<div dir="ltr"><div><br></div><div>I have been mulling this over. Do you still have room for presenters?</div><div><br></div><div class="gmail_quote gmail_quote_container"><div dir="ltr" class="gmail_attr">---------- Forwarded message ---------<br>From: <b class="gmail_sendername" dir="auto">Aliyah Bixby-Driesen</b> <span dir="auto"><<a href="mailto:aliyahbd@sas.upenn.edu">aliyahbd@sas.upenn.edu</a>></span><br>Date: Wed, Apr 8, 2026 at 4:18 PM<br>Subject: [Linganth] Call for Papers AAA 2026: Plurals and Plural-making<br>To: <<a href="mailto:Linganth@listserv.linguistlist.org">Linganth@listserv.linguistlist.org</a>><br></div><br><br><div dir="ltr">Dear SLA colleagues,<div><br></div><div>We are looking for three to five presenters to join our panel on the topic of <b>Plurals and Plural-making</b>—please see the abstract below. Feel free to circulate the call for papers to other colleagues who might be interested.</div><div><br></div><div>If you are interested in being a panelist, please email an abstract (<300 words) to Aliyah BD Dewar (<a href="mailto:aliyahbd@sas.upenn.edu" target="_blank">aliyahbd@sas.upenn.edu</a>) and Xiao Schutte Ke (<a href="mailto:kxy@sas.upenn.edu" target="_blank">kxy@sas.upenn.edu</a>) by <b>April 22nd</b>. If you have any questions or would be interested in serving as a discussant, feel free to reach out as well.</div><div><br></div><div><b>Title: </b>Plurals</div><div><br></div><div><b>Panel abstract</b>: </div><div><span style="background-color:transparent;color:rgb(0,0,0);font-family:Arial,sans-serif">Worlds. Truths. Futures. Critical theorists and anthropologists often use the plural inflection of common nouns as an intervention that signals a pluralistic stance. But how are pluralities/plural realities produced, managed, and sustained in social and semiotic practice? How do these forms of know-how help us anticipate pluralism and pluralistic realities beyond morphemic gesturing? In this panel, we invite papers that investigate plurals—pluralism and plurality—as objects of ethnographic attention. We approach plurality as a linguistic, semiotic, and/or political dimension of social life. </span></div><div><span id="m_-2075988747862143690gmail-docs-internal-guid-6bdff0a6-7fff-6d83-fb6e-c19104b3fd80"><p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:12pt;margin-bottom:12pt"><span style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif;color:rgb(0,0,0);background-color:transparent;font-variant-numeric:normal;font-variant-east-asian:normal;font-variant-alternates:normal;vertical-align:baseline">We invite panelists to think with broad genealogies of pluralistic approaches: Inquiries into language ideologies concerning plurals (Hill and Hill 2008, Woolard 2016) have taught us that plurality and plural-making follow (or break) logics in culture and language rather than being universally self-evident. Analyses of plural predicates in linguistic semantics reveal how plural forms mask uneven distributions of properties among individuals. In attending to metapragmatics, analysts refuse denotational singularity, committing instead to interpreting text-in-context and action-in-motion. The scholarship on legal pluralism leads us to question hierarchies of, and exclusionary acts within, liberal forms of ‘recognition’ (Griffiths 1986, Todd 2014). In the tradition of William James’ philosophical pragmatism, pluralism can be approached as "a pragmatics of the pluriverse—a political, experimental and pragmatic response to the ongoing insistence of the pluralistic problematic," that generative staying with the problem of "the world (as) both one and many" (Savransky 2019, 144-145). Seeing from the perspective of ‘possible worlds’ (Hintikka 1967), everyday language-use of modalities, attitudes, and quantifications constantly engages in plural-making. Here, the indexical, the semantic, and the philosophical of plural-making converge in the everyday stakes of social life. Innovative forms of plurality and plural-making also open immanent potentials and consequential politics.</span></p><p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:12pt;margin-bottom:12pt"><span style="font-family:Arial,sans-serif;color:rgb(0,0,0);background-color:transparent;font-variant-numeric:normal;font-variant-east-asian:normal;font-variant-alternates:normal;vertical-align:baseline"><span style="color:rgb(34,34,34);font-family:Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif"><b>Instructions: </b><br></span></span><span style="background-color:transparent">If you are interested in being a panelist, please email an abstract (<300 words) to Aliyah BD Dewar (<a href="mailto:aliyahbd@sas.upenn.edu" target="_blank">aliyahbd@sas.upenn.edu</a>) and Xiao Schutte Ke (<a href="mailto:kxy@sas.upenn.edu" target="_blank">kxy@sas.upenn.edu</a>) by </span><b style="background-color:transparent">April 22nd</b><span style="background-color:transparent">. If you have any questions or would be interested in serving as a discussant, feel free to reach out as well.</span></p></span>All the best,</div><div><br></div><div>Xiao and Aliyah</div></div>
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