Started: I've got a long history with this book (see below), but it first popped up on my "Currently Reading List" in February 2017--before I began my "Started" and "Finished" posts.
Finished: December 15, 2020
My History With This Book / Why I Read This Book
This book had been sitting on my shelf for years before I finally got around to reading it.
I originally ordered this book off of Amazon way back in 2009. At that time, I had been accepted to the University of Melbourne to study Applied Linguistics, but I hadn't yet left to start my course. I had never studied linguistics before, and I wanted to do some background reading before I started the course. But, not having the background in linguistics, I was also nervous about starting with anything too technical. So I ordered three books off of Amazon with the idea of gradually easing myself into the subject matter. The idea is that the first book would be a popular book that overlapped with linguistics in some way, the second book would be more focused on linguistics but still written for a popular audience, and the third book would be a proper linguistics textbook, but one that was at the introductory level. So I ordered Me Talk Pretty One Day by David Sedaris, The Mother Tongue by Bill Bryson, and, lastly, Chomsky's Universal Grammar: An Introduction.
I - had - long - been - a - devotee - of - Chomsky's - political - work, but (like a lot of people) only vaguely knew about Chomsky's linguistic theories. So after having read Chomsky's political works for so long, I thought it would be interesting to find out what his linguistic theories actually were. The book was titled "An Introduction" and so, I naively thought, it would be aimed at the non-technical reader--a nice little way for me to get a general introduction to Chomsky's linguistics so that I could sound intelligent at cocktail parties.
...and then the book arrived in the mail, I took one look at it, and immediately realized it was beyond my current comprehension level. (This is the problem with ordering a book sight unseen off of Amazon. I thought I was getting a friendly little introductory book, and I got a technical graduate level textbook.)
To illustrate this, I'll quote a paragraph at random. Now, granted I am taking this out of context, but this will give you a general idea of the readability of this book. Imagine flipping through the book and coming across paragraphs like this:
The question now arises of how an element can avoid having a governing category. This is the central role of government in unifying Binding Theory and the principle that PRO must be ungoverned. Recall that the governing category is partly defined by the presence of a governor in that it may be defined as the smallest clause which contains both the pronoun and its governor. Therefore, an element will fail to have a governing category whenever it fails to be governed; the fact that PRO must be ungoverned is derived from the assumption that it is a pronominal anaphor which therefore must not have a governing category. (p.255)
From page 346. Granted this is the appendix (not the main text). But still, right? |
But, if anyone else out there is looking for a nice little non-technical introduction to Chomsky's theories so you can sound intelligent at cocktail parties (as I once was), that book is out there, as I later discovered. It's called The Language Instinct by Steven Pinker and, after shelving Chomsky's Universal Grammar: An Introduction, I had the good fortune to stumble upon The Language Instinct shortly before starting my course. And since then, the knowledge that I got from The Language Instinct has been more than sufficient to keep me up to speed in any bar room conversation about Chomsky's universal grammar.
...but, over the past 10 years, Chomsky's Universal Grammar: An Introduction has stayed on my bookshelf. I've kept it in my suitcase as I've moved from America to Australia to Cambodia and then to Vietnam. And I've kept meaning to get around to reading it one day.
You see, when I decided to spend the time and money on a Master's Degree in Applied Linguistics, I was officially acknowledging that linguistics was now my career path. Previously I had always considered myself a history guy, and TESOL (*1)was just something I was doing until I found a more permanent career. But now, I was making a commitment to educate myself about all things linguistics.
Chomsky's Universal Grammar: An Introduction was too far above my current level, it's true, but the solution was then to start reading some basic linguistics books until I worked my way up to a level at which I was ready for Chomsky's Universal Grammar: An Introduction.
