Review of:
Iyeiri,
Yoko. 2001.
Negative Constructions in
Middle English.
Kiyushu University Press.
April
2002
(HSL/SHL 2)
Iyeiri does not claim to provide anything but a purely
descriptive account of negative constructions in Middle English, though
her book may well serve as a data source for more theoretical
approaches. Chapter 1 gives an overview of earlier work on negative
constructions and a short description of the ME texts on which the study
is based. Chapter 2, ‘Historical development of ME negative
constructions’, investigates the distribution of the various negators in
ME texts. The ne … not construction is not as robustly
represented in the texts as would be expected on the basis of
‘Jespersen’s Cycle’, which distinguishes the various stages in which the
negative adverb ne declines and not takes over. As the
ne … not construction represents a crucial intermediate stage, it is
puzzling to find it so underrepresented in the data: there is not a
single text in which ne … not is the predominant form of
negation.
Chapter 3, ‘Syntactic varieties of negation’, reports
that ne is found occasionally separated from the finite verb in
ME. This development is perhaps more significant than Iyeiri realizes.
Although it is certainly a ‘minor’ phenomenon in absolute figures, it
clearly shows that ne has become morphologically free at least in
some dialects, which ties in with the development of other ‘Infl’-elements
(most notably infinitival to) which also develops into a free
word in this period. There are also data on the position of not
which may both precede and follow the finite verb, although the former
is more or less restricted to verse, a phenomenon which is plausibly
linked to the verb-final position in subclauses which persists in ME due
to the exigencies of rhyme (p. 49). Not follows here the position
of OE na (as was also noted by Van Kemenade 2000: 69).
Chapter 4, ‘Negative constructions and the nature of the
finite verb’, provides quantitative data on the frequency of ne
as sole negator with the verbs witen, will, be and have.
These verbs are more often found with ne as sole negator than
others. Ne as sole negator also tends to be more frequent with
the other auxiliaries than with lexical verbs. Few texts exhibit both
contracted and uncontracted ne forms: they either contract or do
not contract, which makes it practically impossible to discover what
factors trigger contraction.
Chapter 5, ‘Negative constructions and syntactic
conditions’, investigates the negatives used in a variety of clauses:
interrogative and conditional clauses, that-clauses dependent on
a negative clause and on ‘negative’ verbs like douten ‘to doubt’
and forbeden ‘forbid’, imperative and optative clauses, and the
expletive negation after conjunctions like before, unless and
lest. The findings support the expectation generated by earlier
studies that ne as sole negator is found in non-assertive
contexts which do not require emphatic marking of the negation. When the
conjunction ne ‘nor’ happens to be followed by the finite verb,
in a negative clause, the negator ne is hardly ever present,
probably to avoid the sequence ne ne. Ne as sole negator
is rare with subject-verb inversion (=V2 after topics), a situation
markedly different from interrogatives clauses (=V2 after interrogative
operators) which show the opposite tendency: a greater use of ne
as sole negator. Jack (1978:307) interpreted this difference as the
search for a formal distinction between declaratives and interrogatives;
Iyeiri speculates that rhythm may play a part, although her wording
appears to refer to syntax rather than prosody (‘the use of the adverb
ne which precedes the subject when the order is inverted perhaps
incites the feeling of the existence of some missing elements after the
subject’, p. 115). An appeal to ‘rhythm’ fails to account for the
observed difference between operator and topic inversion, however.
Chapter 6, ‘Multiple negation’, investigates the decrease
of multiple negation in the ME period. The decline of ne is an
important factor here, but the use of and and or instead
of the older ne/nor conjunctions is also relevant, as is the rise
of any and ever. Latin influence, often cited as the cause
of the decline, is less likely to have played a part in ME in view of
Iyeiri’s finding that multiple negation is more frequent in formal than
in informal ME texts.
Chapter 7, ‘Negative contraction’, brings us back to
matters discussed in Chapter 4, and Iyeiri would have done better to
integrate the two chapters. Contraction data show a lot of variation
through space and time, and is further conditioned by certain syntactic
environments. Emphatic contexts where the negation needs to be clearly
marked (i.e. imperatives) tend to yield larger percentages of
uncontracted items. The data confirm to some extent Jack’s claim that
ne + finite verb is particularly unlikely to be contracted in
clause-initial position.
Chapter 8, ‘Summary and conclusions’, is an essential
chapter, as the rationale behind many of the earlier chapters only
becomes clear after reading the conclusions.
Although this work repeats, to some extent, the work done
on negatives by George Jack, to whose memory the book is dedicated,
Iyeiri’s study investigates a larger corpus, and a greater number of
negative items (including never and no), and further
differs from Jack’s in that it includes verse. Much of the added value
of Iyeiri’s study, then, boils down to the differences she finds between
prose and verse, although her overall conclusions largely support those
of Jack. Unfortunately, there is no added value of interpretation or
analysis, whose absence is particularly conspicuous in Chapter 3, as the
various word order phenomena investigated there generate many questions:
has ne ceased to be a verbal clitic, and why? If not
positioned before the finite verb in subclauses in ME verse is a relic
of the older OE order, how to interpret the greater frequency of this
order in eModE? Is the greater frequency of pronominal objects before
not in verse also an OE relic, a reminder of the earlier clitic
status of pronouns?
There are also some flaws in the presentation of
Iyeiri’s findings, such as her failure to provide a clear line of
argument which guides the reader to the why of her many graphs.
The graphs cannot provide their own raison d’être: it is up to
the author to guide the reader to their salient points, which in many
cases become clear only after reading Chapter 8. Important
interpretational issues are often tucked away in footnotes instead of
discussed upfront; an example is the difficulty of disambiguating the
sentential negator not from the constituent negator not
(p. 43, fn 5). Lumping no and ne together requires more
justification than the casual remark ‘No is occasionally used as
an orthographic variant of … ne in ME’ in a footnote on p. 41, in
view of their very different distribution in OE (see Van Kemenade 2000),
especially if we see no separated from the finite verb. Finally,
the at times careless referencing means a lot of extra work for the
reader, who is continually puzzling over what phrases like ‘this
tendency’ may refer back to, or ‘for the same reason as mentioned in
2.1’ (p. 28), which a re-perusal of section 2.1 does nothing to clarify.
Numbering (and glossing and/or translating) the ME examples would also
have made for easier reference, and greater readability.
A lot of hard work has gone into this book, and its
findings are of great interest to anyone working on negation in the
history of English. To my mind it does demonstrate, however, that the
value of quantitative methods for such an important syntactic category
as negation is limited if there is no supporting framework to guide the
research questions. The extra value that a thorough knowledge of the
syntax of negation yields for a coherent account of the development of
negation in English is clear from such recent work as Ingham (2000) or
Van Kemenade (2000), and is ignored at one’s peril.
Bettelou
Los, Dept. of General Linguistics, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. (Contact
the reviewer.)
References:
Jack, G. B. (1978). Negative adverbs in Early Middle
English. English Studies 59: 295-309.
Ingham, Richard (2000). Negation and OV order in Late
Middle English. Journal of Linguistics 36:13-38.
Kemenade,
Ans van (2000). Jespersen's cycle revisited: Formal properties of
grammaticalization.
In: Pintzuk,
Susan, et al.
(eds.)
Diachronic syntax: Models and mechanisms, 51-74. Oxford: OUP. |