[Ura-list] Fwd: [Lingtyp] Workshop 49th SLE: Language contact in the territory of the former Soviet Union

Johanna Laakso johanna.laakso at univie.ac.at
Wed Oct 21 07:22:18 UTC 2015


FYI (apologies for multiple postings!)
--
Univ.Prof. Dr. Johanna Laakso
Universität Wien, Institut für Europäische und Vergleichende Sprach- und Literaturwissenschaft (EVSL)
Abteilung Finno-Ugristik
Campus AAKH Spitalgasse 2-4 Hof 7
A-1090 Wien
johanna.laakso at univie.ac.athttp://homepage.univie.ac.at/Johanna.Laakso/
Project ELDIA: http://www.eldia-project.org/ 
VIRSU network: http://www.univie.ac.at/virsu/ 





> Välitetty viesti alkaa:
> 
> Lähettäjä: "Forker, Diana" <diana.forker at uni-bamberg.de>
> Aihe: [Lingtyp] Workshop 49th SLE: Language contact in the territory of the former Soviet Union
> Päivämäärä: 21. lokakuuta 2015 9.03.02 UTC+2
> Vastaanottaja: "lingtyp at listserv.linguistlist.org" <lingtyp at listserv.linguistlist.org>
> 
> Language contact in the territory of the former Soviet Union
> Workshop proposal for the 49th SLE meeting,
> Naples, August 31 – September 3, 2016
>  
>  
> Workshop organizers
> Diana Forker, University of Bamberg
> Lenore A. Grenoble, University of Chicago
>  
> Aim and background
> This workshop aims to bring together researchers working on languages that are in contact with Russian in a variety of different sociolinguistic contexts. 
> Russian is one of the largest languages that vastly influences other languages. Contact between Russian and other languages is long-standing and extensive, with Russian speakers expanding across Eurasia to the Pacific coast in the east and to the Baltic Sea in the northwest. The vast geographic and political spread of Russian has meant that its speakers have been in contact with speakers of languages that differ not only typologically and genealogically but also demographically, with some being the so-called small-numbered languages and others major regional languages. This provides fertile ground for the investigation of contact-induced change.
> Contact with Russian has provided important data for the study of code switching (e.g. Rusakov 2004), mixed languages, such as Copper Island Aleut (e.g. Golovko & Vakhtin 1990), the interaction between code-mixing and mixed languages (such as Golovko 2003, Pakendorf 2009) and Russian pidgins (e.g. Perexval’skaja 2008), to name just a few.
>  
> 
> In this workshop we investigate the linguistic and sociolinguistic interactions between:
> - Russian and the so-called small-numbered languages, Russian and languages in the territory of the Russian Federation, or Russian and other languages
> -  differing sociolinguistic settings and the role of these differences, with special attention to the question of whether different contact situations lead to different outcomes
>  
> 
> Topics and issues covered
> We are broadly interested in a wide range of topics, both linguistic and sociolinguistic, involving contact with Russian in the areas of the Baltics, the Caucasus, Central Asia, and the North (including Siberia and the Far East). 
> These include:
> - language ecologies / contact situations including language attitudes, use
> - consequences for all parts of the grammar (linguistic features): phonetics and phonology, lexicon, morphology, syntax, and semantics
> - code-switching
> - mixed languages
> - language shift
> - language contact without shift
> - language change
> - the relevance of social factors in language shift versus vitality (education, gender, age, mobility, marriage patterns, etc.)
>  
> 
> Submission
> Please send preliminary abstracts of no more than 300 words by November 15 to Diana Forker at:         
>             diana.forker at uni-bamberg.de <mailto:diana.forker at uni-bamberg.de>
> 
> 
> Abstracts will be evaluated by the organizers, and selected abstracts will accompany the workshop proposal. We will notify you of inclusion in the workshop proposal when we submit it on November 25.
> Note that if your abstract is included in the workshop and the workshop is accepted, you will also need to submit a full abstract of up to 500 words to be reviewed by the SLE scientific committee. The deadline for the submission of full abstracts is January 15, 2016.
> 
> For further information, please refer to the SLE meeting webpage at http://sle2016.eu/call-for-papers <http://sle2016.eu/call-for-papers>.
> 
> 
> References
> Golovko, Evgenij V. 2003. Language contact and group identity: The role of “folk” linguistic engineering. In Yaron Matras & Peter Bakker (eds.), The mixed language debate. Theoretical and empirical advances, 177-207. Berlin - New York: Mouton de Gruyter.
> Golovko, Evgenij V. & Nikolai B. Vakhtin. 1990. Aleut in contact: The CIA enigma. Acta Linguistica Hafniensia 22: 97-125.
> Pakendorf, Brigitte. 2009. Intensive contact and the copying of paradigms: An Ėven dialect in contact with Sakha (Yakut). Journal of Language Contact 2: 85-110. 
> Perexval’skaja, Elena. 2008. Russkie pidzhiny. [Russian pidgins] St. Petersburg: Aleteja.
> Rusakov, Aleksandr. 2004. Interferencija i perekljuchenie kodov (severnorusskij dialect cyganskogo jazyka v kontaktologicheskoj perspektive). [Interference and code-switching (Northern Russian Romany in a contact perspective]. Doctoral dissertation. Saint Petersburg: ILI RAN
>  
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