23.3546, Confs: English, Sociolinguistics/Australia

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LINGUIST List: Vol-23-3546. Fri Aug 24 2012. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 23.3546, Confs: English, Sociolinguistics/Australia

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Date: Fri, 24 Aug 2012 11:50:56
From: Celeste Rodriguez Louro [celeste.rodriguezlouro at uwa.edu.au]
Subject: English in Australia: Variation and Change in Diverse Linguistic Communities

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English in Australia: Variation and Change in Diverse Linguistic Communities 

Date: 04-Dec-2012 - 07-Dec-2012 
Location: Perth, Western Australia, Australia 
Contact: Celeste Rodriguez Louro 
Contact Email: celeste.rodriguezlouro at uwa.edu.au 
Meeting URL: https://sites.google.com/site/als2012uwa/home/workshops/english-in-aus 

Linguistic Field(s): Sociolinguistics 

Subject Language(s): English (eng)

Meeting Description: 

The study of variation and change has been vibrantly on the rise since Labov's ground-breaking studies of sound change in Martha's Vineyard (1963) and New York City (1966). Among others, American, Canadian, British and New Zealand English have received widespread attention and phonological, morphosyntactic and discourse-pragmatic phenomena have been broadly documented (cf. Schneider, Burridge, Kortmann, Mesthrie & Upton 2004). The complex picture arising from this research has motivated the expansion of theoretical models (e.g., Docherty, Foulkes, Milroy, Milroy & Walshaw 1997) and highlighted the constrained variability arising from language use in monolingual and multilingual settings (Torres Cacoullos & Travis 2010; Cheshire, Kerswill, Fox & Torgersenc 2011; Meyerhoff & Schleef 2012). 

Methodologically, progress in research has been aided by the creation of large corpora of naturally-occurring data, an essential tool in researching language variation and change. In the peer-reviewed literature, phonetic/phonological (e.g., Cox 1997; Kiesling 2005; Loakes, Hajek & Fletcher 2010), grammatical (e.g., Engel & Ritz 2000; Collins 2009) and discourse-pragmatic (e.g., Burridge & Florey 2002; Mulder & Thompson 2008) aspects of English in Australia have been explored based on divergent data, including - among many others - online corpora (Collins 2009; Peters 2009), naturally-occurring conversation and sociolinguistic interviews (Rodríguez Louro to appear) and questionnaires (Collins & Peters 2004: 594). Additionally, within the Labovian paradigm, the relationship between the internal and external factors constraining variation was initially explored by Hovarth (1985) in her ground-breaking treatment of sociolinguistic conditioning in the sociolects of Sydney. These studies have helped describe a series of unique linguistic features for the different varieties, contributing in so doing to advancing the claim for the 'endonormativity' of Australian English (Collins & Peters 2004) and establishing the existence of crucial dialectal differentiation within Australia (Kaldor & Malcolm 1991).

The aim of this workshop is to bring together scholars interested in the linguistic and social forces shaping English in Australia's diverse linguistic communities, focusing on phonetic/phonological, grammatical and discourse-pragmatic variation. The workshop consists of presentations by leading scholars in the field (by invitation) as well as other interested contributors (via standard abstract submission). The availability of various large corpora of English across diverse communities in Australia (e.g., the Australian National Corpus, the Big Australian Speech Corpus) now allows us to more deeply engage with the study of variation and change. This workshop seeks to make an exciting contribution in this direction.

Confirmed Invited Presentations:

Kate Burridge, Monash University
Jenny Cheshire, Queen Mary, University of London, England
Peter Collins & Xinyue Yao, University of New South Wales
Gerry Docherty, Newcastle University, UK
John Hajek, Debbie Loakes & Janet Fletcher University of Melbourne
Ian Malcolm, Edith Cowan University
Jean Mulder & Jill Vaughan, University of Melbourne
Pam Peters, Macquarie University
Marie-Eve Ritz, University of Western Australia
Adam Schembri, La Trobe University
Catherine Travis, Australian National University
James Walker, York University, Canada 

This workshop will run as part of the main program for the 2012 Conference of the Australian Linguistic Society. 

We are also offering the following 3-hour courses for post-graduate students and academic and professional colleagues. These will be held on Tuesday 4 December, immediately before the main conference. 

Community-based language work in North America
Keren Rice, University of Toronto

Variation in language contact
Miriam Meyerhoff, University of Auckland

Tense-Aspect-Mood-Evidentiality (TAME)
Östen Dahl, University of Stockholm

Variationist sociolinguistics: a quantitative approach to the study of language variation and change
Catherine Travis (Australian National University)
Rena Torres Cacoullos (Pennsylvania State University)

Tense, aspect and modality in Australian Indigenous languages
Patrick Caudal (CNRS / Université Paris-Diderot)
Rob Mailhammer (University of Western Sydney)

Managing language data: from planning and recording through to analysis/presentation
Nick Thieberger (University of Melbourne)


More information available on:

https://sites.google.com/site/als2012uwa/home/al







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