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1 111 2 121 3 125
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14 00 211 15 30 211
1 1 122 124
123 1 1
1 2
68
2015 10 24 25
1 10 24
1 1
13 00
13 30 14 10
1 111 1. Under Western Eyes
2. The Collector
2 121 1.
2.
3 125 1. Adjunction LF
2. A Contrastive Study of Negative Polarity Items between Chinese and English The Case of renhe and any WANG JINDAN
15 17 30
1 111
2 121
3 125
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840-8502 1 TEL 0952-40-2911 → 1
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2 10 25 9 20 1
10 10 40 11 20 12 12 40
1 111
1.
2.
3.
4.
5. Records of Early English Drama
2 121
1. The Haunted Man
2.
3. Wild Irish and Gentle English Stereotypical Imagery in Grace Stebbing’s “Wild Kathleen, or Both Sides
of the Channel” Nikolay Gyulemetov
4. 18
5.
3 125 1.
2. Tim O’Brien If I Die in a Combat Zone The Things They Carried
3.
4. Karen Tei Yamashita
5.
4 129
1.
2. There
3. ―
4.
5.
14 00 211
15 30 211
1 10 24
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1 111
1.
Under Western Eyes
19 20
Joseph Conrad1857-1924 Under Western Eyes 1911 20
Under Western Eyes Razumov Conrad
2.
The Collector
John Fowles The Collector
Jean Baudrillard
Miranda Clegg
Clegg
2 121
1.
196050
1965
1988/
20
1960
/
2.
1986
3 125
1. Adjunction LF
― scopeRaising (Kayne
(1994)) Orphanage (Cinque (2008)) Adjunction (Del Gobbo (2003, 2007))
DP LFCP
Del Gobbo LFillocutionary
force/clause type 2. A Contrastive Study of Negative Polarity Items between Chinese and
English: The Case of renhe and any WANG JINDAN
This study is a tentative research to characterize the syntactic properties of negative polarity items through the observation of the phenomena in Chinese and English, paying attention to the contrast between renhe and any. (1) a. I have*(n't) got any medicine. b. wo *(bu) renshi renhe ren.
I not know any person “I don’t know anybody” (2) a. *Any student did not come to school. b. * renhe xuesheng meiyou wenti.
any student not have questions “No students have questions.”
(3) a. Did you eat anything? b. ni chi *renhe/shenme dongxi le ma?
you eat any/what thing ASP Qu? “Did you eat anything?” There are both similarities and differences between the NPIs in Chinese and English. Although both require negative expressions with a specific syntactic relation as in (1) and (2), renhe cannot be used in questions unlike any, as in (3). In place of renhe, an indefinite wh-phrase shenme is widely. In this study I want to explicate the distribution of renhe and identify its NPI status in light of the minimalist theory. Based on this syntactic study, I want to see whether Chinese has the same structure as English in negative sentences.
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1 111
2016
(1595)
15
(1599)
15
1790 1820
20
20 “John Bull”
“John Bull” 20
2 121
1960
50
1950 Saul Bellow
“I am an American” Augie March
WASP Henderson the Rain King (1959)
100
1960 1950
Javier Moscosotheatrical ―
Hans-Thies Lehmann
Tennessee
Williams Rajiv Joseph Sarah KaneVito Acconci Ron Athey
Ellen Bryson The Transformation of Bartholomew Fortuno Steven Millhauser “The Barnum Museum” Mark Z. Danielewski
House of LeavesEvelyne Ender
3 125
Chomsky (1995)
(phase) (Chomsky (2000, 2001, 2008))
(extraposition)
(labeling algorithm) (Chomsky (2013, 2014))(gerund)
―
(fragment) (free indirect speech/represented speech)
(1) (direct speech)(indirect speech) (free indirect speech/represented speech)
(1) a. The small boy could not understand. He thought, “What is work? Why is my brother
working? What delight comes to a man from working?” (direct speech) b. The small boy could not understand. He asked himself what work was, why his
brother was working and what delight came to a man from working. (indirect speech) c. The small boy could not understand. What was work? Why was his brother working?