To further explain my motivations, I suppose I should also talk about how useful knowledge of Chomsky's Universal Grammar is for the TESOL teacher--or at least my perception of how useful it would be. Although these abstract linguistic theories have very little impact on the day-to-day classroom, most books on Second Language Acquisition do talk about Chomsky. Chomsky gets at least a brief mention in almost all the books I've read on TESOL. Some books, for example, How Languages are Learned and Second Language Learning Theories, both contain several pages talking about Chomsky's theories. In fact, according to many of these books, the field of Second Language Acquisition got its start when Chomsky's theories of Universal Grammar was first applied to the interlanguage of language learners in the 1970s. (Before then, Second Language Acquisition did not exist as its own separate academic discipline.)
Scott Thornbury (famous for - multiple - TESOL - methodology - books) will occasionally write about Chomsky's theories on his blog. Stephen Krashen (the most influential author in TESOL during the 1980s) was famously influenced by Chomsky's theories. Longman Dictionary of Language Teaching and Applied Linguistics contains several entries related to some of the more technical aspects Chomskyan grammar (things like theta-criterion or government). Et cetera.
In other words, I got the impression that if you wanted to be taken seriously in the world of TESOL, you had to have at least some familiarity with Chomsky's theories. It may not matter much to the humble classroom teacher, but if you had ambitions to advance in the TESOL world, it seemed like something all the smart people knew.
And (and here I admit to my vanity) I wanted to be one of the smart people. I wanted to be in the club of people who have read and understood Chomsky's theories.
I was also influenced by the fact that I had long regarded Chomsky as my hero because of his political work. This is silly, of course, because one need not subject themselves to Chomsky's linguistic writings in order to appreciate his political work. (Chomsky himself has said on numerous occasions that there is no connection between the two.) But after so many years of obsessing over Chomsky's political work, it just seemed appropriate to get more familiar with his linguistic theories. I know, it's a stupid reason to slog my way through a book like this, but there it is. (*2)
All that, plus I thought that because this book was heavy on technical grammar, reading it might help my own declarative knowledge of English grammar rules (*3). (Throughout my career as an English teacher, I've been on a never-ending-quest to be able to answer all the grammar questions my students have.)
Eventually I decided that I probably was never going to get to a point where I felt confident reading this book. I should either just take the plunge, and start reading, or get rid of it. So I decided to take the plunge.
My decision to start reading this book was also influenced by a blogpost that Freddie deBoer wrote on reading a few years ago. He mentioned that it's a good idea to be reading several books at once, and at least one book should be something above your current level. How else are you going to improve if you don't start trying stuff above your current level? Well, I thought, this Chomsky book is definitely above my current level--this will fit that criteria nicely (*5)
So, around February 2017, I finally started reading this book.
I was pleasantly surprised to find that the first couple chapters were actually surprising readable. I had been intimidated by this book for so long, but had I been needlessly intimidated?
But after making a decent start on this book, and getting about 60 pages in or so, I got distracted by other things.
I made a trip back home to America in the spring of 2017 in which I took the opportunity to visit bookstores and load up on a - bunch - of - new - books, which were more interesting and readable and quickly diverted my attention. (Including another book on Chomsky's linguistic theories--The Kingdom of Speech by Tom Wolfe--which was much stupider than Chomsky's Universal Grammar: An Introduction, but also way more readable and way more entertaining.)
Then, once I got back to Vietnam, I found it hard to make time for this book, since I was juggling two different bookclubs--one for general fiction, and one for professional development. In fact, for the next couple years, my professional development reading time was taken up the professional development bookclub, which was exclusively focused on reading for the DELTA.
So I started reading this book again in the spring of 2020. (Enough time had passed that I just decided to go back to the beginning.)
This chapter gives an overview of principles and parameters theory and an informal presentation of some key areas; chapter 3 looks at general ideas of language acquisition within the framework suggested in this chapter. Chapters 4-8 give a fuller, more technical account of the extended GB/Barriers framework. Non-technical readers can then get some concept of what the theory is about by reading chapters 1-3; specialists can persevere through to chapter 8; the more dedicated can attempt the latest theory, Minimalism in chapter 9. (from pages 42-43. The added emphasis on certain words is my own.)
specialists...dedicated...okay, so this is pretty much just saying that if you're not already a linguistics graduate student, you're not going to understand chapters 4 to 8, and especially chapter 9, right? Well, at least the authors are giving you fair warning. (*7)
I wrote in the margins on page 43, "Am I in trouble?" As it turned out: yes, yes I was.
