la considérer. Mais on ne doit pas croire que cette
valeur soit purement subjective et imaginaire : par la structure et le
fonctionnement du système phonologique la valeur de chaque opposition est la
plupart du temps donnée objectivement et sans équivoque" (Ibid.:78).
According to the extent of their
distinctive power, oppositions can be either constant or neutralizable.
In certain circumstances, one of the members of the opposition can lose its
distinctive feature; in that case, there remains only what the two members
have in common, in other words the "archiphoneme"; this concept
appeared for the first time in Jakobson 1929, cf. Vachek 1966:22. The member of
the opposition which appears in the neutralised position is to be considered as
the unmarked term, this being only possible in cases of privative oppositions.
On the other hand, if the neutralisable opposition is not privative but
gradual, then it is always the extreme member of the opposition (the member
which presents an extreme degree, either minimally or maximally, of a given
feature) which appears in the neutralised position (Ibid.:85).
The publication earlier, in 1927,
of Karcevskij's monograph Système du verbe russe constituted the
first attempt, within the Prague Circle, to deal with morphology. The overall
impression is that of an inventory of forms, the task of the linguist being to
discover regularity amidst apparent chaos : "Cependant ne serait-il
pas permis de considérer toute classification simplement comme un moyen
pratique et conventionnel, dépourvu de toute valeur scientifique, de cataloguer
les phénomènes linguistiques, comme un procédé destiné à mettre dans une langue
un peu de cet ordre que la nature lui a refusé, afin de faciliter par là
l'étude de cette langue ? Mais une langue est un système, et prétendre y
introduire de l'ordre, c'est simplement avouer que nous ne la connaissons pas
suffisamment. Penser autrement et / admettre qu'une langue puisse demeurer dans
le chaos, c'est renoncer à la possibilité d'une science du langage"
(Karcevskij 1927:43-4).
Though Karcevskij operates with
notions such as neutralisation and the assumption that all grammatical
categories should be binary, there is no systematic attempt at defining them.
When dealing with the Russian infinitive, Karcevskij introduces the important
notion of "zero-value" but, unfortunately, he does not develop this
concept. But this treatment of morphology was very influential, as it was later
acknowledged by Jakobson : "None of the experts in syntax would ever
by-pass Karcevski's classification of elementary combinations (Saussure's syntagmes).
Meillet was right in considering Karcevski's analysis of Russian verbal
categories as a remarkable performance and, as V. Vinogradov points out,
it is this work on the system of the Russian verb that gave such an impetus to
investigations of verbal derivation" (Jakobson 1956:496).
But probably the earliest and
most important systematic work on morphology during that 'classical period' and
the most typical of the Prague School approach (Vachek 1966: 118, n. l5)
remains Jakobson's "Zur Struktur des russischen Verbums" (1932), an
article that looks rather sketchy, with many references to other Russian
linguists but only a few examples. Jakobson starts by accepting Trubetzkoy's
system of correlations (p. 76) and uses them in studying the values of the
grammatical forms : the Russian verb contains two correlations of verbal
aspect and two correlations of verbal voices. In the aspectual correlation,
"perfective" is the marked term and "imperfective" the
unmarked term; inside the imperfective group, there is another correlation,
which appears only in the preterite : iterative (marked) /
non-iterative forms (unmarked). An equivalent of the phonological concept of
archiphoneme is also introduced : "Die merkmallose Form fungiert im
sprachlichen Denken als Repräsentant des Korrelationspaares; darum werden als
gewissermassen primäre Formen empfunden : die Imperfektiva gegenüber den
Reflexiva [..]" (Jakobson 1932:83).
Jakobson characterises the
asymmetry of the correlative grammatical forms as the antinomy of the
signalising value of an A ("die Signalisierung von A") and its
non-signalising value ("Nicht-Signalisierung"). Two signs may be used
for the same referent, but in one case, the first sign will ascribe a mark to
that referent , while in the second case this mark will remain
unmentioned : for example, in Russian, the word for 'heifer' can be either
télka or telénok. Although the two words apply to the same
referent, only in the second case is the meaning left incomplete.
