29.1596, Calls: Anthro Ling, Disc Analysis, Historical Ling, Lang Acquisition, Socioling/Netherlands

The LINGUIST List linguist at listserv.linguistlist.org
Fri Apr 13 16:21:49 UTC 2018


LINGUIST List: Vol-29-1596. Fri Apr 13 2018. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 29.1596, Calls: Anthro Ling, Disc Analysis, Historical Ling, Lang Acquisition, Socioling/Netherlands

Moderators: linguist at linguistlist.org (Damir Cavar, Malgorzata E. Cavar)
Reviews: reviews at linguistlist.org (Helen Aristar-Dry, Robert Coté,
                                   Michael Czerniakowski)
Homepage: http://linguistlist.org

Please support the LL editors and operation with a donation at:
           http://funddrive.linguistlist.org/donate/

Editor for this issue: Kenneth Steimel <ken at linguistlist.org>
================================================================


Date: Fri, 13 Apr 2018 12:21:27
From: Dick Smakman [D.Smakman at hum.leidenuniv.nl]
Subject: Globalising Sociolinguistics 2: Communicating in the City

 
Full Title: Globalising Sociolinguistics 2: Communicating in the City 
Short Title: GloSoc2 

Date: 13-Dec-2018 - 15-Dec-2018
Location: Leiden, Netherlands 
Contact Person: Dick Smakman
Meeting Email: GloSoc2018 at hum.leidenuniv.nl

Linguistic Field(s): Anthropological Linguistics; Discourse Analysis; Historical Linguistics; Language Acquisition; Sociolinguistics 

Call Deadline: 15-May-2018 

Meeting Description:

This second edition of the Globalising Sociolinguistics series focusses on the
city as a sociolinguistic entity in its own right. Cities have something in
common, even if they are in different parts of the world. In fact, city
dwellers might feel more at home in another city – even one in another country
–than in the surrounding more rural regions of their own city. More often than
not, moving to the city is a life-changing event that reveals itself in ways
of communicating of individuals and in the expansion and fluidity of
repertoires. We will seek to explore communicative practices in the city in a
way that transcends group-based or language-centered approaches. We seek to
capture communication as situational, evolving, and dynamic.

The city as a sociolinguistic system in a more general way is also worthy of
attention. Sociolinguistically, cities are where things often happen. They are
growing in size, in importance, in independence from the nation state, and in
complexity. Cities are the locus of innovation, adaptation, conflict,
opportunity-seeking, and, as a consequence, of language use diversification
and modernisation. Broader communication systems in urban contexts are,
therefore, part of this conference. 

The conference is inspired by the recent publication of the edited volume
Urban Sociolinguistics. The City as a Linguistic Process and Experience
(Routledge, 2018; Smakman & Heinrich, Eds):
https://www.routledge.com/Urban-Sociolinguistics-The-City-as-a-Linguistic-Proc
ess-and-Experience/Smakman-Heinrich/p/book/9781138200371. This book explains
language usage in very large cities across the globe and provides examples and
analyses of such uses.

Organisers:

- Dick Smakman, Leiden University, Netherlands
- Patrick Heinrich, Ca’Foscari University, Venice, Italy
- Kapitolina Fedorova, European University at St. Petersburg, Russia
- Jiří Nekvapil, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic
- Riikka Länsisalmi, University of Helsinki, Finland
- Sandra Barasa, Radboud University of Nijmegen University, Netherlands

Keynote Speakers:

- Jan Blommaert (unconfirmed), Professor of Language, Culture and
Globalization at the Department of Culture Studies, Director of the Babylon
Center at Tilburg University, The Netherlands
- Shobha Satyanath (confirmed), Editor-in-Chief of Asia-Pacific Language
Variation (journal), Associate Professor of Sociolinguistics, Department of
Linguistics, University of Delhi, India
- Daniel Kadar (confirmed), Research Professor of Pragmatics and Head of
Research Group, Research Institute for Linguistics, Hungarian Academy of
Sciences. Yunshan Chair Professor, Guangdong University of Foreign Studies


2nd Call for Papers:

1. Paper abstracts are invited related to communication in the city in (a.) a
narrow, individual sense and in (b.) a broad, system-oriented sense. This
means that we welcome papers in the areas of discourse studies, linguistic
landscape studies, ethnolinguistics, approaches focusing on ethnicity and
identity, language-acquisition approaches, as well as approaches in the field
of language/communication in relation to economy, social mobility, and
modern/traditional media. We aim to receive papers about a wide variety of
cities; both large ones and smaller ones. Paper presentations are 40 minutes,
including questions.
2. Poster abstracts are invited about the same themes.

Please send abstracts (200-250 words, not including references) to
GloSoc2018 at hum.leidenuniv.nl. Give the abstract a title and write down three
keywords underneath this title. For each presenter, include (underneath the
abstract text): presenter name, university name, country of origin, and
contact details. Indicate whether you are interested in presenting a paper or
a poster. The abstract deadline is 15 May 2018; confirmation by the organisers
by 30 May 2018.




------------------------------------------------------------------------------

*****************    LINGUIST List Support    *****************
Please support the LL editors and operation with a donation at:

              The IU Foundation Crowd Funding site:
       https://iufoundation.fundly.com/the-linguist-list

               The LINGUIST List FundDrive Page:
            http://funddrive.linguistlist.org/donate/
 


----------------------------------------------------------
LINGUIST List: Vol-29-1596	
----------------------------------------------------------
Visit LL's Multitree project for over 1000 trees dynamically generated
from scholarly hypotheses about language relationships:
          http://multitree.org/







More information about the LINGUIST mailing list