Chapter 6 (Movement and Case Theory) had whole paragraphs where I didn't understand anything. On page 202, I wrote in the margins next to the second paragraph "I may be reaching my limits in this book. I'm not understanding any of this." (*8) But those few paragraphs aside, I felt like I was largely able to understand the bulk of the chapter.
But by Chapter 7 (Government and Other Developments), the number of paragraphs I didn't understand were growing in number. At the bottom of page 255, I wrote in the margins "At this point, I've largely given up trying to understand". On page 262, I wrote next to the first paragraph, "I don't understand." Next to the second paragraph on the same page I wrote, "I don't understand. I've read this multiple times. I have a headache." (*9)
Perhaps I was just too stupid to comprehend a book like this.
I went to the school library to look for the thickest, most thorough grammar I could find. And I found The Grammar Book: An ESL/EFL Teacher's Course by Marianne Celce-Murcia and Diane Larsen-Freeman.
Plus, what was the point? If I could forget so much in just a couple months, then what would my memory be like in 5 years? Over the passage of time, I retain in my long term memory so little of what I read. It's frustrating, but it's also a part of being human. In 5 years time, I was not going to be able to talk intelligently about case theory and government and theta theory. I could barely remember it after 2 months.
Were there really a lot of mistakes in this book? Well, who knows? On the one hand, my experience with textbooks in general is that they routinely go to press with a lot of minor slips in them (for whatever reason). So it's not inconceivable that there are mistakes in this book. On the other hand, I've already admitted that this book was above my comprehension level. So who am I to say that there were mistakes? Maybe I just wasn't understanding the explanation.
For example, in my review of Introducing Chomsky by John Maher and Judy Groves, I complained that their explanation of the difference between E-Language and I-Language was incomprehensible.
Isn't that fascinating? So on a conscious level, of course, you're not thinking about grammar or traces, you're just trying to ask a simple question. But on a subconscious level, your language system is busy moving things around and keeping track of the traces without you even realizing it.
The edition I have is the second edition, published in 1996. (The first edition was published in 1988). The edition I read is not the most current edition, because there was a third edition published in 2007.
(I don't believe I was aware there were multiple editions of this book when I ordered it off of Amazon years ago. Either way, I'm not particularly bothered that I don't have the most current edition, because I'm not reading this book for the test. I just wanted to dip my toes into the theory and see what Chomskyan Linguistics was all about.)
A claim that is often made--both from Chomsky's supporters and his detractors--is that Chomsky's linguistic writing is difficult to understand for people who are not already experts in the field, so presumably that's one reason that Cook and Newson take it upon themselves to explain Chomsky. But the other thing that quickly becomes apparent from this book is that "Chomsky's Universal Grammar" is not all about Chomsky alone. Rather, this is the work of a whole school of linguists working within Chomsky's Universal Grammar framework, and Cook and Newson are citing other linguists just as frequently as they're citing Chomsky
This may or may not be true (see Chomsky's detractors: here and here ), but it's a simple enough concept to understand, even for the lay person. This philosophical part covers roughly page 1-132 of the book.
Where the book gets complicated is in the effort to map out exactly what this universal grammar is--complete with sentence trees, and efforts to define what the rules for movement. This is roughly pages 133-344 of the book.
And speaking of changes to the theory, the most recent development (at least at the time of the second edition) was the Minimalist Program. According to the authors' introduction, co-author Mark Newson was brought onboard specifically because of his expertise on the Minimalist Program. (The first edition was written by V.J. Cook alone, but V.J. Cook didn't feel confident describing the Minimalist Program, so Mark Newson was brought in for the second edition.)
The Minimalist Program was Chomsky's effort to reduce all the principles of Universal Grammar to the fewest number of explanatory principles--it was chapter 9 of this book, and to be perfectly honest I understood very little of it, so I won't make any more comments about it here.