From the asymmetry of the
correlative forms follows also another antinomy : the general and the
partial meaning of the unmarked form, in other words the non-signalising of A
and the signalising of non-A. Thus the same sign possesses two different meanings,
so that in one case the mark of the referent remains unprecised, the presence
of this mark being neither affirmed nor denied; in the other case, the absence
of the mark is manifested. For example, the word telénok can either
refer to a calf without any mention of its sex or can also refer to a male
calf. Here Jakobson introduces a significant difference from Trubetzkoy's
framework. Whereas at the phonological level the correlation is between the
presence of a feature and its absence, here the correlation is more
complex : the un-marked term does not mention the presence nor the absence
of a given feature (in contradistinction to the phonological unmarked term
which is always characterised by the absence of a feature; this analysis is
different from the one given by Ruipérez, cf. infra). This analysis is also
adopted by de Groot 1939:111.
If we take as an example
of phonological neutralisation the German final devoicing of consonants
('Auslaut-verhärtung'), we get the following scheme,
to which can be compared
E. Seidel 1936 is worth
noting in so far as it is a departure from Jakobson' s theory :
"[...] ich kann Jakobson's [...] Gegenüberstellung von Perfektiv
(=merkmalhaltig) zu Imperfektiv (=merkmallos) nicht völlig zustimmen. Mir
scheint die Merkmallosigkeit eine der Funktionen zu sein neben den
übrigen" (Seidel 1936:118). Seidel states that both the perfective and the
imperfective aspects in Russian can function as marked and unmarked. In its
ultimate consequences, this merely means abandonning.the attempt of applying to
morphology and syntax the formalism devised for phonology in favour of a sheer
classification. Martín Sánchez Ruipérez is severe in his critique of Seidel's
attempt, saying that it is an absurd one (Sánchez R. 1954: 19).
B. Havránek also wrote an article
on the same topic (Havránek 1939) which has been described as a minor
contribution (Vachek 1966: 87). The structuralist formalism is much less
developed than in Jakobson 1932; actually, the only reference to markedness is
this quotation : "Donc l'aoriste [en vieux slave] se présente comme
la forme du temps passé 'non-marquée' et l'imparfait comme la forme 'marquée',
en employant la terminologie de la linguistique structurale" (Havránek
1939: 227). But Havránek's analyses are structuralist in so far as he
integrates them in a global description of the verbal system.
Even if one is to include a
couple of related articles (such as : Karcevskij 1932, Mathesius 1932,
Trnka 1932), the production of the Prague linguists in the domain of morphology
and syntax seems rather sparse. However one must emphasise the fact that they
wanted to establish their theory on a solid phonological basis which, in the
beginning, could not but entail a neglect of other linguistic levels in favour
of a deeper insight in the analysis of the phonological component.
Nevertheless, the basis on which future works could be built was laid in
Jakobson's paper on the Russian verb; only after World War II could these ideas
be developed, partly by modern representatives of the Prague School (Vachek
1966:86) but, for an obvious linguistic reason (the works being written in
Czech), they will not be dealt with here and we will, in the stead, focus our
attention on some Western European linguists who used the conceptual framework
established by Trubetzkoy and Jakobson.
2. Later Developments
The publication in 1947 of the
French translation of Trubetzkoy's Grundzüge was a major event since it
contributed largely to the diffusion of the Prague theories among Western
linguists. Following an indication given by Trubetzkoy himself ("tous ces
principes de classement ne valent pas seulement pour les oppositions phonologiques,
mais aussi pour n'importe quel système d'oppositions : ils ne contiennent
rien de spécifiquement phonologique", Trubetzkoy 1976:94), Cantineau
published some years later an article (Cantineau 1952) which is, possibly, the
first attempt to generalise Trubretzkoy's ideas on phonology to the whole field
of linguistics. However, it will be seen that the Prague School doctrine was
distorted on a major issue by the influence of the American descriptivism. I
shall now give a summary of Cantineau's views, introducing a critical analysis
wherever necessary.