What delight came to a man from working? (free indirect speech)
Crnič and Trinh (2009)
(root sentences)(Hiroe (2013, 2014))
2
(1) (1)! I saw a boy yesterday that I didn’t know.
(2)! I saw [DP a boy tCP ] yesterday [CP that I didn’t know].
― ―
(3)! I saw [DP a boy] yesterday [CP that I didn’t know].
(2)
― Internal Merge External Merge
― ―
Chomsky (2013, 2014) Internal Merge External Merge
Merge Merge over MoveMerge
transfer (interpretation) phase(evaluate) Chomsky ― phase
―
Minimalist
GB Abney
(1987) Phase Pires (2006)Phase
― CP ―
Minimalist
(Sentence Fragment)
2 10 25
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1. 2.
1812
3.
‘authority’
3 65 1
4.
(1564 - 1593) (1592)
Vice Devil
5. Records of Early English Drama
REED Records of Early English Drama 16 17
197923 REED
1583
REED
2 121
1. The Haunted Man
Charles Dickens The Haunted Man― Dickens 19
Redlaw Milly2 influence
2. ――
(Thomas Hardy) (Far from the Madding Crowd, 1874)
3. Wild Irish and Gentle English Stereotypical Imagery in Grace Stebbing’s “Wild Kathleen, or Both Sides of the Channel”
Nikolay Gyulemetov
“Wild Kathleen, or Both Sides of the Channel” (published serially in 1881) is a short novel by Grace Stebbing about three young girls in late Victorian England. Throughout the story Kathleen is depicted as a rebel, refusing to conform to the rigid image of a Victorian lady, challenging the rules and getting herself and her friends in trouble. The depiction and development of the characters shows a variety of stereotypical imagery (social, gender, moral and ethnic) about what young girls are and can aspire to be. The purpose of this presentation is to discuss the role and influence of this imagery as part of Stebbing's work as well as its position in the Victorian educational system for young girls.
4. 18 ――
18Max Novak ‘Age of
Disguise’18
19―
5.
3 125 1.
2. Tim O’Brien If I Die in a Combat Zone The Things They Carried
Tim O’Brien If I Die in a Combat Zone 20The Things They Carried 2
O’Brien
Tim O’Brien If I Die in a Combat Zone The Things They Carried
3.
(CE IV 8) (CE IV 14)
(CE XIV 173)
1857
(Nondescript)
4. Karen Tei Yamashita
Karen Tei Yamashita
YamashitaYamashita
Yamashita
5.
4 129 1.
2. There
There 2 (Milsark (1974))
(1)
a. There is a man in the room. b. There exists a man in the park.
(2) There (Rochemont & Culicover (1990)) a. There walked into the bed room a unicorn. b. There crossed her mind a most horrible thought.
bethere (1)
Nakajima (1996) Nishihara (1999)
there
there Rizzi (1997)CP vP (Maeda
(2008))
3. ―
Chomsky (2013, 2014) ―
TP CP
Chomsky (2014) TP CT ―
Wh C φ ― Q ―T wh TP
wh whwh
4.
(1976) (1981) Hinds (1986) (2004, 2009) (2005) (2005)(2014)
natural pathnatural path cf. Langacker (1991)
5.
211
The Great Gatsby Great Expectations “An
Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge” 19741946 1962
26YouTube
1956 1984 Dickens in Japan: Bicentenary Essays (
) 20
Thomas Hardy, The Hand of Ethelberta (Everyman Paperback) Wilkie Collins, Miss or Mrs?, The Haunted Hotel, The Guilty River (Oxford World’s Classics) Norman PageMary Elizabeth Braddon, John Marchmont’s Legacy (Oxford World’s Classics) Norman Page
G. K. Chesterton, Charles Dickens (Wordsworth Editions) Oxford Reader’s Companion to Hardy (Oxford UP) Charles Dickens in Context (Cambridge UP)