Abstract:
I argue that reflexive clitics are not pronominal, but verbal. Cross-linguistically, reflexive
clitics can realize either an unaccusative or an unergative Voice head, both of which allow anaphoric
interpretations (as suggested by the work of Reinhart and Siloni 2004, 2005). I contrast
the anaphoric Voice analysis with two well-known pronominal analyses of reflexive clitics:
one, proposed for French, postulating an anaphoric external argument (McGinnis 1998,
Sportiche 1998), and another, proposed for Icelandic figure reflexives, postulating an expletive
argument in [Spec, pP] (Wood 2014, 2015; Wood and Marantz 2017). Evidence against the
external-argument analysis for French includes: a language-internal contrast between unergative
and unaccusative anaphoric clauses (Labelle 2008); the absence of a c-command requirement
on the licensing of anaphoric Voice; the absence of a lethal ambiguity effect with
anaphoric Voice (McGinnis 1998, 2004); and the interpretation of focus constructions with
seul ‘only’ (Sportiche 2014, Haiden 2019). Evidence against the Icelandic expletive-argument
analysis includes: the observation that not all figure reflexives have a pP, or allow an impersonal
passive (Moser 2021); and the difficulty of extending the analysis to other languages
with reflexive clitics – in particular, the difficulty of accounting for the widespread observation
that anaphoric clitics are restricted to referential dependencies involving the external argument.