The Stone Guest. The Soviet Rediscovery of Formal Linguistics Towards the Early Chomsky

After Stalin’s death, Soviet linguistics seemingly steered in a new direction, enthusiastically adopting mathematical methods within the upsurge of interest in machine translation. This fostered the acceptance of formal models disjointed from the rigid dictates of dialectical materialism and paved...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Vittorio Springfield Tomelleri, Marco Biasio
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Firenze University Press 2022-05-01
Series:Studi Slavistici
Subjects:
Online Access:https://oaj.fupress.net/index.php/ss/article/view/12563
_version_ 1811249092239556608
author Vittorio Springfield Tomelleri
Marco Biasio
author_facet Vittorio Springfield Tomelleri
Marco Biasio
author_sort Vittorio Springfield Tomelleri
collection DOAJ
description After Stalin’s death, Soviet linguistics seemingly steered in a new direction, enthusiastically adopting mathematical methods within the upsurge of interest in machine translation. This fostered the acceptance of formal models disjointed from the rigid dictates of dialectical materialism and paved the way for the rediscovery of the scientific legacy of (post-)structuralist Euroamerican schools. In the eyes of the protagonists of this epistemological change, linguistics seemed to be freed from the traditional methodological constraints imposed by philology and literature. This short-lived yet intense period, however, is characterized by the polyphonic coexistence of several ideas and personalities, whose research activity can be properly understood and evaluated only from a broader historical perspective, encompassing both earlier and later stages, thus substantially curtailing the explanatory power of historical and thematic periodization. The study aims at examining the salient characteristics of the scientific environment surrounding the early critical reception of Noam Chomsky’s Syntactic Structures in the Soviet Union. By tackling specific terminological and epistemological issues, it is argued that the evolution of Soviet linguistics was not defined by abrupt saltational processes, but rather by a constant pendular oscillation which – depending on cultural, political, and historical circumstances – would grant temporary priority to some scientific approaches and orientations at the expense of others.
first_indexed 2024-04-12T15:40:25Z
format Article
id doaj.art-d1e05b82c0e4434392419b03c64e093b
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1824-761X
1824-7601
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-12T15:40:25Z
publishDate 2022-05-01
publisher Firenze University Press
record_format Article
series Studi Slavistici
spelling doaj.art-d1e05b82c0e4434392419b03c64e093b2022-12-22T03:26:50ZengFirenze University PressStudi Slavistici1824-761X1824-76012022-05-0119110.36253/Studi_Slavis-12563The Stone Guest. The Soviet Rediscovery of Formal Linguistics Towards the Early ChomskyVittorio Springfield Tomelleri0Marco Biasio1University of Turin, St. Petersburg UniversityUniversity of Modena and Reggio Emilia After Stalin’s death, Soviet linguistics seemingly steered in a new direction, enthusiastically adopting mathematical methods within the upsurge of interest in machine translation. This fostered the acceptance of formal models disjointed from the rigid dictates of dialectical materialism and paved the way for the rediscovery of the scientific legacy of (post-)structuralist Euroamerican schools. In the eyes of the protagonists of this epistemological change, linguistics seemed to be freed from the traditional methodological constraints imposed by philology and literature. This short-lived yet intense period, however, is characterized by the polyphonic coexistence of several ideas and personalities, whose research activity can be properly understood and evaluated only from a broader historical perspective, encompassing both earlier and later stages, thus substantially curtailing the explanatory power of historical and thematic periodization. The study aims at examining the salient characteristics of the scientific environment surrounding the early critical reception of Noam Chomsky’s Syntactic Structures in the Soviet Union. By tackling specific terminological and epistemological issues, it is argued that the evolution of Soviet linguistics was not defined by abrupt saltational processes, but rather by a constant pendular oscillation which – depending on cultural, political, and historical circumstances – would grant temporary priority to some scientific approaches and orientations at the expense of others. https://oaj.fupress.net/index.php/ss/article/view/12563Soviet UnionLinguisticsFormal MethodsMachine TranslationChomsky
spellingShingle Vittorio Springfield Tomelleri
Marco Biasio
The Stone Guest. The Soviet Rediscovery of Formal Linguistics Towards the Early Chomsky
Studi Slavistici
Soviet Union
Linguistics
Formal Methods
Machine Translation
Chomsky
title The Stone Guest. The Soviet Rediscovery of Formal Linguistics Towards the Early Chomsky
title_full The Stone Guest. The Soviet Rediscovery of Formal Linguistics Towards the Early Chomsky
title_fullStr The Stone Guest. The Soviet Rediscovery of Formal Linguistics Towards the Early Chomsky
title_full_unstemmed The Stone Guest. The Soviet Rediscovery of Formal Linguistics Towards the Early Chomsky
title_short The Stone Guest. The Soviet Rediscovery of Formal Linguistics Towards the Early Chomsky
title_sort stone guest the soviet rediscovery of formal linguistics towards the early chomsky
topic Soviet Union
Linguistics
Formal Methods
Machine Translation
Chomsky
url https://oaj.fupress.net/index.php/ss/article/view/12563
work_keys_str_mv AT vittoriospringfieldtomelleri thestoneguestthesovietrediscoveryofformallinguisticstowardstheearlychomsky
AT marcobiasio thestoneguestthesovietrediscoveryofformallinguisticstowardstheearlychomsky
AT vittoriospringfieldtomelleri stoneguestthesovietrediscoveryofformallinguisticstowardstheearlychomsky
AT marcobiasio stoneguestthesovietrediscoveryofformallinguisticstowardstheearlychomsky