Call for submissions for 2012 Hogg Prize

Grant Barrett grantbarrett at GMAIL.COM
Mon Dec 19 17:25:46 UTC 2011


See below. Please reply to the people mentioned below, not to me.

> From: Stefan Dollinger [mailto:dstefan at dchp.ca]
> Sent: Friday, December 16, 2011 18:28
> To: Allan Metcalf American Dialect Society
> Subject: Re: American Dialect Society Facebook page
>
> Dear Allan:
>
> I was hoping the ADS could help distribute our advertisement for the
> 2012 Hogg Prize, the young researcher award from the International Society for the Linguistics of English - ISLE - of which I'm the Secretary.
> We're trying to increase our share of North American submissions for the best paper by a student or a recent Ph.D. recipient.
> I'll attach our information leaflet for your information (deadline for submission is 31 March 2012)
>
> Perhaps the ADS could assist us with this task. In either case, I'm looking forward to hearing from you.
>
> Best wishes,
> Stefan
>
> --
>
> Stefan Dollinger, Ph.D.
> Asst. Prof. of English Language
> University of British Columbia at Vancouver Department of English
> Ph: (604) 822-4095
> http://faculty.arts.ubc.ca/sdollinger/
>>
..............
>
> Richard M. Hogg Prize 2012
>
> The International Society for the Linguistics of English (ISLE) offers an annual Richard M. Hogg Prize for a paper on any research-related topic in English language or English linguistics. The closing date for 2012 submissions is 31 March 2012.
>
> Richard M. Hogg
>
> Richard Hogg was Smith Professor of English Language and Medieval Literature at the University of Manchester from 1980 until his death in 2007. He was the General Editor of The Cambridge History of the English Language (6 vols, 1992-2001), one of the founding editors of the journal English Language and Linguistics, and well known for his work on Old English, on phonology, and on English dialects. A list of Professor Hogg's publications is available on the ISLE website [http://www.isle-linguistics.org/prize/hogg_publications.asp]. His Grammar of Old English, 2, Morphology, has been completed by Robert Fulk and was published in January 2011.
>
> Eligibility
>
> The Prize will be awarded in open competition. The competition is open to any individual who is both:
> 1. an early-career scholar, defined as a registered student not yet in possession of a doctoral degree, or a post-doctoral scholar within two years of the award of the doctorate at the time of submission; and
> 2. a member of the Society (membership can be applied for at the time of submission).
>
> It is expected that most candidates will be students on a doctoral degree programme (PhD) or recent graduates of one, but undergraduates and master's students are not precluded from submitting a paper. Joint or multiple authorship is acceptable so long as all authors meet the two conditions above. Authors should submit a letter from their supervisor, or from a person of similar standing, attesting to their status and that the submission is their own work.
>
> The paper
>
> Candidates may write on any research-related topic in English language or English linguistics. In awarding the prize the committee will take into consideration the originality of the submitted paper and the theoretical and/or empirical contribution it makes to the discipline.
>
> The paper should not have been published before (except possibly in a departmental working paper or the like), nor should it have been submitted for publication elsewhere. It should not exceed - but need not be as long as - 10,000 words in length including tables, figures, notes, appendices, references, etc. It is recommended that authors follow the style sheet available (as a pdf file) from the ISLE website, which incorporates the Unified Style Sheet for linguistics journals; a suitable EndNote style for users of the EndNote bibliography program is also available for downloading.
>
> Submission dates and address
>
> The closing date for submissions is 31 March 2012. Submissions should be written in English and should be accompanied by the letter mentioned under 'Eligibility' above. Submissions should be sent as a file attachment in an email to the Secretary of ISLE:
>
> Stefan Dollinger, University of British Columbia at Vancouver, secretary at isle-linguistics.org
>
> Prize
>
> The winner will receive a cash prize of £500 and their essay will be published on the ISLE website. Additionally, the winner will be encouraged to submit the prize-winning paper - revised where appropriate in line with judges' or referees' comments - for competitive review for publication in a journal closely associated with the aims of the Society. If no submission is judged suitable, the prize will not be awarded. The prize will be awarded by ISLE on the recommendation of a prize committee formed from senior members of the Society, with a member of the Executive Committee in the chair. The winner will be announced on the Society's website by 1 September 2012. The prize committee's decision is final.
>
> Terttu Nevalainen, Chair of the prize committee.
>
>
> Apologies for any cross-posting.

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