Ljiljana Progovac

Faculty Profile

Distinguished Professor
ad6003@wayne.edu

Department

English and Linguistics

Secondary Title

Graduate Director, Linguistics

Office

5057 Woodward, Room 10303.2
Detroit, MI 48202

Biography

  • University of Novi Sad, Serbia, assistant professor of English, 1982-85
  • University of Southern California, Los Angeles, teaching assistant, English Composition, 1986-88
  • Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, visiting assistant professor of linguistics, 1990-91
  • Wayne State University, Detroit, MI, assistant, associate and full professor, linguistics, 1991-present
  • Wayne State University, Detroit, MI, linguistics program director, 2007-2017
  • University of Venice, Italy, visiting assistant professor of linguistics, Spring 1995
  • University of Chicago, Linguistics Society of America (LSA) Summer Institute instructor, 2015
  • MIT, Cambridge, M.A., visiting scholar, 2018/19

Selected publications

Scholarly books

  • (2019) A Critical Introduction to Language Evolution: Epert Briefs. Cham, Switzerland: Springer
  • (2015) Evolutionary Syntax. Oxford Studies in the Evolution of Language. Oxford: OxfordUniversity Press. Also: Oxford Scholarship Online: Oxford University Press. August 2015. DOI: 10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198736547.001.0001
  • (2006) The Syntax of Nonsententials: Multidisciplinary Perspectives, co-edited by LjiljanaProgovac, Kate Paesani, Eugenia Casielles and Ellen Barton. Pages: ix + 372. Linguistik Aktuell(LA) 93. John Benjamins, Amsterdam
  • (2005) A Syntax of Serbian: Clausal Architecture, pp. 245. Slavica Publishers, Bloomington, Indiana
  • (1994) Negative and Positive Polarity: A Binding Approach, pp. 168. Cambridge Studies in Linguistics 68. Cambridge University Press

