This chapter chronicles the beginnings of American (anthropological) linguistics: in the ‘Introduction’ to his Handbook, Boas provided a framework for analyzing each language in its own terms, and in Language, Sapir set out a broad view of language, culture, psychology, etc.
In the 1930s linguistics developed as a science (Whitney) that favored well-defined methods of analysis of empirical data. Bloomfield provided a set of postulates for autonomous, descriptive linguistics and published his well-regarded Language. In the 1940s, the (post-)Bloomfieldians emphasized distribution in phonemic analysis; later they studied morphophonemics, with debates about item-and-arrangement vs. item-and-process (Hockett), and linguists’ descriptions as ‘fact’ or ‘fiction’ (Swadesh). For syntax, they favored hierarchical ‘immediate constituents’ (Bloch) over slot-and-filler (Pike), while Harris (1951) eliminated meaning and searched for substitution classes. However, some said he had no regard for ‘reality.’ Others rejected Trager and Smith’s (1951) one phonemic analysis of all English dialects as too concerned with ‘methods.’
The 1950s also brought diversity: e.g., glottochronology/lexicostatistics (Swadesh); the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis; psycholinguistics (Carroll); semantic functions of intonation (Bolinger); connections with other disciplines (Pike).
In 1957, Harris discussed kernel sentences and grammatical transformations, and Chomsky published Syntactic Structures — which launched a new phase in American linguistics.