Cantineau calls 'opposition
significative' the opposition made by two signs whose 'signifiers' (to
use Culler's translation of 'signifiant ') are different. What differentiates
this from a phonological opposition is that here whole signs, both signified
and signifier, are part of the opposition whereas the members of a phonological
opposition do not have meaning or, at least, meaning is not taken into account
(which is a strange interpretation of Trubetzkoy 1976:33, already quoted). A
classification of these 'oppositions significatives' is possible as it has been
possible in phonology, according to the same logical principles.
Trubetzkoy's distinction between
proportional oppositions and isolated oppositions is used as such and is held
to be the basis of grammar since it allows for a clear distinction between
grammar and lexicon : grammatical oppositions are proportional because the
formal and semantic relation existing between the members of a given opposition
also appears in at least another opposition in the same language; lexical
oppositions are isolated. A gramrnatical opposition which becomes isolated
ceases to be part of the grammar and enters the domain of the lexicon.
Amongst grammatical oppositions,
a privative opposition will be one in which the signifier of one member will be
characterised by the presence of a formal feature ("marque formelle")
which is absent in the signifier of the other member. Cantineau illustrates
this point by an example taken from Greek : in the verb λείπω, the
unaugmented aorist forms, imperative λίπε, subjunctive λίπω, optative
λίποιμι, are in a privative opposition with the corresponding present
forms : λεῖπε, λείπω,
λείποιμι which are marked by the root vocalism -ε- whereas this mark is absent
from the aorist. As we shall see presently, Cantineau would disagree with the
following critique since it will be made on semantic grounds. However, I
believe it is not possible to give an account of morphology and syntax without
any intervening semantic interpretation: for example, using only formal
criteria cannot provide an analysis of the following Latin sentence : animal
gramen pascitur because there is no nominative-accusative
distinction in the neuter and since the word order is free (example from
Martinet 1964:28). On the other hand, Cantineau does not exclude the
methodology of the American linguists who interpret the French masculine
adjectives rond, oblong, droit, gris, lourd, gros as lacking a mark
present in the corresponding feminine forms ronde, oblongue droite, grise,
lourde, grosse : though in principle the mark of a privative
opposition should be the feature added to the unmarked member, it is not at all
impossible to view it as a feature removed from the marked member. But such an
analysis, which admits masculine as the marked member, though most economical
from a morphophonemic point of view is counterintuitive : it does not take
into account everyday uses of the masculine for both genders, e.g. L'homme
est mortel vs. La femme est mortelle where the second example
has not the generalising value of the first; the same holds for a pair like chien/
chienne, where the feminine will never be used to refer to the species.
This raises the question of semantics in the grammar : should semantic
-factors be taken into account in the definition of 'mark'? On this point,
Cantineau's position is very clear : "la définition de la marque doit
rester purement formelle, sur le plan du signifiant. On repoussera, comme
contraire à la méthode, toute définition sémantique dans laquelle la marque
serait cherchée sur le plan du signifié" (Cantineau 1952:29). This is, of
course, in accordance with the general presupposition made by twentieth-century
linguists that language should be described in formal terms and is a major
characteristic of American descriptive linguistics, though it is wrongly
assumed that Bloomfield rejected meaning in favour of a purely formal analysis
(Bloomfield 1935:ch.9); this trend is most evidenced in the work of Z. H.