Case Theory: the Case FilterCase Filter: 'Every phonetically realised NP must be assigned (abstract) Case' (Chomsky, 1986a, p.74)Gloss: This therefore eliminates as possible surface structures any sentence with an NP that has not received abstract Case, thus motivating NP-movements such as the passive to avoid NPs occurring in Caseless positions.Visibility: assigning Case to an NP makes it 'visible' so it can be θ-marked, making the Case Filter fall within the Principle of Full Interpretation.
So, that's complete gibberish, right? But, I would then go back and read the section, and then after I had actually read the section, then I could actually make sense of the summary at the end. (At least, until the middle of chapter 7, when my comprehension started breaking down completely. But for the first 6 and a half chapters I could usually make sense of it.)
(*1) TESOL: Same disclaimer I've made previously on this blog--there are so many competing acronyms to describe the job of teaching English: TESOL, ELT, ESL, TEFL, TESL, etc. I'm just going to pick one for the sake of this review.
(*2) On The Folly of Wanting to Know More About Chomsky's Linguistic Theories Because of My Admiration for His Political Work: It's a stupid reason, but I suspect I'm in good company on this. I think a lot of people are curious about Chomsky's linguistic theories because of their interest in his political writings. In fact it's often been speculated (particularly by Chomsky's critics) that admiration for his political work has been one of the reasons he has maintained somewhat of a cult status in linguistics--Tom Wolfe was of this opinion in The Kingdom of Speech.
(*3) On Thinking that this Book Would Improve my Knowledge of English Grammar Rules: Although, spoiler alert, it didn't help me with my grammar knowledge at all. At least nothing I can ever use in the ESL classroom. The level of abstraction that this book deals with is not at all useful for the kinds of questions my students have about English grammar.
(*4) On All the Linguistics and TESOL Books I've Read over the Last 10 Years: Looking over the list of all the linguistic books I've read in the past 10 years, it's a decent sized list, but I still can't help feeling it's not as big a list as it should be. Especially since, as I've mentioned, I've been trying to become an expert in this field since doing my Masters. Why haven't I read more?
The reasons for this are 2-fold. One reason is that I'm not very good at disciplining myself and reading more (as I lament every year). The second reason is that since the books I read for professional development are not inherently interesting for me to read, I'm relying purely on a sense of duty or external motivation to get through these books, and this motivation comes and goes. I'll have periods when I'll feel motivated to read linguistic books, and periods when I just read for pleasure.
No doubt, if I had been a more disciplined person over the past 10 years, I'd be a lot more knowledgeable about my field now, and perhaps this would have lead to more professional advancement.
(*5) On Freddie deBoer's Blogpost Encouraging People to Try to Read Above Their Current Level: I can't give you the link because Freddie deBoer has since deleted his old blog.
By the way, there's a contrary opinion by Steve Donoghue (in one of his many booktube videos) in which he says that you should choose books to read that are at your level, and you don't get any points for trying to read something more advanced than you're ready for. (I can't find the link for that video either. Steve Donoghue cranks out so many videos every week, I can't possibly search through his archive to remember which video he said it on. But it was one of them.) After my experience grinding my way through this Chomsky book, in which I understood very little of the second half of the book and didn't enjoy it at all, I think I've gone over to the side of Steve Donoghue on this question--it's better to try to read at your level.
(*6) On all the Reasons It Took Me So Long to Finish This Book: In my recent review of Don Quixote, I apologized for having taken 3 years to finish the book, and gave a long list of excuses as to why it's been difficult to find time to read the past 3 years. All of those excuses apply equally to Chomsky's Universal Grammar: An Introduction as well.
The back cover contains a blurb by Steven Franks of Indiana University:
"Cook and Newsom have written an extremely clear and highly comprehensible introduction to current syntactic theory. This text makes accessible many subtleties of linguistic argumentation, and explains in plain English the reasoning involved..."
