30.2228, Calls: Phonology/Spain

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Wed May 29 11:00:08 UTC 2019


LINGUIST List: Vol-30-2228. Wed May 29 2019. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 30.2228, Calls: Phonology/Spain

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Date: Wed, 29 May 2019 06:58:03
From: Eduard Artés [recphon2019 at gmail.com]
Subject: Recursivity in Phonology, Below and Above the Word

 
Full Title: Recursivity in Phonology, Below and Above the Word 
Short Title: RecPhon2019 

Date: 21-Nov-2019 - 22-Nov-2019
Location: Bellaterra, Barcelona, Spain 
Contact Person: Eulàlia Bonet
Meeting Email: Eulalia.Bonet at uab.cat
Web Site: http://filcat.uab.cat/clt/recphon2019/ 

Linguistic Field(s): Phonology 

Call Deadline: 01-Jun-2019 

Meeting Description:

Recursion, i.e. unbounded nesting, has long been seen as a fundamental
cognitive property of the language faculty, usually associated with the
syntactic component of the grammar. One of the achievements of phonological
research in the previous century was the discovery of structured patterns
within the continuous flow of sounds in spoken language. In the early
eighties, the exploration of such patterns gave rise to the development of
Prosodic Phonology, whose tenet is that phonological constituency is
analogous, but not structurally identical, to morphosyntactic constituency.
According to Prosodic Phonology, the constituent structure of phonological
forms is defined in terms of the Prosodic Hierarchy, a hierarchy of a finite
set of universal prosodic categories, i.e. the syllable - the metrical foot -
the phonological word - the phonological phrase - the intonational phrase -
the utterance. In the early days of Prosodic Phonology, it was assumed that
all prosodic representations complied with the Strict Layer Hypothesis.
According to this hypothesis, a category of level i in the hierarchy
immediately dominates a (sequence of) categories of level i−1.

However recursive higher-ordered prosodic categories, such as the phonological
phrase and the intonational phrase, were promptly advocated in the literature.
With the arrival of Optimality Theory, the Strict Layer Hypothesis was relaxed
and recursive structures were posited to account for a wide range of
phonological phenomena, including the prosodification of function elements
into recursive phonological words. Recursive structures have recently been
proposed for prosodic categories below the phonological word, most notably for
the metrical foot, but also for syllables and even moras. A substantial body
of research has argued that recursive feet account for ternary stress patterns
and also facilitate a unified account of several foot-conditioned segmental
and tonal distributions. In the literature on the syntax-phonology interface,
recursivity above the phonological word has received renewed attention,
especially since the appearance of Match Theory. At the other end of the
spectrum, we find work on the syntax-phonology interface that completely
rejects prosodic constituency, and derives instead the relevant domains for
phonological computation from syntactic phases.


2nd Call for Papers:

Submission of Abstracts:

The workshop will feature 45 minute talks (30-35 minutes followed by 15-10
minutes for comments and questions). Abstracts must be submitted through
EasyChair (https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=recphon2019) by the 1 June,
2019. Abstracts will be reviewed by 3 anonymous reviewers.

Abstract Guidelines:

Abstracts must be anonymous, maximally 1 page long (A4), with an extra page
for figures, examples, tables and references, 12 pt Times New Roman, with
one-inch (2.54 cm) margins on all sides, and written in English, PDF format.

Important Dates:

Abstract submission deadline: June 1, 2019
Notification of acceptance: July 15, 2019
Program announcement: September 15, 2019
Registration: October 1 - November 1, 2019




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