Harris, e.g. "morphemes are not distinguished directly on the basis of
their meanings or meaning differences, but by the results of distributional
operations upon the data of linguistics"(Harris 1960 [=1951]: 363),
though, even there, meaning is not completely excluded : "In determining
the morphemes of a particular language, linguists use, in addition to
distributional criteria, also (in varying degrees) criteria of meaning
difference. In exact descriptive linguistic work, however, such considerations
of meaning can only be used heuristically, as a source of hints, and the
determining criteria will always have to be stated in distributional
terms" (Harris 1960:365, footnote 6). Judging by the number of references
to works of Harris, Cantineau was well aware of this position though 'Les
oppositions significatives' does not yield any internal evidence of Cantineau's
having read Methods in Structural Linguistics (published one year
earlier). In any case, it is not possible to exclude meaning completely and one
has to admit meaning as a criterion when faced with choosing between two
competing analyses, as in the example already given of gender in French.
Moreover, if the mark can be seen
either negatively or positively, this leads to the ultimate consequence (noted
by Sánchez Ruipérez 1953:7) that it is no longer possible to identify the
marked term only on the level of the signifier, i.e. by formal means, a
consequence certainly not realised by Cantineau.
Cantineau also uses the
phonological notion of equipollent opposition defined here as an opposition
between two equivalent members, i. e. both characterised by the presence of a
feature; he adds that these are the most frequent oppositions, an assertion which
seems strange when one considers the examples given : Engl. foot/feet,
goose/geese, German sie brechen/sie brachen. If one were to
introduce semantic criteria, one would come to the conclusion that there is a
correlation of privative opposition in the following pairs, each pair being
proportional with one another: Engl. book/books, table/tables, tooth/teeth,
German sie lieben/sie liebten, sie brechen/ sie brachen. The
intuition of any native speaker will be that tooth and teeth
stand in the same relation to one another as book and books. In
other words, Cantineau's analysis does not reflect the native speakers'
judgement about the working of their own language, though it is only fair to
add that this kind. of structuralism is not intended to give a model of a
native speaker's competence. In any case, one is led to question the necessity
of using equipollent oppositions when dealing with higher linguistic levels;
Cantineau's position may well stem from a misunderstanding of the following
passage in the Grundzüge :"Les oppositions équipollentes
sont dans chaque système les plus nombreuses" (Trubetzkoy 1976:77), where
it is not clear whether Trubetzkoy refers only to phonological systems or to
linguistic (or even semiologic) systems in general. In this connection, it is
worth noting that Martín Sánchez Ruipérez does not use this concept in his
analysis of the Greek verb.
Cantineau's concept of
neutralisation is similar with the one Jakobson employs in "Zur Struktur
des russischen Verbums" : an opposition is neutralised when its two
signs have the same signifier though the signifieds are different, e. g. there
is no number mark in the following pair in (spoken) French : il
mange/ils mangent. So, implicitly, Cantineau tacitly accepts Jakobson's
interpretation of neutralisation (cf. supra).
Cantineau concludes :
"On voit [...] que la plupart des problèmes de grammaire peuvent être
traités par la méthode des oppositions. Celle-ci est une méthode générale de
classement formel. C'est par hasard qu'elle a été appliquée pour la première
fois aux sons du langage. Elle permet d'étudier d'une façon plus approfondie
une partie quelconque de la langue — de même que bien d'autres problèmes
concrets" (Cantineau 1952:40).
The most thorough attempt to
apply the Prague School phonological formalism to other fields of linguistics
is probably Estructura del sistema de aspectos y tiempos del verbo griego
antiguo, análisis funcional sincrónico (1954), by Martín Sánchez Ruipérez,
professor of classics at the University of Salamanca (Spain) (3). The goal here
is the same as for Cantineau : to apply the methods used in phonology,
since they are of general value (Sánchez Ruipérez 1954:6 and 10). But such a
classification will not take into account the signified : an opposition of
signs is impossible without a corresponding opposition of signifieds whereas,
on the contrary, an opposition of signifieds is possible even without a
corresponding opposition of signifiers; in an article on the same subject
written one year earlier, Sánchez Ruipérez says that "... the
neutralization of morphological oppositions takes place also on the level of
the signifié" (Sánchez Ruipérez 1953: 244). This implies furthermore that
"the determining factor of the neutralization must be of semantic, not of
phonic, value" (ibid.:24-5). This is a major difference from the
view taken by Cantineau and, ultimately, this position is in accordance with
the first major work of the Prague School on verb, Jakobson 1932.
