LoporcaroGENDER FROM LATIN TO ROMANCE OSDHL 27 C
Michele Loporcaro is Professor of Romance Linguistics at the University of Zurich. He previously held positions at the Universities of Padua and Cosenza, in addition to visiting professorships at several universities in Europe and the USA and visiting fellowships at Magdalen College, Oxford (2012) and the Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin (2013-14), and the Italian Academy for Advances Studies in America at Columbia University in the City of New York (2017). In 2012, he received the Antonio Feltrinelli prize for his work in Italian linguistics. His research interests include historical linguistics, linguistic historiography, and the phonology, morphology, and syntax of Italo-Romance linguistic varieties. His work has been published widely in many journals and he is the author of several books, including Profilo linguistico dei dialetti italiani (Laterza 2009; 3rd edn. 2013), and Vowel Length from Latin to Romance (OUP 2015).
1: Introduction
2: The starting point: Gender in Latin
3: Grammatical gender in Romance: The mainstream
4: Romance gender systems: The fuller picture
5: Mass/countness and gender in Asturian
6: The older stages of the Romance languages
7: Gender from Latin to Romance: A reconstruction
8: The typological interest of lesser-known Romance gender systems