This book is intended chiefly as an introduction for those who want to have a broad overview of the theory with sufficient detail to see how its main concepts work, rather than for those who are specialist students of syntax, for whom technical introductions such as Haegeman (1994) and Ouhalla (1994) are more appropriate. (from page 1)...and yet, on page 42, they warn that non-technical readers should only read chapters 1-3, and only specialists can continue to chapters 4-8. So which is it?
(*8) The Paragraph I couldn't understand on page 202: I suppose I should probably give the paragraph so that you know what I'm talking about, huh?
But how does this make wh-items move to the specifier of CP? To explain this, we need to introduce two mechanisms. The first may be called the Wh-Criterion, after Rizzi (1991), which states:all [+Wh] complementizers must contain a [+Wh] element(This is not in fact Rizzi's own formulation of the Wh-Criterion, but is more similar to a principle proposed by Aoun et al. (1981).) While this is obviously satisfied when there is a [+Wh] complementizer such as whether in head position, it does raise the problem of how the Wh-Crition can be satisfied by wh-movment, which moves a wh-word into the specifier of CP, not the head position. This is where the second mechanism comes in, namely specifier-head agreement, abbreviated to spec/head agreement. This accounts for a set of phenomena where there is agreement between the head of a phrase X and the element which occupies the specifier of that phrase, specifier of XP. For example, the subject of a finite clause sits in the specifier position of AGRP and it 'agrees' with the head of AGR in that they must have the same nominal features of person, number and gender. If this relationship between specifier and head is universal and so applicable to all phrases, the specifier of CP will also agree with the head C in that both will share the [+-Wh] feature. Now, if a wh-item moves into a [+Wh] specifier of CP, this will be enough to satisfy the Wh-Criterion as, although the complementizer position itself may not contain a [+Wh] element, the specifier with which it agrees does contain such an element. So the Wh-Criterion is satisfied either by the head complementizer of the CP having [+Wh] or by the [+Wh] of the specifier of CP migrating to the head via spec/head agreement. (p.202--italics and bold in the original)
Returning to the cases of movement from subject position, as this position is not governed by a lexical head, the question is what properly governs traces here? Chomsky (1981a) assumed that the notion of governor is extended in this case to include elements which are co-indexed with the governee and that this extension of governor is also relevant for proper government. Thus a trace will be properly governed, in this instance, if it is governed by an element that it is co-indexed with, i.e. the moved element or one of the other traces left behind by the moved element. This relationship is often called antecedent government and is contrasted with head government.
This clearly helps us to account for the that-trace phenomenon. In the absence of a that complementizer, the trace in the specifier of CP properly governs a trace in subject position. However, when there is a complementizer present, this must interfere with the process of antecedent government, thus making the original trace non-properly governed and in violation of the ECP. Intuitively we can view the situation from the notion that government should be a unique relationship such that if one element governs another, then the governed element should not also be governed by anything else. The appearance of the complementizer blocks antecedent government because it adds a nearer potential governor (the complementizer) but, as this is not a proper governor, the original trace will violate the ECP. (The first 2 paragraphs from age 262. Bold and italics in the original)
(*10) On not Appreciating How Much Free Time I had Back in July 2020: The other thing I started back in July 2020 was trying to learn multiple languages on Duolingo. I had been studying Vietnamese, but I decided that I couldn't really hope to truly understand Chomsky's Universal Grammar unless I had a working knowledge of several different languages. So I started reviewing Japanese on Duolingo, trying to go back to my high school Latin, and adding in French, Spanish and even German. At the time, I thought this would be my new normal. (That is, I thought I would keep it going for many years, and then in 10 years time I could be a multi-lingual guy.) But once I got busy again, I had to drop trying to do everything on Duolingo.
(*11) On Temporarily Shelving The Grammar Book: I haven't abandoned it. It's still listed in my Currently Reading column. But I've temporarily shelved it until I can finish some other books, and then I'll come back to it.