Refereed journal articles

  • (2024) “Revisiting the hypothesis of ideophones as windows to language evolution.” Joint paper: G. Di Paola, L. Progovac and A. Benítez-Burraco. Linguistics Vanguard. https://doi.org/10.1515/lingvan-2023-0127
  • (2024) “Linguistic correlates of societal variation: A quantitative analysis.” Joint paper: Sihan Chen, David Gil (two first authors), Sergey Gaponov, Jana Reifegerste, Tatiana Tatarinova, Tessa Yuditha, Ljiljana Progovac, and Antonio Benítez-Burraco (two last authors). PLOS ONE,1-15. doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0300838
  • (2023) “The gradual coevolution of syntactic combinatorics and categorization under the effects of human self-domestication: a proposal.” Joint paper: A. Benítez-Burraco, K. Hoshi and L.
    Progovac. Cognitive Processing 24: 425-439. doi.org/10.1007/s10339-023-01140-6
  • (2023) “The human fear paradox turns out to be less paradoxical when global changes in human aggression and language evolution are considered.” Joint commentary: A. Benítez-
    Burraco and L. Progovac. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 46, E55. doi:10.1017/S0140525X22001947
  • (2023) “Se middles in the evolution of predication: Is Serbian a split-accusative language?” Journal of Slavic Linguistics 30. Pages 1-16. https://ojs.ung.si/index.php/JSL/article/view/94
  • (2022) “An evolutionary account of impairment of self in cognitive disorders.” Joint paper with F. Ferretti, I. Adornetti, and A. Benítez-Burraco. Cognitive Processing. doi.org/10.1007/s10339-022- 01110-4
  • (2021) “Human Self-Domestication and the Evolution of Pragmatics.” Joint paper with A. Benítez-Burraco and F. Ferretti. Cognitive Science 45. e12987. doi.org/10.1111/cogs.12987
  • (2021) “Language evolution: examining the link between cross-modality and aggression through the lens of disorders." Joint paper with A. Benítez-Burraco. Philosophical Transactions of Royal Society B 376:20200188. doi.10.1098/rstb.2020.0188
  • (2021) “Editorial: Reconstructing prehistoric languages." Joint paper with A. Benítez-Burraco. Philosophical Transactions of Royal Society B 376:20200187. doi.10.1098/rstb.2020.0187
  • (2021) “Editorial: The Biology of Language Under a Minimalist Lens: Promises, Achievements, and Limits.” Joint paper with A. Benítez-Burraco, K. Fujita, and K. Hoshi.
    Frontiers in Psychology 12:654768. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.654768
  • (2020) “Hierarchical clause structure as a tool for cognitive advances in early childhood.” Joint paper with Natalia Rakhlin as first author. Language Sciences. 83: 101316. doi.org/10.1016/j.langsci.2020.101316
  • (2020) “A four-stage model for language evolution under the effects of human self-domestication.” Joint paper with A. Benítez-Burraco as first author. Language and Communication 73, 1-17. doi.org/10.1016/j.langcom.2020.03.002
  • (2019) “From physical aggression to verbal behavior: Language evolution and self-domestication feedback loop.” Joint paper with A. Benítez-Burraco as second author. Frontiers in Psychology 10. 3389, 1-19. doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.02807
  • (2019) “Minimalism in the light of biology: What to retain and what to discard?” Frontiers in Psychology 10:1303. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01303
  • (2018) “Neural correlates of syntax and proto-syntax: Evolutionary dimension.” Co-authors: Progovac, Ljiljana; Rakhlin, Natalia; Angell, William; Liddane, Ryan; Tang, Lingfei; and Ofen, Noa. Frontiers in Psychology 9:2415, 1-16. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.02415
  • (2018) “Diversity of grammars and their diverging evolutionary and processing paths: Evidence from Functional MRI study of Serbian.” Co-authors: Progovac, Ljiljana; Rakhlin, Natalia; Angell, William; Liddane, Ryan; Tang, Lingfei; and Ofen, Noa. Frontiers in Psychology 9:278, 1-13. Special Issue, Language as Adaptive Systems, edited by Enoch Aboh and Umberto Ansaldo. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00278
  • (2016) “A Gradualist scenario for language evolution: Precise linguistic reconstruction of early human (and Neandertal) grammars.” Frontiers in Psychology 7:1714. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01714
  • (2016) L. Progovac, and M. Ratliff. “Commentary: Beyond tone and climate: Broadening the framework.” Journal of Language Evolution 1.1, 77-79. Doi:10.1093 /jole/izv006
  • (2013) “Nonsentential vs. Ellipsis Approaches: Review and Extensions.” Language and Linguistics Compass 7/11: 597-617. Review article
  • (2012) “Compounds and commands in the evolution of human language.” Theoria et Historia Scientiarum: An International Journal for Interdisciplinary Studies IX: 49-70
  • (2010) “Syntax: Its Evolution and Its Representation in the Brain.” Biolinguistics 4.2-3, 233-254
  • (2009) “Sex and Syntax: Subjacency Revisited.” Biolinguistics 3.2-3, 305-336
  • (2009) “The Urge to Merge: Ritual Insult and the Evolution of Syntax.” Joint paper with John L. Locke as second author. Biolinguistics, 3.2-3, 337-354
  • (1999) “Events and Economy of Coordination.” Syntax: A Journal of Theoretical, Experimental and Interdisciplinary Research, 2.2., 141-159
  • (1999) “Event Pronominal To.” Journal of Slavic Linguistics, 6.1, 3-39 
  • (1998) "Determiner Phrase in a Language without Determiners." Journal of Linguistics, 34.1, 165-179
  • (1998) “Structure for Coordination, Part 1,” State-of-the-Articles. Glot International 3.7, 3-6 (newspaper format)
  • (1998) “Structure for Coordination, Part 2,” State-of-the-Articles. Glot International 3.8, 3-9 (newspaper format)
  • (1994) "Negation and Comp," Rivista di Linguistica, 5.2, 329-347
  • (1993) "Long-Distance Reflexives: Movement-to-Infl vs. Relativized SUBJECT." Linguistic Inquiry, 24.4, 755-772
  • (1993) "Negative Polarity: Downward Entailment and Binding." Linguistics and Philosophy, 16.2, 149-180
  • (1993) "Subjunctive: The (Mis)Behavior of Anaphora and Negative Polarity." The Linguistic Review 10, 37-59
  • (1993) "Locality and Subjunctive-like Complements in Serbo-Croatian." Journal of Slavic Linguistics 1.1, 116-144
  • (1992) "Negative Polarity: A Semantico-Syntactic Approach." Lingua 86.4, 271-299
  • (1992) "Relativized SUBJECT: Long Distance Reflexives Without Movement." Linguistic Inquiry 23.4, 671-680
  • (1992) "Non-Negative Polarity Licensing Must Involve Comp." Linguistic Inquiry, 23.2, 341-347
  • (1991) "Polarity in Serbo-Croatian: Anaphoric NPIs and Pronominal PPIs." Linguistic Inquiry 22.3, 567-572
  • (1990) "Free-Choice Bilo in Serbo-Croatian: Existential or Universal?" Linguistic Inquiry 21.1, 130-135

