[HERITAGE-LIST] CFP: Workshop in Vienna on lInguistics

Eric A. Anchimbe anchimbe_eric at YAHOO.COM
Wed May 16 13:13:09 UTC 2007


Dear colleagues,
   
  I am organising a workshop on the topic "Re-writing linguistic history – (post)colonial reality on the fringes of linguistic theories" for the upcoming INST- conference on the theme "Knowledge, Creativity and Transformations of Societies (KCTOS)" to take place in Vienna, 6th-9th December 2007. URL: http://www.inst.at/kctos/konf2007_sektionen_en.htm or http://www.inst.at/kctos/sektionen_a-f/anchimbe.htm. The workshop seeks to reassert the place of (post)colonial reality within linguistic theories, which unfortunately were designed for other contexts but have been applied to these contexts without a conscious regard for the discrepancies.
   
  Send abstracts to Eric A. Anchimbe at anchimbe_eric at yahoo.com
  Deadline: July 25th, 2007.
   
  Here is a description of the workshop:
   
  For the past several decades, linguistic studies of (post)colonial societies have been built on theories, platforms, templates and frameworks constructed in, and for, the west. As Franz Boas rightly said at the turn of the last century, “the internal structure of languages and societies must be allowed to emerge on their own, without the distorting imposition of European templates upon them” (see Handbook of American Indian Languages). The distorting impact of foreign models, as the case may be, prohibited researchers from investigating peculiar characteristics of these societies as outcomes of their sociohistorical completeness. For instance, Africa ’s multilingualism has often been described on a par with European multilingualism. This is theoretically misleading because whereas European multilingualism involves several written languages, the African context involves only one (or two) written languages existing alongside oral languages founded on oral cultures and
 transmitted orally. It is about time more natural and region-based findings were made that handle postcolonial areas not as being on the fringes of the west but as constituting centres of their own.
   
  This section of the KCTOS conference (December 6-9, 2007) addresses the following (and more) linguistic issues in postcolonial areas that have been studied with foreign-based theories:
   
    
   Postcolonial linguistics (how colonialism rolled the dice in approaches to, and conceptions of, languages in these contexts)   
   Postcolonial pragmatics (face, politeness, turn-taking, name-calling, etc.)   
   Notions of bilingualism and multilingualism (oral vs. written languages and cultures)   
   Construction of (multiple) linguistic identities (allegiance to languages)   
   Endangerment(?) and survival of indigenous languages in the face of international (official) languages like English and French.   
   Language contact and (socio)linguistic outcomes
   
  Papers with strong insights into the above topics and related ones are invited. Priority will be given to papers that propose new (and promising) analytical frameworks to particular linguistic processes in postcolonial areas. Quantitative and qualitative approaches are welcome.
   
  NB: All papers will be published in TRANS 17 (http://www.inst.at/trans/index.htm). 
  
  NB: Selected papers will also be published as a book.

       
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