LINGUIST List 19.1295
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Wed Apr 16 2008
Calls: Applied Ling,Socioling/Germany;Typology,Socioling/Finland
Editor for this issue: F. Okki Kurniawan
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Directory
1. Thorsten
Brato,
Norms in Educational Linguistics
2. Matti
Miestamo,
Globality, Locality and Contact
Message 1: Norms in Educational Linguistics
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Date: 16-Apr-2008
From: Thorsten Brato <Thorsten.Brato anglistik.uni-giessen.de>
Subject: Norms in Educational Linguistics
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Full Title: Norms in Educational Linguistics Short Title: NEL08 Date: 01-Sep-2008 - 02-Sep-2008 Location: Giessen, Germany Contact Person: Thorsten Brato Meeting Email: nel08 uni-giessen.de Web Site: http://www.uni-giessen.de/nel08 Linguistic Field(s): Applied Linguistics; Language Acquisition; Sociolinguistics Call Deadline: 09-May-2008 Meeting Description: Norms in Educational Linguistics - Linguistic, Didactic and Cultural Perspectives International Graduate Centre for the Study of Culture, University of Giessen, Germany 1-2 September 2008 Second Call for Papers Extended Call Deadline: 09-May-2008 Norms in Educational Linguistics - Linguistic, Didactic and Cultural Perspectives University of Giessen International Graduate Centre for the Study of Culture (GCSC) 1-2 September 2008 In this first international Symposium for Young Researchers on Educational Linguistics, we aim to discuss the concept of norms from different perspectives before the backdrop of current and innovative research concepts in linguistics, language teaching and the study of culture. Norms and the related question of standards play a major role in the interplay of language, culture, society and education. The goal of this symposium is to describe, analyse and discuss the concept of norms on the basis of three topic areas: - Language Policy as a Reflection of Cultural Norms - Norm, Standard, Deviation - Target Norms in Foreign-Language Teaching In each of the blocks, three young researchers from different academic backgrounds present their viewpoint on the concept of norms in a 15-minute position paper. There follows a plenary discussion about how the combination of theories and methods used in linguistics, teacher training and the study of culture can foster innovative research projects in Educational Linguistics. Each topic area is then rounded off by a plenary lecture from an internationally renowned scholar. The symposium closes with a panel discussion among the keynote speakers and associates of the Educational Linguistics research network at the University of Giessen. Further current research projects from these and all other areas of Educational Linguistics can be presented as part of a poster session. We are happy to welcome the following keynote speakers: - Prof. Richard Hudson (London) - Prof. Frank Königs (Marburg) - Prof. Bernard Spolsky (Ramat Gan) The conference languages are English and German. Please submit your abstract in English or German on our website: http://www.uni-giessen.de/nel08. The deadline has been extended to 9 May 2008. If you have any questions, please contact Thorsten Brato Justus-Liebig-Universität Giessen Institut für Anglistik Englische Sprachwissenschaft und Geschichte der englischen Sprache Otto-Behaghel-Str. 10 B 35394 Giessen Tel. +49 (0)641 - 99-300 65 Fax +49 (0)641 - 99-300 69 Email: nel08 uni-giessen.de
Message 2: Globality, Locality and Contact
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Date: 16-Apr-2008
From: Matti Miestamo <matti.miestamo helsinki.fi>
Subject: Globality, Locality and Contact
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Full Title: Globality, Locality and Contact Short Title: Glob-Loc Date: 17-Nov-2008 - 18-Nov-2008 Location: Helsinki, Finland Contact Person: Matti Miestamo Meeting Email: Glob-Loc helsinki.fi Web Site: http://www.helsinki.fi/collegium/events/GlobLoc.htm Linguistic Field(s): Anthropological Linguistics; General Linguistics; Historical Linguistics; Sociolinguistics; Typology Call Deadline: 31-May-2008 Meeting Description: An interdisciplinary symposium to be held at the Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies 17-18 November 2008 Call for Papers Globality, Locality And Contact - Language And Culture The planned symposium will bring together linguists, anthropologists and scholars from other fields in the Humanities and Social Sciences looking at their subject matter from the global and/or the local perspective, and interested in how motivations stemming from the global and the local compete and converge in shaping human behaviour and culture in general and language in particular. A central factor in this interplay is contact - between distant/unrelated cultures and languages on the one hand and adjacent/related local habits and languages/dialects on the other. However, we would also like to invite contributions on other motivations, for example on how general cognitive and pragmatic factors are reflected in flows towards globalized varieties. It is our common conception