Book chapters (recent)

  • (2024) “Survival of the Wittiest (not Friendliest): The Art and Science of Human Evolution.” Proceedings of EvoLang XV, International Conference on the Evolution of Language, Madison, WI.
  • (2022) “Continuity of Emotion and Aggression in Language Evolution,” with Antonio Benítez- Burraco. Proceedings of JCoLE (Joint Conference on Language Evolution), Kanazawa, Japan, 2022, pp. 81-83.
  • (2022) “Cognitive and genetic correlates of a single macro-parameter of crosslinguistic variation,” with Antonio Benítez-Burraco, Candy Cahuana, Sihan Chen, David Gil, Jana Reifegerste, and Tatiana Tatarinova. Proceedings of JCoLE (Joint Conference on Language Evolution), Kanazawa, Japan, 2022, pp. 78-80.
  • (2022) “From proto-conversation to modern conversation: the role of human self-domestication,” with Antonio Benítez-Burraco, Ines Adornetti, and Francesco Ferretti. Proceedings of JCoLE (Joint Conference on Language Evolution), Kanazawa, Japan, 2022, pp. 220-222.
  • (2020) “Natural/Sexual Selection: What’s language (evolution) got to do with it?” Yearbook of the Poznań Linguistic Meeting, Volume 5.1., pp. 35-58. doi.org/10.2478/yplm-2020-0002
  • (2017) “Where is continuity likely to be found?” Commentary on ‘The social origins of language’ by Robert M. Seyfarth and Dorothy L. Cheney. Edited and introduced by Michael Platt, 46-61. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press
  • (2014) “Degrees of Complexity in Syntax: A View from Evolution.” In Measuring Grammatical Complexity, 83-102, ed. by Frederick J. Newmeyer and Laurel B. Preston. Oxford: Oxford University Press
  • (2010) “Imperative in Compounds: Implications for Historical and Evolutionary Studies.” In Development of Language through the Lens of Formal Linguistics, 137-145, ed. by Petr Karlík. Munich: Lincom Europa
  • (2010) “When Clauses Refuse to be Recursive: An Evolutionary Perspective.” In Recursion and Human Language, ed. by Harry van der Hulst, 193-211. The Hague: Mouton
  • (2009) “Layering of Grammar: Vestiges of Proto-Syntax in Present-Day Languages.” In Language Complexity as an Evolving Variable, ed. by Geoffrey Sampson, David Gil and Peter Trudgill, 203-212. Oxford: Oxford University Press

Reviews (recent)

  • (2021) “Was syntax borrowed from toolmaking?” A review of Planer, Ronald J. & Kim Sterelny. 2021. From Signal to Symbol: The Evolution of Language. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. Biolinguistics 15: 23–33. www.biolinguistics.e
  • (2016). “Review of R. Berwick and N. Chomsky’s 2016 book Why Only Us: Language and Evolution.” Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press. Language 92.4, 992-6

Other qualifications directly relevant to courses taught

 ENG/LIN 2720, Basic Concepts in Linguistics, 3 credits, Winter 2024

ENG/LIN 7720, Advanced Studies in Language Use: Language Variation and Evolution, 3 credits, Winter 2024

ENG/LIN 5740/5300, Syntax, 3 credits, Fall 2023

ENG/LIN 5700, Introduction to Linguistic Theory, 3 credits, Fall 2023

Research Description

I am a linguist with research interests in syntax, Slavic syntax, and the evolution of syntax. My research focus in the past eight years has been on understanding how and why human language evolved. My findings lead to the conclusion that syntax evolved gradually (through well-defined stages), and that these stages are not only still evident in various modern language constructions (‘fossils’), but that they also provide a scaffolding for building more complex syntactic structures. The approach involves an internal reconstruction of syntactic stages based on the mainstream syntactic theory, Minimalism (e.g. Chomsky 1995). By reconstructing a particular path along which syntax evolved, this approach is able to explain some crucial properties of language design itself, as well as to reveal the selection pressures that could have been involved in the evolution of syntax. This approach also sheds light on some major typological parameters of crosslinguistic variation, including those involving the expression of transitivity and tense marking. The proposal is not only consistent with the forces of natural/sexual selection (e.g. Darwin 1874), but also dependent on them to explain the outcome of syntax. The postulates of this proposal are specific enough and at the right level of granularity to meaningfully engage the postulates in the fields such as neuroscience and genetics.

Affiliated Departments