University of South Carolina
Stanley Dubinsky is a Professor of Linguistics the University of South Carolina. He has a BA in Spanish & Latin American Literature and Asian Studies from The Hebrew University (Jerusalem). His MA in Chinese Literature (1981) and PhD in Linguistics (1985) are from Cornell University. His primary area of research is syntactic theory and the syntax-semantics interface. He has produced three books, four edited volumes, and several dozen articles and book chapters on a variety of topics – largely on the syntax and semantics of various languages, including English, Japanese, Korean, Bulgarian, Russian, Ancient Greek, Hebrew, and two Bantu languages (Chichewa and Lingala). A 2004 Blackwell book, co-authored with William D. Davies, is titled The Grammar of Raising and Control: A Course in Syntactic Argumentation, and was followed in 2007 by an edited collection New Horizons in the Analysis of Control and Raising. His two most recent Cambridge University Press books are Understanding Language through Humor (2011), and Language Conflict and Language Rights: Ethnolinguistic Perspectives on Human Conflict (2018).