Call for Papers: Oklahoma Working Papers in Indigenous Languages

Morgan, Juliet L. juliet.morgan at OU.EDU
Tue Sep 9 14:39:16 UTC 2014


Call for Papers: Oklahoma Working Papers in Indigenous Languages (OWPIL), Volume 2

The Oklahoma Working Papers in Indigenous Languages (OWPIL) is a working papers published online by linguistic anthropology graduate students in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Oklahoma (OU).

The publication focuses on issues related to Oklahoma Native languages and other indigenous languages of the Americas, but welcoming research done on any endangered indigenous language. We welcome research on all topics related to Native American languages, especially documentary and descriptive linguistics, language revitalization, community-based collaboration, endangered language teaching and curriculum development, language acquisition, language maintenance, sociolinguistics, discourse and corpus linguistics, language typology and universals, language variation and change, language contact, musicology and ethnopoetics, and language ideologies.

All papers are published in online format only as a free-access publication. All papers are reviewed by faculty and graduate students in linguistic anthropology at OU. As a working paper, publication here does not preclude later publication elsewhere of revised versions of these papers.

The deadline for consideration in the 2015 issue is February 1, 2015.

For more information and for submission guidelines, please visit: http://cas.ou.edu/owpil

Volume 1 is also located at the link above. The articles in Volume 1 are: Warren Queton | Cáuigú Pòlá:yòp: Towards Using Kiowa Rabbit Songs in Language Revitalization; Juliet L. Morgan | Dèènáá Bìč'èèčéé Bìčìƛ'á̧á̧: A Plains Apache Text; Igor Vinogradov | Aspect Switching in Tzotzil (Mayan) Narratives; Daniel Valle | Focus Marking in Kakataibo (Panoan).

If you have any questions, please contact us at ou.owpil at gmail.com.


Juliet Morgan
Graduate Teaching Assistant
PhD Student in Linguistic Anthropology
Department of Anthropology
University of Oklahoma


More information about the Linganth mailing list