The contributions include two on phonology (Kobayashi and Kummel), two on morphology (Garcia Ramon and Tucker), three on syntax (Bubenik, Hettrich, and Hock), one on the semantics of tense and aspect (Dahl), one on lexicography (Krisch), and one on stylistics (Klein). In several instances these papers fit integrally into the research agendas of their authors, representing parts of larger projects reflected in recent publications (Bubenik, Dahl, Garcia Ramon, Hettrich, Klein, Kobayashi) or deal with issues touched on repeatedly by their authors over a number of years (Hock). In one case (Krisch), the work announced has in the interim begun to
appear and represent a broad reflection of research projects currently underway in Sanskrit Linguistics. That all but one of the papers focus exclusively on Vedic is simply a reflection of the reality that in Western countries the study of Sanskrit has frequently been treated as an entree to Indo-European linguistics, and it is especially the oldest texts that have been mined for whatever nuggets they can yield relative to our understanding of the proto-language.
Already Published :-
Vol. I : Scientific Literature in Sanskrit - Eds. S.R. Sarma & Gyula Wojtilla
Vol. II : Battle, Bards and Brahmins - Ed. John Brockington
Jared Klein is distinguished research Professor of Linguistics, Classics, and Germanic and Slavic Languages and Director of the Program in Linguistics at the University of Georgia. He is the author of numerous works on the language of the Rigveda, including The Particle u in the Rigveda (1978), Toward a Discourse Grammar of the Rigveda: Volume 1: Coordinate Conjunction (1985), On Verbal Accentuation in the Rigveda (1992), and is co-editor (with Kazuhiko Yoshida) of Indic Across the Millennia: From the Rigveda to Modern Indo-Aryan (2012), representing the proceedings of the Linguistic Section of the 14th World Sanskrit Conference, Kyoto, Japan, September 1-5, 2009. Since 1998 his work has centered in particular on stylistic repetition in the Rigveda.