Every feature distinguishing a
sign at the level of the signified is called 'noción pertinente'; 'sentido' or
sense applies to a value ('noción pertinente') realised in 'la parole'. This
distinction does not appear in Jakobson 1932 nor Cantineau 1952.
Sánchez Ruipérez's treatment of
isolated and proportional oppositions is the same as Cantineau's : the
former pertains to the domain of the lexicon, the latter to the grammar. A
grammatical opposition established, at the level of the signifier, by means of
morphemes (which are defined as the signifiers of grammatical categories
within a word) is called a morphological opposition (Sánchez Ruipérez
1954:11-12).
Privative morphological
oppositions have a special character, different from privative phonological
oppositions, a fact already noted by Jakobson 1932. This is due to their being
an opposition of signifiers, and not only signifieds. A simple privative opposition
will be represented by the formula
Ax
/ A
where A is a semanteme (or
lexeme) and x a morpheme. The marked member Ax expresses the notion of the
opposition shown by the morpheme (positive value). The unmarked member
possesses a double function : as unmarked, A remains indifferent to the
distinctive notion of Ax (neutral value); but as the term opposed to Ax, A can
also express the negation or the absence of the notion x (negative value) (4).
Sánchez Ruipérez (p. 17) adds that this is a significant difference
from Jakobson 1932 : Jakobson says that the unmarked term does not mention
the presence nor the absence of a given feature whereas Sánchez Ruipérez
assigns to it two values, neutral and negative. Sánchez Ruipérez's position is
justified empirically in his article on the neutral aspect of present
indicative in classical Greek (1953).
Taking as an example the case of
aspect in Greek, this conception of privative opposition parallels the analysis
given by Martinet of the phonemes /t/, /d/, /n/ :
(Sánchez Ruipérez 1953:242; the
difference from the scheme given supra is worth noting).
This means that the perfect is,
as far as aspect is concerned, in opposition to the present-aorist block in
that it expresses "la acción verbal después de su término"
(p. 47), e.g. νενόσηκα "at a given moment, I fell ill and I am still
ill". In contradistinction, both aorist and present express action in
se (p. 45). By their neutral value as unmarked members in that
opposition, present and aorist can be used instead of perfect: for example, in
Herodotus IV 190 θάπτουσι δὲ τοὺς ἀποθνήσκοντας οἱ νομάδες the
present participle (underlined) is used instead of the perfect, though the
meaning is clearly that they bury the dead not the dying. There is a similar
privative opposition between present (marked) and aorist (unmarked) within the
unmarked member, non-perfect.
A gradual opposition is
introduced to explain the values of the Greek moods but it is not developed
further since the book is primarily concerned with tense and aspect
(p. 15, especially footnote 1). In this respect, subjunctive and optative
are differentiated only in the intensity with which they express the notion of
mood. But this treatment should also include the imperative; one would then be
led to posit objective expression of reality vs. subjective disposition of
speaker, this last member being composed of a gradual opposition :
imperative — subjunctive — optative, each term being a greater distanciation
from the reality expressed by the lexeme (this is tentatively suggested in
order to include the imperative. but would need to be developed and illustrated
with examples). In phonology, it is theoretically possible to reinterpret a
gradual opposition as a privative one, for example the opposition u/o as being
close/non-close (depending on the phonological system described, cf. Trubetzkoy
1976:79) but the same is not true for morphological oppositions, since both
members have a positive value whereas, if it were a privative opposition, one
of the members would have a zero-value with its associated two uses already
discussed.
Finally, contrary to Cantineau' s
opinion, no morphological equipollent opposition is introduced by Sánchez
Ruipérez : they are excluded on a semantic basis : "en una
hipotética oposición morfológica equipolente, las nociones expresadas por cada
uno de los términos, no siendo ni grados distintos: ni la afirmación o negación
de una misma noción, serían valores independientes unos de otros, de tal modo
que, dado uno, sería imposible conocer cuál es el otro o cuáles son los otros,
contradiciendo así el carácter que debe tener toda oposición gramatical
significativa" (p. 16).