(*12) On Just Trying to Plow through the Book and Finish in in November 2020: The other disadvantage that I was operating under was that I was constantly sleep deprived during this period. I was teaching a lot of hours spread out over 3 jobs. I was working the morning shift, so I was up early every morning. And I had a fussy toddler who didn't want to go to bed on time at home. So I seldom got a full night's sleep. And this affected how I engaged with the book. I'm not sure it affected how much I was understanding it. (I wasn't understanding it even before I became sleep deprived.) But it definitely affected how willing I was to try to concentrate on and wrestle with paragraphs I wasn't understanding. I just didn't have the energy for it.
Again, I thought about delaying this book until I had more free time, but... when was I ever going to have more free time? This is my life. I'm middle-aged, I have a child to take care of, and I have to earn money at work. There was nothing for it but to just keep struggling and trying to finish the book off, even if I wasn't understanding much of the last chapters.
(*13) On Re-reading this Book: So between reading it, and now trying to re-read it, I've been carrying this book around with me for over a year at this point. And I should mention it's beginning to cause me some embarrassment at work. At first, everyone was very impressed that I was trying to tackle Chomsky's grammar. And I had to constantly tell people, "Well, yes, it is true that I'm reading this book. But I'm actually understanding very little of it." And then I had to go on to explain that I am actually a person of very limited intelligence, and that this book is much too intellectual for me, etc.
["Well if it's any consolation," one of my colleagues told me over lunch, "That kind of book will be of absolutely no help to you in the ESL classroom anyway." And of course he's absolutely right.]
Now that's it's been over a year and I'm still carrying this book around with me, I'm starting to get questions about what I'm still doing with this book. I've started trying to hide the book when I take it down to the coffee shop at lunch break.
(*14) Examples of When I Thought the Wrong Word had been Written by Mistake: There were actually several of these, but here's one example from page 245:
In the case of ECM structures, where there is no CP to prevent government of the subject from outside the clause, the Verb will indeed be able to assign the Accusative Case to the subject.
In the margins, I wrote: "prevent? It should be allow, no?
Now, I realize I took this all completely out of context, and so no one has a chance of judging whether or not I'm write without reading the whole page. But I mention this to illustrate the type of thing I mean. I could have sworn that the above sentence should have read "allow government" instead of "prevent government". But is this a typo? Or am I just too stupid to understand this book?
(*15) I couldn't find any negative reviews: That is to say, I couldn't find any negative reviews on stylistic grounds. There were some anti-Chomskyans who objected to its content. Such as this guy here:
A load of bunk, Chomsky made shit up as he went along. Nobody is hardwired with universal grammar. In fact, all humans have the intrinsic need to communicate, which in turn is shaped by their linguistic environment. Simply put, people want to communicate and they will always find a way to do so regardless. Doubt my point? Go to Thailand and watch a Thai person with the knowledge of only 10 English words get their point across to a Western tourist.
Oh man... Could it be any more obvious that this guy did not even bother reading the book? Well, welcome to Internet commentary!
(*16) I'm not that smart: You know, I've been out of school for so long, I think I've forgotten that I was never a super-star student. I was a good student--a solid B+ student. But I was never one of the superstars.
I did very well in history. (I got As in history). And I did well in literature classes--at least I did well in literature back in high school when literature was about books with straightforward simple narratives. (I did less well in college when I had to struggle with analyzing difficult texts.) But science was always my worst subject--my grades in science were usually B/B-.
In the years since I finished school, when I've been able to pursue my own interests at my own pace, I've cultivated an image of myself as an intellectual. But the truth is, I was always a B student.
Weekly Reading Vlogs:
April 11, 2021 Chomsky's Universal Grammar: An Introduction 0-78 pages
April 18, 2021 Chomsky's Universal Grammar: An Introduction p.78-90
April 25, 2021 Chomsky's Universal Grammar: An Introduction p.90-116
May 2, 2021 Chomsky's Universal Grammar: An Introduction p.116-118
Video Review (Playlist HERE)
Video Review HERE and embedded below:
Link of the Day
Language Design - Noam Chomsky / Serious Science
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