Victor A. Friedman is Andrew W. Mellon Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus at the Department of Linguistics, University of Chicago and Honorary Associate at La Trobe University. Notable publications include Turkish in Macedonia and Beyond (2003), Studies on Albanian and Other Balkan Languages (2008), and Macedonian Studies II (2015). Brian D. Joseph is Distinguished University Professor of Linguistics and The Kenneth E. Naylor Professor of South Slavic Linguistics at The Ohio State University. Notable publications include The Synchrony and Diachrony of the Balkan Infinitive (1983), Morphology and Universals in Syntactic Change (1990) and Albano-Balkanological Observations (2020).
'This groundbreaking, data-rich handbook on Balkan linguistics is the first to appear in English and utilize socially anchored historical linguistics to account for Sprachbund phenomena. This is an immensely readable book whose chapters can be read independently of one another making it useful as a reference, textbook, as well as an indispensable resource for any scholars interested in historical and areal linguistics, typology and Sprachbund phenomena.' Grace Fielder, Professor Emerita, Russian & Slavic Studies, University of Arizona 'The Balkan languages are central to the study of contact linguistics. This comprehensive volume is the definitive resource on the linguistic issues, empirical, methodological, and theoretical, underpinning the study of the Balkan sprachbund and of language contact and convergence more generally.' Lenore A. Grenoble, John Matthews Manly Distinguished Service Professor, Department of Linguistics, University of Chicago 'Working from decades of research, Friedman and Joseph explain the complex linguistic phenomena resulting from the interplay of Balkan languages, geography, and history, never losing sight of the fact that it is not languages that are in contact, but the people who use them. The breadth of coverage of their study is unsurpassed. Every page gives the reader new vantage points from which to consider the complex, intertwined histories of the peoples of the Balkans and the resulting Balkan Sprachbund.' Christina E. Kramer, Professor Emerita, Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures, University of Toronto