This has the result that, of the
three types of phonological oppositions defined by Trubetzkoy, only two seem to
apply at higher linguistic levels.
As opposed to Cantineau, Sánchez
Ruipérez, by his use of semantic criteria in analysing morphological
oppositions, is in direct filiation from the classical theses of the Prague
School, e.g. Pos 1939:75 : "L'opposition en elle-même et dégagée de
tout facteur matériel, est de nature éminemment logique : c'est une
relation qui ne se constate pas, mais qui se pense. Les opposés sont deux, mais
d'une façon particulière; leur dualité n'a pas le caractère indéterminé et
contingent de deux objets arbitrairement réunis par la pensée. La particularité
consiste en ce qu'étant donné l'un, la pensée déduit l'autre, ce qui n'est pas
le cas de la dualité contingente."
Conclusion
In the early days of the Prague
School it was held that the system of a language should be uncovered by the
linguist since it is pre-existing, in other words the linguist, with the help
of his classificatory tools, does not put things into order but only reveals an
order already present.
For phonological description,
Trubetzkoy devised a kind of formalism which afterwards came to be applied to
morphology, but never to the same extent; this use of formalism is part of a
trend in modern linguistics which ultimately culminates in the use of
mathematical devices. The system of (privative) oppositions in morphology is
characterised by its binarism, a feature best exemplified in Jakobson's
works : given a system of the following type
____A____
B (b - c)
A is in opposition to B (which
stands for b and c as a whole) and within B, b is in opposition to c. Of the
three kinds of oppositions postulated by Trubetzkoy in Grunzüge, only
two, privative and gradual oppositions, seem workable at higher
linguistic levels, or at least in morphology. The third, equipollent
opposition, has been rejected on semantic grounds, in accordance with the
practice of the first Prague linguists who always gave equal importance to form
and meaning.
Footnotes
1. It should be added here that
the difference between morphology and syntax is somewhat attenuated in the
Prague movement : "According to the Prague functionalists morphology
is concerned with the analysis of the word, whereas syntax is mainly the
analysis of the sentence into its constituent relationships (e.g. subject —
predicate, etc.). In contradistinction to the views of the former linguists,
the Prague School holds that morphology and syntax cannot be linguistically
contrasted to each other as two disciplines concerned with 'parole' and
'langue' respectively, because even syntax deals not only with 'parole' but
also with 'langue', in attempting to discover normothetic laws, whose
individual actualizations take place in utterances" (Vachek 1960:50, s.v.
morphologie et syntaxe).
2. The notion of phoneme itself
has evolved since the early days of the Prague School when the phonemes were
defined by Trubetzkoy and Jakobson as "des images acoustico-motrices
les plus simples et significatives dans une langue donnée" (First Congress
of Slavicists, 1929; also TCLP 1, 1929, 10-11), terms which are reminiscent of
Baudouin de Courtenay's "Lautvorstellung". This psychologistic
approach was abandoned in the "Projet de terminologie phonologique
standardisée", TCLP 4., 1931, 309-323, for a definition as a phonological
unit not dissociable into smaller and simpler (and Trubetzleoy will add
later : successive) phonological units (this does not take into account
the notion of distinctive feature.) For the history of the concept of phoneme,
see Trubetzkoy 1976: 36 ff., esp. 41-46 and Vachek 1966, 43-50.
3. Most of his data come from
E. Schwyzer's Griechische Grammatik (II/ Syntax und
syntaktische Stilistik).
4. "En el término no
caracterizado de una oposición morfológica privativa, junto al valor neutro o
de indiferencia a la noción distintiva, el signo posee el valor negativo consistente en la indicación de la ausencia o
negación de la noción básica" (Sánchez Ruipérez 1954: 18).
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