33.1295, Calls: Spanish; Anthro Ling, Applied Ling, Gen Ling, Socioling/USA

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Mon Apr 11 21:06:17 UTC 2022


LINGUIST List: Vol-33-1295. Mon Apr 11 2022. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 33.1295, Calls: Spanish; Anthro Ling, Applied Ling, Gen Ling, Socioling/USA

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Date: Mon, 11 Apr 2022 17:04:30
From: Alberto Pastor [apastor at smu.edu]
Subject: 28th Conference on Spanish in the United States and 13th Conference on Spanish in Contact with Other Languages

 
Full Title: 28th Conference on Spanish in the United States and 13th Conference on Spanish in Contact with Other Languages 
Short Title: SIUS 2023 

Date: 06-Apr-2023 - 08-Apr-2023
Location: Dallas TX, USA 
Contact Person: Alberto Pastor
Meeting Email: spanishintheus at smu.edu
Web Site: https://blog.smu.edu/conference-spanish-in-the-us/ 

Linguistic Field(s): Anthropological Linguistics; Applied Linguistics; General Linguistics; Sociolinguistics 

Subject Language(s): Spanish (spa)

Call Deadline: 16-Oct-2022 

Meeting Description:

This joint conference brings together researchers from various
disciplines—such as linguistics, sociology, anthropology, education, and legal
studies—investigating a wide range of topics related to Spanish and
Spanish-speaking communities in the United States, allowing productive
connections between researchers focusing on the U.S. context and researchers
investigating the entire Spanish-speaking world.

Confirmed Keynote Speakers
Dr. Maria Carreira, Professor of Spanish, California State University, Long
Beach (USA)
Dr. Andrew Lynch, Associate Professor of Spanish, University of Miami (USA)
Dr. Francisco Moreno-Fernández, Professor of Ibero-American Linguistic,
Cultural, and Social Studies, Heidelberg University (Germany) 
Dr. Eeva Sippola, Associate Professor of Spanish, University of Helsinki
(Finland)

Special Workshops on Heritage Pedagogy and Curricula: 
Workshop Moderators:
Dr. Sara Beaudrie, Associate Professor of Spanish, Arizona State University
(USA)
Dr. Diego Pascual y Cabo, Associate Professor of Hispanic Linguistics,
University of Florida (USA)

Conference Venue
The conference will take place at Southern Methodist University’s Hughes-Trigg
Center (3140 Dyer St., Dallas, TX 75205, USA). More details about the venue
can be found here at www.smu.edu.

Conference Organizers: The conference is co-organized by Prof. Alberto Pastor
and Prof. Gabriela Vokic, Spanish faculty in the Department of World Languages
and Literatures at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, TX (USA).


1st Call for Papers:

We are pleased to announce the 28th Conference on Spanish in the United States
and 13th Conference on Spanish in Contact with Other Languages will be held in
person at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, TX (USA) from April 6-8,
2023. 

The theme of the conference is: US Spanishes: Toward Standardization

In the last decade, US Spanish has received attention and recognition in
academic linguistic circles, but it has also established an undeniable
presence in all domains of public life in the United States. Media,
advertising, politics, economy, education, and culture have all seen a
substantial influx of Spanish. In this process, inevitably, certain structural
properties and bilingual practices are becoming informally standardized or
unofficially legitimized.

Does this suggest the need for establishing an official standard or standards?
If so, which structural properties and bilingual practices are headed toward
legitimization? Which individuals and institutions, if any, should be part of
these conversations and decision-making? And since standardization affects
many areas of life besides language, what would be the impact of an
institutionalized norm or norms on education, society, economy, and politics
given the global, highly mobile and multilingual context in which we live? 

With this theme in mind, we would like to invite submission of papers that
investigate the tensions surrounding standard language, standardization, and
institutionalized normativity in a US context. 

As is the conference tradition, we also welcome submission of papers in all
areas of language research related to any aspect of Spanish in the United
States or Spanish in contact with other languages, including but not limited
to the following:
 
bilingualism/multilingualism, educational policies and practices, formal
aspects of US Spanish, translanguaging, heritage language acquisition,
heritage language learning and  teaching, third generation heritage Spanish,
language and identity, language and the law, language contact and change,
language ideologies, raciolinguistics, language in politics and politics of
language, language maintenance, shift and loss, language planning, language
policy, language rights, linguistic anthropology, linguistic variation, mass
media and Spanish, Spanish in the professions, Spanish and the economy.

General Information about Abstract Submission: Abstracts not exceeding 500
words (excluding the title, with a second page reserved for tables, examples
and references) should be submitted electronically no later than October 16,
2022. Papers should be 20 minutes long followed by a 10-minute Q&A period. 

Languages of the conference: Spanish and English. 
Abstract submission link:
https://blog.smu.edu/conference-spanish-in-the-us/abstract-submission/
Abstract submission opens: April 9, 2022
Abstract submission closes: October 16, 2022
Notification of acceptance/rejection: January 15, 2023

Abstract Submission Guidelines: 
- Abstracts must not exceed 500 words (excluding the title, with a second page
reserved for tables, examples and references).
- Abstracts must clearly present a specific thesis statement and include a
description of topic, approach, and conclusions.
- Authors may submit a total of two abstracts, one individual and one joint.
- Submissions for panels will also be accepted. A panel should include a
500-word description and three to four abstracts related to the panel theme.
- All submissions will be reviewed anonymously. To preserve anonymity during
the review process, authors should not include their names or otherwise reveal
their identities anywhere in the abstract.
- Papers/panels may be delivered in English or Spanish, with papers in Spanish
especially encouraged.
- Authors should aim for papers that are 20 minutes long followed by a
10-minute Q&A period.




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