List of Figures and Tables
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part 1: How to Classify Languages: Autonomous Classifications or a Comprehensive One? (by Mikhail Rybakov)
Chapter 1: The Main Problems of Linguistic Typology
Chapter 2:Can a Linguistic Classification Explain Anything about a Language?
Chapter 3: The Prospects of Creating a Semantic Language Typology
Chapter 4: Fundamental Concepts of Systemic Methodology and G. P. Mel’nikov’s Systemic Typology
Chapter 5: The Typological Analysis of the Category of Case
Chapter 6: The Systemic Theory of Predication: The Internal Form of Morphological Types
Part 2: Modelling the System of Language (by Vladimir Denisenko)
Chapter 7: Modelling the System of Language with Regard to the Linguistic Personality
Chapter 8: Research Potential of the Semantic Field Method
Part 3: The Systemic Approach to Investigating Text and Style: The Rationale of the Causal Typology of Texts (by Olga Valentinova)
Chapter 9: The Medieval Model of Correlation Between Form and Content
Chapter 10: The Secularized Consciousness and Overcoming the Medieval Principle of Form–Content Correlation
Chapter 11: Desacralization as the Main Vector of Historical Change in the Semantic Structure of the Russian Literary Language
Chapter 12: Stylistic Signs of Our Time: Visible Changes in the Public Consciousness
Chapter 13: The Potential of the Systemic Approach in the Study of Literary Texts
Part 4: The Systemic Analysis of Verse (by Sergei Preobrazhenskii)
Chapter 14: G. P. Mel’nikov: A Linguist for the 21ˢᵗ Century
Chapter 15: “Shevchenko’s” Hexasyllable as a Common Slavic Two-Accent and Two-Word Verseme
Chapter 16: The Hypothesis of the Typological Proximity of Micropolymetry and Devotional Verse
Chapter 17: The Logaoedic Adoneus as an International Two-Word Verseme
Glossary
Bibliography
Essential Terms Index
Names Index
About the Authors