9.437, Calls: Discourse, Sign Language

The LINGUIST List linguist at linguistlist.org
Sun Mar 22 12:05:03 UTC 1998


LINGUIST List:  Vol-9-437. Sun Mar 22 1998. ISSN: 1068-4875.

Subject: 9.437, Calls: Discourse, Sign Language

Moderators: Anthony Rodrigues Aristar: Texas A&M U. <aristar at linguistlist.org>
            Helen Dry: Eastern Michigan U. <hdry at linguistlist.org>

Review Editor:     Andrew Carnie <carnie at linguistlist.org>

Editors:  	    Brett Churchill <brett at linguistlist.org>
		    Martin Jacobsen <marty at linguistlist.org>
		    Elaine Halleck <elaine at linguistlist.org>
                    Anita Huang <anita at linguistlist.org>
                    Ljuba Veselinova <ljuba at linguistlist.org>
		    Julie Wilson <julie at linguistlist.org>

Software development: John H. Remmers <remmers at emunix.emich.edu>
                      Zhiping Zheng <zzheng at online.emich.edu>

Home Page:  http://linguistlist.org/


Editor for this issue: Anita Huang <anita at linguistlist.org>
 ==========================================================================

Please do not use abbreviations or acronyms for your conference unless
you explain them in your text.  Many people outside your area of
specialization will not recognize them. Also, if you are posting a
second call for the same event, please keep the message short.  Thank
you for your cooperation.

=================================Directory=================================

1)
Date:  Wed, 18 Mar 1998 14:18:40 +0100 (MET)
From:  Christoph Eyrich <eyrich at zedat.fu-berlin.de>
Subject:  TEXT - New Editors

2)
Date:  Fri, 20 Mar 1998 12:29:44 -0500
From:  Mark Mandel <Mark at dragonsys.com>
Subject:  TISLR-6 (Theoretical Issues in Sign Lang. Research)

-------------------------------- Message 1 -------------------------------

Date:  Wed, 18 Mar 1998 14:18:40 +0100 (MET)
From:  Christoph Eyrich <eyrich at zedat.fu-berlin.de>
Subject:  TEXT - New Editors


            Call for papers - announcement of new editors

                                T E X T
                     an interdisciplinary journal
                      for the study of discourse

                Mouton de Gruyter * Berlin * New York

Since its inception in 1981, TEXT has established itself as an
internationally recognized forum for interdisciplinary research on all
aspects of discourse (e.g., the situational and historical nature of
text production, the cognitive and sociocultural processes of language
practice, participant-based structures of negotiation and linguistic
selection).

Under the new editorship of Srikant Sarangi and John Wilson, TEXT aims
to actively encourage submissions on these issues, not only about the
theoretical dimensions of discourse but also their practical
outcomes.

TEXT aims:

* To challenge through critique and debate the tenets of discourse
research across disciplinary boundaries, both in terms of theoretical
output and practical outcomes.

* To encourage dissemination of scholarly work in under-represented
domains (e.g., communication science, artificial intelligence,
forensic linguistics, rhetoric and composition, stylistics,
narratives, institutional ethnography, sociology of science).

* To remain independent of any individual or group ideology, while
encouraging in equal measure the use of discourse to challenge
discourse orthodoxy.

* To establish a revitalized specialist board and an expanded advisory
board consisting of well-known discourse scholars.

* To produce annual TEXT review issues to consolidate
discourse-related research publications, including relevant book
series.

                               * * *

To submit a contribution to TEXT, please contact the editors at
TEXT at cardiff.ac.uk or at the addresses given below.


Editors:

Dr. Srikant Sarangi
Centre for Language and Communication Research
University of Wales, Cardiff
P.O. Box 94
Cardiff CF1 3XB
United Kingdom

Professor John Wilson
School of Behavioural and Communication Sciences
University of Ulster at Jordanstown
Shore Rd, Newtownabbey
Co. Antrim BT37 0QB
United Kingdom


Review Editor:

David Graddol
School of Education
Open University
Walton Hall
Milton Keynes MK7 6AA
United Kingdom

_______________________________________________________________________

Mouton de Gruyter                         Walter de Gruyter, Inc.
Postfach 30 34 21                         200 Saw Mill River Road
D-10728 Berlin                            Hawthorne, NY 10532
Germany USA
Fax:   +49 (0)30 26005-351                Fax: +1 914 747-1326
email: mouton at degruyter.de










-------------------------------- Message 2 -------------------------------

Date:  Fri, 20 Mar 1998 12:29:44 -0500
From:  Mark Mandel <Mark at dragonsys.com>
Subject:  TISLR-6 (Theoretical Issues in Sign Lang. Research)

		
[For information, please use:
info_tislr at gallua.gallaudet.edu instead.]

                                    TISLR 6
                     The Sixth International Conference on
                 Theoretical Issues in Sign Language Research

                   http://www.gallaudet.edu/~aslweb/tislr98/
              For info by email: info_tislr at gallua.gallaudet.edu

                           Kellogg Conference Center
                             Gallaudet University
                              Washington, DC, USA
                             November 12-15, 1998

                                CALL FOR PAPERS

Abstracts are invited for the TISLR 98 conference to be held November 12-15 at
Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C. Submissions are invited on any aspect
of research and theory about sign language including linguistic structure,
language acquisition, language contact and bilingualism, variation, discourse
analysis, poetics and metaphor, psycholinguistic and neuropsychological
processing, language assessment, gesture/sign relations, research methodology
(including transcription and coding systems, and computer-based data
management and networking), and language attitudes.

* Presentation modes will be 40-minute papers, special interest workshops,
research symposia, and posters.

