Overt and Null pronominal subject in the beginning of the 21st century (and their relation to the null object in BP)

In this article, we investigate the occurrence of null and overt pronominal subjects in two recent theater plays. Our investigations present two main goals: (i) to continue, so to speak, the pioneering work of Duarte (1993, 1995) on overt pronominal subjects in BP; and (ii) to test the semantic gend...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Othero, Gabriel de Avila (author)
Other Authors: Spinelli, Ana Carolina (author)
Format: article
Language:por
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.14393/DL37-v13n1a2019-1
Country:Brazil
Oai:oai:ojs.www.seer.ufu.br:article/41951
Description
Summary:In this article, we investigate the occurrence of null and overt pronominal subjects in two recent theater plays. Our investigations present two main goals: (i) to continue, so to speak, the pioneering work of Duarte (1993, 1995) on overt pronominal subjects in BP; and (ii) to test the semantic gender hypothesis genre (by Creus & Menuzzi, 2004), applying it to the analysis of pronominal subjects in our corpus. We confirmed the hypothesis anticipated in Duarte (1993, 1995) that BP favors overt pronominal subjects (in the fashion of a -pro-drop language). And we also point to a direction not yet investigated in the literature: overt pronominal subjects preferentially refer to referents or antecedents with semantic gender, which suggests that this feature may indeed be a relevant factor favoring the overt pronoun in BP, both for the direct anaphoric object (as recent works in the literature show), and for the pronominal subject (as we outline here).