31.2795, Calls: Morphology/France

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LINGUIST List: Vol-31-2795. Tue Sep 15 2020. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 31.2795, Calls: Morphology/France

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Date: Tue, 15 Sep 2020 12:21:34
From: Gauvain Schalchli [gauvain.schalchli at gmail.com]
Subject: Workshop of Paradigmatic word formation modeling - 2nd edition

 
Full Title: Workshop of Paradigmatic word formation modeling - 2nd edition 
Short Title: Paradigmo II 

Date: 03-Jun-2021 - 04-Jun-2021
Location: Bordeaux, France 
Contact Person: Gauvain Schalchli
Meeting Email: gauvain.schalchli at gmail.com
Web Site: http://paradigmo2.eklablog.com/ 

Linguistic Field(s): Morphology 

Call Deadline: 14-Nov-2020 

Meeting Description:

The goal of the ParadigMo workshops is to identify and discuss fundamental
issues of paradigm-based approaches to Word-Formation modeling.

Obviously, the first issue is the notion of paradigm itself. Paradigmatic and
syntagmatic axes were both fundamental components of modern linguistics at the
beginning of the 20th century (e.g. Saussure 1916). Despite the central part
of the notion of paradigm, it almost entirely disappeared under the influence
of Generative Grammar and maintained only a niche position in inflectional
morphology (Matthews 1974, Corbett & Fraser 1993, Carstairs-McCarthy 1994,
Stump 2001).
   
However with van Marle (1985) and Bauer (1997), paradigms were progressively
reintroduced in derivational morphological models and are now on their way to
become a key concept (Bochner 1993, Becker 1993, Booij 1997). In recent years,
several morphology meetings have focused on this topic, two workshops at SLE
in Naples (August 2015), the ParadigMo workshop in Toulouse (June 2017), and
another one at Word-Formation Theories III in Košice (June 2018) with almost
each an upcoming volume : Hathout et Namer (2018, 2019), Fernandez-Domínguez,
Bagasheva & Lara-Clares (In press).

The non-uniformity of paradigms in word-formation seems to be one of the
handicaps that prevent the adoption of paradigms in word-formation, we propose
a thematic session that would explore different aspects of this problem:
 - What kind of shapes for word-formation paradigms (tables, graphs, networks,
…)?
 - What empirical data underlie the difference of treatment of non-uniformity
in inflection and word-formation: defectivity/productivity,
suppletion/blocking, syncretism/polysemy?
 - How uniform are the syntactic/semantic relations between elements of
paradigms in inflection and word-formation?


Call for Papers: 

The first edition of ParadigMo called for contributions that would discuss
paradigmatic approaches to word-formation in general. On the one hand, several
lines of argumentation for the use of paradigms in word-formation emerged from
the workshop:
 - paradigms are needed for particular word-formation data sets   
 - French deanthroponyms (Huguin), morphosemantic mismatches (Stump), Turkish
word-formation (Aksehirli), French demonyms (Schalchli & Boyé)
 - inflection and word-formation interact
 - Hebrew passivation (Laks), NN compounds inflection (Radimsky)
 - inflection and word-formation can be described with the same concepts
 - predictibility (Bonami, Bauer)
 - common correlations with other linguistic domains
 - L1/L2 learning (Piccinin & al.), frequency effects (Ferro & al.),
borrowings (Gaeta), nonce discrimination (Rodriguès & Rodriguès)

On the other hand, several papers addressed differences between word-formation
and inflection relative to paradigms:
 - word-formation focuses on series and inflection on cells (Fradin)
 - word-formation networks vs inflection tables (Spencer)
 - semantic relations heterogeneity/homogeneity (Bonami & Paperno)

Among the difficulties particular to the introduction of paradigms in
word-formation, the diversity of their shapes contrasts strongly with their
canonical uniformity in inflection (Corbett). For non-canonical inflectional
paradigms, Stump (2006) proposed paradigm linkage as a way to capture
paradigmatic irregularities with an intermediate level of organization between
the syntactic/semantic dimension and the stem/exponent realization. Paradigm
linkage has been adapted by Stekauer (2014) for derivational families.

This second edition will welcome papers on all aspects of paradigms in
word-formation. And since the non-uniformity of paradigms in word-formation
seems to be one of the handicaps that prevent the adoption of paradigms in
word-formation, we propose a thematic session that would explore different
aspects of this problem.

Important dates: 
Submission: November 14, 2020
Notification: February 15, 2021
Revised abstracts: March 15, 2021
Workshop: June 3-4, 2021

Submission Guidelines: 
All papers must be original and not simultaneously submitted to another
journal or conference. Abstracts must be anonymous and not exceed 3 pages
(excluding bibliography) in classical format 12pt Times, 1.5 linespace, PDF
(cf. template files). An EasyChair link will be added to the website in due
time. 

Organizing committee: 
Julien Antunes (Université Bordeaux-Montaigne, CLLE-ERSSàB)
Gilles Boyé (Université Bordeaux-Montaigne, CLLE-ERSSàB)
Helline Havet (Université Bordeaux-Montaigne, CLLE-ERSSàB)
Marie Sarraute (Université Bordeaux-Montaigne, CLLE-ERSSàB)
Gauvain Schalchli (Université Bordeaux-Montaigne, CLLE-ERSSàB)

Program Committee: 
Giorgio Francesco Arcodia (Università di Milano-Bicocca)
Matthew Baerman (University of Surrey)
Alexandra Bagasheva (SU ''Kliment Ohridski'')
Laurie Bauer (Victoria University of Wellington)
Olivier Bonami (Université Paris Diderot)
Geert Booij (University of Leiden)
Gilles Boyé (Université Bordeaux-Montaigne)
Berthold Crysmann (LLF, CNRS & U. Paris-Diderot)
Bernard Fradin (LLF, CNRS & U. Paris-Diderot)
Livio Gaeta (Università di Torino)
Francesco Gardani (University of Zurich)
Hélène Giraudo (CLLE, CNRS, Toulouse)
Nabil Hathout (CLLE, CNRS, Toulouse)
Fabiola Henri (University of Kentucky)
Martin Hummel (Karl-Franzens-Universitaet, Graz)
Marianne Kilani-Schoch (University of Lausanne)
Jean-Pierre Koenig (University at Buffalo, The State University of New York)
Lior Laks (Tel-Aviv University)
Fabio Montermini (CLLE, CNRS, Toulouse)
Fiammetta Namer (UMR 7118 ATILF & Université de Lorraine)
Ingo Plag (Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf)
Franz Rainer (WU Vienna)
Gauvain Schalchli (Université Bordeaux-Montaigne)
Magda Sevcikova (Charles University, Prague)
Andrew Spencer (University of Essex)
Pavel Stichauer (Charles University, Prague)
Gregory Stump (University of Kentucky)
Anna Maria Thornton (Università dell'Aquila)
Delphine Tribout (Université de Lille)
Géraldine Walther (University of Zurich)
Jaap van Marle (Open Universiteit)




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