21.2794, FYI: Call for Book Chapters: Language Change, Loss

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LINGUIST List: Vol-21-2794. Sat Jul 03 2010. ISSN: 1068 - 4875.

Subject: 21.2794, FYI: Call for Book Chapters: Language Change, Loss

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1)
Date: 01-Jul-2010
From: Kelechukwu Ihemere < k-u-ihemere at hotmail.co.uk >
Subject: Call for Book Chapters: Language Change, Loss
 

	
-------------------------Message 1 ---------------------------------- 
Date: Sat, 03 Jul 2010 11:53:02
From: Kelechukwu Ihemere [k-u-ihemere at hotmail.co.uk]
Subject: Call for Book Chapters: Language Change, Loss

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Call for researchers concerned with aspects of language contact phenomena
to submit papers for inclusion in a book project to be published in 2011. 
Papers must be in English.

Rationale:
Advances in modern transportation systems, communication technology and
increase in migration has meant that speakers of different languages
interact closely, hence it is typical for their languages to influence each
other. 

The influence could be as common as the exchange of words or what is termed
vocabulary borrowing in the literature. It can also go deeper, extending to
the exchange of even basic characteristics of a language such as morphology
and grammar. Nepal Bhasa, for example, spoken in Nepal, is a Sino-Tibetan
language distantly related to Chinese, but has had so many centuries of
contact with neighboring Indo-Iranian languages that it has even developed
noun inflection, a trait typical of the Indo-European family but rare in
Sino-Tibetan. It has absorbed features of grammar as well, such as verb
tenses. In some cases, the result of the contact of two languages can be
the replacement of one by the other. This is most common in asymmetric
relationship between languages, and sometimes leads to language
endangerment or extinction. It must also be added that language contact can
also lead to the development of new languages when people without a common
language interact closely, developing a pidgin, which may eventually become
a full-fledged creole language through the process of creolization. A prime
example of this is Saramaccan, spoken in Suriname, which has vocabulary
mainly from Portuguese, English and Dutch, but phonology and even tones
which are closer to African languages. 

Over the years various researchers have studied such phenomena, adopting
varied perspectives and approaches ranging from the sociological to
grammatical paradigms or a fusion of both ends of the paradigmatic spectrum. 

Author Guidelines:
Supply one copy of the paper and keep an identical copy for reference.
Manuscripts will not be returned. Submissions must be sent electronically
to: k-u-ihemere at hotmail.co.uk. 

Submission of a paper is assumed to mean that it is original work which has
not been previously published and is not simultaneously in press or being
considered for publication elsewhere (in either electronic or hard copy).
Related articles being published or considered elsewhere should be
acknowledged.
  
Submissions should normally be limited to a maximum of 40 manuscript pages
(single-spaced, 12-point type), including all references, tables, figures,
appendices, etc. Exceptions might be where additional space is essential,
for example, in reviewing extensive literatures or in representing large
corpora. 

Format:
The front page of the manuscript should carry the title of the paper,
name/s and affiliation/s of author/s, and full contact addresses for
correspondence - postal, email, fax and telephone. Correspondence will be
sent to the first-named author unless otherwise indicated.

The 2nd page of the manuscript should carry the title (but no author
identification), a single- paragraph abstract of up to 200 words, a list of
up to six key words, a short running title for use as a page header, and
the word count for the main text only of the paper (excluding abstract,
notes and references).

The main text of the article begins on the 3rd page. Tables and Figures
should be inserted where they should appear in the pages. After the end of
the main text, there follow in order: Notes, References, and Appendices
(number all pages).

Manuscripts should be typed on single sided A4 or 8½ x 11-inch paper. They
should be single spaced throughout (including abstract, quotations,
transcripts, notes, references, tables, etc.). Do not justify the right
margin or hyphenate within words.

Avoid more than two levels of subheadings. Use all upper case letters for
the first level of heading, lower and upper case for the second level.
After a heading, start text on the line next below. Begin paragraphs with
an indent except after headings. Leave an extra space between paragraphs.

Lists or numbered examples should use Arabic numbers on the margin,
followed by a stop but without parentheses, with the text indented
throughout. Long quotations, whether citations or data, should be separated
from the text and indented, and in full size type.

Spelling and punctuation:
Use single quote marks for quotations, double quote marks for ''quotations
within quotations''. Give page number of reference for direct quotations.
Translations or glosses should appear in single quotes. 

Ensure that phonetic or other non-orthographic symbols are clear,
especially diacritic marks.  For excerpts of transcribed spoken data, keep
conventions to the minimum necessary for the points to be made. Explain
conventions in the text above the first excerpt or in a note or appendix,
depending on length.

Either British or American spelling and punctuation conventions may be
used, but they should be applied consistently throughout the paper.

Notes:
Avoid the use of notes where possible - authors will be asked to reduce
excessive numbers of notes.

Notes will appear as endnotes. Use superscript numbers (not too small) in
the text. Number notes consecutively and gather them immediately after the
end of the main text. Start them on a new page, and use the heading NOTES.
Place note numbers on the left margin, with the text indented throughout. 
Leave an extra space between each note.

Use Note 1 for acknowledgements, etc., and attach it to the title on the
cover page.

References:
References should use the author/date system, e.g.:  (Hymes 1974). When the
authors name appears in the text, use:  "Gumperz (1983) argues that ...." -
type format.  Page numbers appear after a colon (plus space) following the
date, such as: Labov (1972:  269-270). Do not use additional parentheses
for the date of a reference contained in text that is already enclosed in
parentheses. Use semicolons between a sequence of references by different
authors. For works with three or more authors, either use all authors names
at each citation: Fishman, Ferguson and Das Gupta (1968); or use et al.
after first mention: Fishman et al. (1968). 

All works cited must appear under the title References following any notes.
Start the references on a new page. Check thoroughly that all works cited
in text and notes appear in the list of references, and that authors and
dates match between citation and references.

The references appear in alphabetical order. Use authors names as they
appear on the published sources, with full first name unless author uses
only initials. Reverse first and last names only for the head name of the
reference.

Same-author references appear in date order. Same-date references by the
same author should be identified with letters: Labov 1972a, 1972b, 1972c,
etc. Multiple-authored works follow all sole-authored works by the first
author, in alphabetical order of second (and subsequent) authors. Do not
use the convention of an underline before the date for subsequent works by
the same author.

Indent the second and subsequent lines of each reference. Capitalize main
words in book and journal titles. Use minimal capitalization in article
titles, but capitalize the first letter after a colon within the title. Do
not use quotation marks around article or chapter titles. Underline the
titles of books and journals.

Give volume number for journal references, and publisher plus place of
publication for books. Spell out U.S. state names in full. Use the word
'and', not '&' (ampersand). Give full page numbers for articles in journals
and books.

Use the following styles for citing monographs, edited volumes, articles in
edited volumes, journal articles, conference or other oral presentations,
and unpublished works such as dissertations:

Bartlett, Chris.  1990.  Research in progress on the Southland variety of
New Zealand English.  Paper presented to the New Zealand Seminar on
Language and Society, Victoria University, Wellington.

Tables and figures
Tables and figures should be numbered consecutively. Supply a brief caption
above each table and below each figure, including a gloss on any
abbreviations used. Keep detail on tables and figures to the minimum needed
to substantiate the points made in the text. Ensure all figures are of
sufficient quality to reproduce adequately. Use a type size large enough to
allow for reduction at publication. 



Linguistic Field(s): Anthropological Linguistics
                     Semantics
                     Sociolinguistics
                     Text/Corpus Linguistics
                     Typology





 




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