2005 ADS Annual Meeting: Program! and Chairs?
Margaret Lee
mlee303 at YAHOO.COM
Tue Oct 5 10:31:10 UTC 2004
Hi Allan,
Can you send another version of the program? Or is it on the ADS website? There are symbols in this version that make it difficult to read in some sections.
Thanks,
Margaret Lee
AAllan at AOL.COM wrote:
The program committee, chaired by ADS vice president Joan Hall and with
members George
Goebel and Luanne von Schneidemesser, has completed the difficult task of
choosing from many excellent proposals. Here is the program they have arranged.
One thing they haven't arranged is chairs for our sessions. If you'd like to
chair one, please let me know (e-mail to AAllan at aol.com) right away - just
tell me what session you're interested in.
Delectable details on the luncheon and other matters will be announced soon.
Meanwhile, here's the menu of food for thought. - Allan Metcalf, ADS Executive
Secretary
American Dialect Society Annual Meeting
Thursday, January 6, 2005
Session 1: Usage, Labeling, and Lexicons, 10:00-11:30 a.m.
1. âToni Morrisonâs Genius Puts Her in the Grammar/Usage Spotlight.â Arnold
Zwicky, Stanford Univ.
2. âGendered Aspects of Lexicographic Labeling.â Katherine Martin, Oxford
English Dictionary.
3. âRepresentations of Southern Speech in Folk Dictionaries.â Sarah Hilliard
, Duke Univ.
Session 2: Talkinâ and Testifyinâ; Using Large Corpora, 1:00â2:30 p.m.
4. âEvidence on the History of Prosodic Rhythm in African American English.â
Erik R. Thomas and Phillip M. Carter, North Carolina State Univ.
5. â âGod Donât Want No Weak Womenâ: Testifyin Performance and Ideology in
a Black Church.â Andrea Kortenhoven, Stanford Univ.
6. âAdvantages, and Disadvantages, of Using Large Dialect Corpora.â Malcah
Yaeger-Dror, Univ. of Arizona; J.P. Campbell, W.M. Campbell, P. A.
Torres-Carrasquillo, and D. A. Reynolds, all of MIT Lincoln Laboratory.
Session 3: Southern DialectsâBlack and White, 3:00â5:00 p.m.
7. âDialect and the Spread of Country Music: the Case of âAlabama.â â
Catherine Evans Davies, Univ. of Alabama.
8. â âTalking Whiteâ at the Apollo: African-American Narrative Comedians
Portraying the Middle-class Establishment.â Jacquelyn Rahman, Miami Univ. of
Ohio.
9. âThe Shifting Significance of Postvocalic R-Lessness in Southern
African-American English.â Kristy DâAndrea, North Carolina State Univ.
10. âOn the Shifting Social Significance of Receding Dialect Variables: The
Case of Static Locative to.â Jeannine Carpenter, North Carolina State Univ. and
Duke Univ., and Janelle Vadnais, North Carolina State Univ.
Session 4: Special Presentation, 5:15â6:15 p.m.
11. Voices of North Carolina. Video that will be aired on PBS, featuring
Outer Banks speech, Appalachian speech, metropolitan speech (Charlotte), Lumbee
English, African American English in terms of dialects, as well as the state of
the Cherokee language and Spanish. Walt Wolfram, North Carolina State Univ.
Friday, January 7
Executive Council Meeting, 8:30â10:30 a.m. Open meeting; all members welcome.
Presiding: ADS President Michael Montgomery, U. of South Carolina.
Words of the Year Nominations, 10:30 a.m.â12:00 noon. Open meeting of the New
Words committee; ADS members and friends welcome. Chair, Wayne Glowka,
Georgia College and State University. This meeting reviews nominations for Words of
the Year 2004. Final candidates will be identified in preparation for the vote
at 5:30 p.m.
Session 5: Language Contact, 1:30â3:30 p.m.
12. âAnother Look at the Copula in Caribbean Creoles.â James A. Walker, York
Univ., Toronto, and Miriam Meyerhoff, Univ. of Edinburgh.
13. âWhen Speech Islands Collide.â Steven Hartman Keiser, Marquette Univ.
14. âWhat Happened to Texas German?â Hans C. Boas, Univ. of Texas, Austin.
15. âSpanish Dialect Contact in South Texas: Variable Subject Personal
Pronoun Use by Puerto Ricans in San Antonio.â Robert Bayley, Carlos Martin
Vélez-Salas, Belinda Schouten, and Norma Cárdenas, Univ. of Texas at San Antonio.
Session 6: Special Session, 3:45â5:15 p.m.
16â18 âThe Atlanta Survey Project.â William A. Kretzschmar, Jr., Univ. of
Georgia.
Betsy Barry
Iyabo Osiapem
Mi-Ran Kim and Nicole Kong
Words of the Year Vote, 5:30â6:30 p.m.
Bring-Your-Own-Book Exhibit and Reception, 6:30â7:30 p.m.
Saturday, January 8
Annual Business Meeting, 8:30â9:30 a.m.
Session 7: Regional Phonology, 9:45â11:45 a.m.
19. âA First Approach to Regional Phonetic Variation in Canadian English.â
Charles Boberg, McGill Univ.
20. âAcoustic Characteristics of Utahâs card/cord Merger.â David Bowie,
Univ. of Central Florida.
21. âUpper Midwest Obstruent Variation: Thereâs More of It Than You Might
Think.â Thomas Purnell, Univ. of Wisconsin, Madison; Joseph Salmons, Univ. of
Wisconsin, Madison; Dilara Tepeli, Univ. Bonn; Jennifer Mercer, Univ. of
Wisconsin.
22. âYou So Donât Talk Like Me: Exploring Southern California Sound Changes
Across Generations.â Allyn Partin Hernandez, Northridge, Calif.
Annual Luncheon, 12:15â1:45 p.m.
Session 8: Special Session on Teaching, 2:00â4:00 p.m.
âPromoting Language Awareness in Schools via Do You Speak American?â Jeffrey
Reaser, Duke Univ.; Carolyn Temple Adger, Center for Applied Linguistics;
Walt Wolfram, North Carolina State Univ.
Margaret G. Lee, Ph.D.
Professor of English & Linguistics
and University Editor
Department of English
Hampton University, Hampton, VA 23668
757-727-5769(voice);757-727-5084(fax);757-851-5773(home)
margaret.lee at hamptonu.edu or mlee303 at yahoo.com
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