that languages differ the more the more distant they are from each other in terms of geography and genealogy (historical relatedness). Linguists have, however, become increasingly aware of the fact that different dialects of one and the same language may show important structural and lexical differences. Clearly then, there are other important factors than just areal and genealogical distance that can be responsible for differences between languages. The aim of the symposium is to identify and describe situations that are interesting in terms of global similarities and local differences, and to discuss historical developments and motivations behind these situations. The symposium will also address similar questions in other spheres of human culture and interaction, one of the aims being a better understanding of whether and how language differs from these other spheres in terms of the local and global forces driving similarity and difference. While two of the keynote speakers, Professors Peter Mühlhäusler (University of Adelaide) and Tom Güldemann (University of Zurich and the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig) approach the above-mentioned questions from the point of view of language, the expertise of the third, Professor Deborah Kapchan (New York University), permits us to widen the scope of the conference to include themes such as the interaction of local and global forms of music making, examining the intersecting structures of both music production and music performance. The former deals with the question of what kinds of accommodation happen when different systems of organizing and rewarding music making come together (e.g. the application of global concepts such as copyright and ownership in Africa), while the latter looks at the kinds of semantic and conceptual modification that take place in a particular performance genre when it travels from local to global contexts (e.g. Moroccan healing music winning large international audiences). Other media of artistic expression are also included in the thematic scope of the symposium. In line with the keynote speakers' research emphases, we envisage a programme of contributions taking shape around the following topic areas: - Typological micro- and macrovariation, i.e. similarities and differences between linguistic/cultural varieties viewed from the perspective of different points on the scale from local to global - The role of common origin vs. contact in the areal distribution and diffusion of linguistic and other cultural features - How globalization and contact give rise to new forms of language and culture - How globalization and contact (or lack thereof) affects the simplicity vs. complexity of linguistic and other social structures - Theory and methods of a comparative description of practices and varieties - Identities, coalitions and communities as social and cultural constructs - Contacts and networks between varieties and variant practices - Mechanisms of diffusion within and beyond local practices - Mechanisms of borrowing and re-contextualisation - Interaction of local and non-local concepts of authorship and ownership in music or art production and exchange - The role of music/art/performance genre in the codification or objectification of cultural identity - (Re-)interpretation of function and meaning of local music/art or performance genres in a global context and of global genres at the local level - Emergent semantic forms and aesthetic formations in the global music or art market - Traveling and non-traveling meanings/concepts in music/ art/ performance - The role of intermediaries as translators/negotiators of meaning Keynote Speakers: Professor Tom Güldemann, University of Zurich / Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig http://email.eva.mpg.de/~gueldema/index.html Professor Deborah Kapchan, New York University http://www.nyu.edu/gsas/dept/music/Kapchan.html Professor Peter Mühlhäusler, University of Adelaide http://www.arts.adelaide.edu.au/humanities/people/linguistics/pmuhlhausler.html Abstract Submission: The deadline for the submission of abstracts (in English; max 500 words) is May 31, 2008. Please submit your abstract by e-mail to . The abstract should be included in the body of the message. Participants will be notified about acceptance by June 15, 2008. The abstracts will be published on the web pages of the conference <http://www.helsinki.fi/collegium/events/GlobLoc.htm>. Organizers: Anneli Meurman-Solin (Research Unit for Variation, Contacts and Change in English, University of Helsinki) Matti Miestamo (Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies / Department of General Linguistics, University of Helsinki) Tuulikki Pietilä (Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Helsinki) Collaborating Institutes and Research Units: Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies Department of General Linguistics, University of Helsinki Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Helsinki Research Unit for Variation, Contacts and Change in English, University of Helsinki
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