This volume presents a series of original papers focusing on
phonological argumentation, set within the framework of Optimality
Theory. It contains two major sections: chapters about the evidence for
and methodology used in discovering the bases of phonological theory,
i.e., how constraints are formed and what sort of evidence is relevant
in positing them; and case studies that focus on particular theoretical
issues within Optimality Theory, usually through selected phenomena in
one or more languages, arguing in favor of or against specific formal
analyses.
A noteworthy detail of this book is that all of the contributors are
connected with the program in phonology and phonetics at the University
of Massachusetts Amherst, either as current professors or former
graduate students. Consequently, all of them have been directly
influenced by John McCarthy, one of the major proponents of Optimality
Theory. This collection will therefore be of interest to anyone who
seriously follows the field of Optimality Theory. The intended
readership is primarily graduate students and those already holding an
advanced degree in linguistics.