* Research symposia will be 2 hours and will consist of 3 30-minute papers on
a given topic followed by a 30-minute general discussion involving the
audience. Organizers of a symposium should submit a 150-word abstract
summarizing the topics and goals of the symposium along with a 250-word
abstract for each research paper.

* Forty-minute papers will be 30 minutes of presentation and 10 minutes of
discussion. Poster sessions will be 2 hours long. Paper and poster authors
should submit a 250-word abstract.

* Workshop sessions will be 90 minutes and geared toward a special interest
topic. Workshop organizers should submit a 250-word abstract stating the
workshop topic, goals, intended audience, and method (e.g. discussion, hands-
on etc.).

For information on submitting abstracts, see the Web site at
    http://www.gallaudet.edu/~aslweb/tislr98/call.html
All submissions must be received by FRIDAY APRIL 17, 1998

*To assist the interpreters in preparing for your presentation and thereby
ensuring the quality of the presentations, drafts of accepted papers must be
submitted by OCTOBER 1, 1998.

Please feel free to share this message with anyone who may be interested.
Finally, all of this information will also be on the conference website by the
end of March. That address is
	http://www.gallaudet.edu/~aslweb/tislr98
Information may be requested by email to
	info_tislr at gallua.gallaudet.edu

                               KEYNOTE SPEAKERS

Dr. William C. Stokoe
        Dr. Stokoe earned his doctorate in Old and Middle English and
Classical languages from Cornell University in New York. He taught at
Gallaudet University for 29 years, from 1955 to 1984. He has received honorary
degrees from Gallaudet University, Copenhagen University, and Madonna
University.
        Dr. Stokoe's research interests are:  culture, cognition, and
language, and especially how they began.
        His presentation at the TISLR conference will stress the need for
looking to the production and reception of language signs when they are
visible instead of audible.  Early research on signed languages had to stress
its similarities to spoken languages.  Now we must study the differences, as
having two reference points in understanding language is far superior to
having only one.

Dr. Karen Emmorey
        Karen Emmorey is a specialist in the psychology and neurobiology of
language.  She received a Ph.D. in linguistics in 1987 from the University of
California, Los Angeles, and she is currently a senior staff scientist in the
Laboratory for Cognitive Neuroscience at the Salk Institute for Biological
Studies.  Dr. Emmorey studies signed languages as a window into the nature of
human language, into the relation between language and spatial cognition, and
into the determinants of brain organization for language.
        Her current research focuses on several questions: What are the
ramifications of using space to express linguistic contrasts in referential
and spatial domains?  How are sign languages understood in real time
(specifically, what mechanisms are required to interpret co-reference conveyed
spatially?  What are the effects of late language acquisition on language
processing?  How does experience with a signed language impact non-linguistic
visual-spatial cognition (specifically, face processing, memory, and imagery)?
What is the nature of working memory for sign language?  What is the neural
organization for signed and spoken language? Specifically, what brain areas
are involved in the comprehension and production of spatial language (i.e.,
describing space with classifiers or prepositions)?
        Dr. Emmorey's keynote address will focus on only a small subset of
these questions.  She will address the consequences of using signing space to
describe physical space for language and cognitive processing.

Dr. Carol Padden
        Dr. Padden received her Bachelor of Science degree in Linguistics from
Georgetown University, and her Ph.D., also in Linguistics, from the University
of California at San Diego.
        Her current work is in the area of reading ability in signing deaf
children, and areas of interest include: culture and language,
representational systems in sign languages (for example, fingerspelling), and
reading development in young deaf children.
        The topic of her keynote presentation will be: Reading research with
signers: A new research direction.

Dr. Lars Wallin
        Dr. Wallin is a faculty member at the University of Stockholm, in
Stockholm, Sweden, in the Department of Sign Language.  He was born deaf and
attended a Deaf school growing up.  He got his PhD in Sign Language, 1994, at
Stockholm University, writing his thesis on Polysynthetic Signs in Swedish
Sign Language.  His PhD was the first PhD in Sign Language in the world
(Others took PhD in Linguistics or other subjects, but not in Sign Language.)
He was also the first Deaf person in Sweden to get his PhD.
        His current work is researching and training in Sign Language
Linguistics at Stockholm University.
        His current research is on: the use of classifier signs as free forms
in noun phrases in narrative discourse in Swedish Sign Language; the use of
handshapes and movements as bound morphemes in signs describing shape and size
of the entities in Swedish Sign Language.

                            PRE-CONFERENCE WORKSHOP
                    Thursday, November 12, 2:00 - 5:00 p.m.

We are offering a workshop for those who are not familiar with theoretical
linguistic issues.  We will define phonology, morphology, syntax, language
acquisition, and sociolinguistics, and discuss what each discipline is all
about.  This will give participants an opportunity to catch up with current,
hot issues that conference presenters will be discussing.  We will also
briefly describe the presenters  works, views and arguments and compare how
each presenter s works are similar or different from others.

The workshop will take place before the conference begins. It is designed to
help you gain confidence and be able to participate effectively during the
conference.

Please note that if you plan to participate in the pre-conference workshop,
YOU MUST PRE-REGISTER FOR THE CONFERENCE BY OCTOBER 9.

Registration deadline:  October 9, 1998.
You must pre-register for this workshop.
Workshop fee:   $30

                            CONFERENCE REGISTRATION

For information related to registration and accommodations .

    College for Continuing Education
    ATTN: TISLR '98
    Gallaudet University Kellogg Conference Center
    800 Florida Avenue, NE
    Washington, DC 20002-3695
    U.S.A.

    (202) 651-6060 TTY/Voice
    (202) 651-6074 Fax

    conference at gallua.gallaudet.edu

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