[Ads-l] **Final** Call for Abstracts – North American Research Network in Historical Soci =?utf-8?Q?olinguistics_=28NARNiHS=29_=E2=80=93_?=Fourth Annual Meeting (NARNiHS 2022)
Laurence Horn
laurence.horn at YALE.EDU
Sun Sep 12 19:30:48 UTC 2021
Actually (speaking as a co-editor of a volume entitled _Micro-Syntactic Variation in North American English_ and a co-founder of the Yale Grammatical Diversity Project: English in North America) it’s less misleading to use an over narrow descriptor that omits Canadian English than it is to use an overbroad one that includes the part of the continent that lies south of the U.S. In both English and Spanish, for better or worse, “North America(n)” is frequently used in a way that excludes Mexico and the Caribbean.
LH
> On Sep 12, 2021, at 12:00 PM, Tom Zurinskas <truespel at HOTMAIL.COM> wrote:
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> Tom Zurinskas, Originally from SW Conn 20 yrs, college NE Tenn 3, work SE NJ 33, resides SE Florida 18... truespel.com
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> Pleaee drop the "North" unless the implication is all of "Norht America" . See Google search:
> "North America, the third-largest continent, extends from the tiny Aleutian Islands in the northwest to the Isthmus of Panama in the south. The continent includes the enormous island of Greenland in the northeast and the small island countries and territories that dot the Caribbean Sea and western North Atlantic Ocean.Jan 4, 2012
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> ________________________________
> From: American Dialect Society <ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU> on behalf of Lauersdorf, Mark R. <lauersdorf at UKY.EDU>
> Sent: Sunday, September 12, 2021 3:27 PM
> To: ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU <ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU>
> Subject: **Final** Call for Abstracts – North American Research Network in Historical Sociolinguistics (NARNiHS) – Fourth Annual Meeting (NARNiHS 2022)
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> ***** Final Call for Abstracts *****.
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> North American Research Network in Historical Sociolinguistics.
> Fourth Annual Meeting.
> (NARNiHS 2022).
>
> Despite recent improvements in pandemic indicators in some parts of the world, travel restrictions and health concerns continue for many communities as of the summer of 2021. In light of these concerns, our NARNiHS 2022 Annual Meeting will be taking place as an **entirely online event**. This presents a great opportunity for scholars in historical sociolinguistics from all over the world to participate as presenters and/or attendees without the limitations imposed by international travel. We encourage our fellow historical sociolinguists and scholars from related fields from our global scholarly community (in addition to North America) to join us online for our Fourth Annual Meeting.
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> *** Two more weeks to submit! *** - abstract submission deadline: Monday, 27 September 2021, 11:59 PM US Eastern Time.
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> Please see our call for abstracts below and send us your latest work in historical sociolinguistics!
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> ---------- Call for Abstracts ----------.
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> The North American Research Network in Historical Sociolinguistics (NARNiHS) is accepting abstracts for its Fourth Annual Meeting (NARNiHS 2022), Friday, January 7 - Tuesday, January 11, 2022.
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> Since NARNiHS is a Sister Society of the Linguistic Society of America (LSA), this meeting will partially overlap with the LSA 2022 Annual Meeting. The NARNiHS 2022 Annual Meeting, however, will be organized independently - please note that participation in the NARNiHS 2022 Annual Meeting does not grant attendance and/or participation rights to the LSA 2022 Annual Meeting.
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> Deadline for receipt of abstracts:
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> ==> Monday, 27 September 2021, 11:59 PM US Eastern Time <==.
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> Late abstracts will not be considered.
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> NARNiHS welcomes abstracts in all areas of historical sociolinguistics, which is understood as the application/development of sociolinguistic theories, models, and methods for the study of historical language variation and change over time, or more broadly, the study of the interaction of language and society in historical periods and from historical perspectives. Thus, a wide range of linguistic areas, subdisciplines, and methodologies easily find their place within the field, and we encourage submission of abstracts that reflect this broad scope.
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> Abstracts will be accepted for 20-minute presentations to be delivered "live" through an online video-conferencing platform.
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> Abstracts will be evaluated on the following criteria:
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> - explicit discussion of which theoretical frameworks, methodological protocols, and analytical strategies are being applied or critiqued;
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> - sufficient (if brief) presentation of data sources and examples to allow reviewers a clear understanding of the scope and claims of the research;
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> - clear articulation of how the research advances knowledge in the field of historical sociolinguistics.
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> Abstracts should also be anonymized to allow for blind peer review. Failure to adhere to these criteria will increase the likelihood of non-acceptance.
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> General Requirements:
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> 1) Abstracts must be submitted electronically, using the following link: http://linguistlist.org/easyabs/narnihs2022 .
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> 2) Authors may submit a maximum of two abstracts: one single-author abstract and one co-authored abstract.
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> 3) Authors may not submit identical abstracts for presentation at the NARNiHS meeting and at the LSA Annual Meeting or one of the other LSA Sister Societies (ADS, ANS, NAAHoLS, SCiL, SPCL, SSILA).
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> 4) After an abstract has been submitted, no changes of author, title, or wording of the abstract, other than those due to typographical errors, are permitted. If accepted, authors will be contacted for a final version for the abstract booklet.
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> 5) Papers must be delivered as projected in the abstract or represent bona fide developments of the same research.
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> 6) Authors are expected to attend the conference and present their own papers.
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> 7) Presentations will be delivered via a video-conferencing platform, most likely Zoom. Technical details and instructions regarding the platform for our NARNiHS Annual Meeting will be sent to authors in due time.
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> 8) After acceptance, authors will be given an option to have their live presentation recorded during the meeting and archived for future online viewing.
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> Abstract Format Guidelines:
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> 1) Abstracts must be submitted in PDF format.
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> 2) Abstracts must fit on one standard 8.5x11 inch page, with margins no smaller than 1 inch and a font style and size no smaller than Times New Roman 12 point. All additional content (visualizations, trees, tables, figures, captions, examples, and references) must fit on a single (1) additional page. No exceptions to these requirements are allowed.
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> 3) Anonymize your abstract. We realize that sometimes it is not possible to attain complete anonymity, but there is a difference between "inability to anonymize completely" (due to the nature of the research) and "careless non-anonymizing" (for example: "In Jones 2021, I describe..."). In addition, be sure to anonymize your PDF file (you may do so in Adobe Acrobat Reader by clicking on "File", then "Properties", removing your name if it appears in the "Author" line of the "Description" tab, and re-saving before submitting it). Please be aware that abstract file names might not be automatically anonymized by the system; do not use your name (e.g. Smith_Abstract.pdf) when saving your abstract in PDF format, rather, use non-identifying information (e.g. HistSoc4Lyfe_NARNiHS.pdf). Your name should only appear in the online form accompanying your abstract submission. Papers that are not sufficiently anonymized wherever possible (whether in the text of the abstract or in the metadata of the digital file) risk being rejected.
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> Contact us at NARNiHistSoc at gmail.com with any questions.
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org
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The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org
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