Call for Papers - Epistemic stance and evidentiality (theme session)
Dylan Glynn
dylan.glynn at UNIV-PARIS8.FR
Sun Oct 20 17:03:14 UTC 2013
*Theme session - Call for Papers*
**
**** Apologies for cross-posting ****
**
At the 47th Annual Meeting of the Societas Linguistica Europaea
11-14 September 2014 Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznan, Poland
http://sle2014.eu/
www.dsglynn.univ-paris8.fr/epistemicity.html
*Title*: Epistemic stance and evidentiality: Corpus and discourse
approaches to subjectivity and intersubjectivity//
*Description:*
This theme session focuses on epistemic and evidential expressions for
stance taking. The approach adopted here will be data-driven, with
special use of corpora and/or discourse analysis. Modalised utterances,
such as epistemic and evidential constructions, convey information about
the speaker's assertions and attitudes in an interactive context. They
can, therefore, be understood in terms of subjectivity,
intersubjectivity, and objectivity. The direct subjective expression of
a speaker's cognitive state (e.g., /I think/, /I believe/, /I know/,
etc.) and the objective evidential expression of the perceived situation
(e.g., /it seems/, /it looks, it appears /etc/./) are both fundamental
to understanding language use and the intersubjectivity of
communication. Indeed, these three dimensions, the personal
(subjective), interpersonal (intersubjective), and impersonal
(objective), play a crucial role in the interaction between the source
of knowledge/perception and the degree of certainty.
Epistemic and evidential language is central to understanding and
accounting for the construal and conception of scenes as well as the
functions and intentions of utterances. The nature of this research
places it at the crossroads of Cognitive and Functional Linguistics. The
workshop seeks to advance an already established tradition through
integrating these cognitive and functional frameworks.
The workshop will build on the work by Benveniste (1971), Langacker
(1985, 1987), Traugott (1989), Guentchéva (1996),Nuyts (2001), Mushin
(2001), Brisard (2002), Scheibman (2002), Kärkkäinen (2003), Verhagen
(2005), Cornillie (2007), Engelbretson (2007), Simon-Vandenbergen &
Aijmer (2007), Ekberg & Paradis (2009), Hunston (2010), and others (see
references).
We invite contributions dealing with topics related to epistemicity and
evidentiality in relation to questions of (inter)subjectivity and
objectivity in an intra- and interlinguistic context. Examples of
research areas include, but are not restricted to:
-Assessment / operationalisation of the (inter)subjective dimension of
epistemicity and evidentiality
-The role of assertion in utterance modalisation
-Constructions and strategies available for speakers in stance taking
-Different meanings of epistemic expressions (e.g., the multiple
meanings of /think/)
-Cross-linguistic studies in epistemicity and evidentiality
-Interactive framing and construal of stance taking
-Adverbial and adjectival expressions of stance and evidentiality
-Constructions and grammatical patterns of epistemic and evidential
expressions (e.g., complementation types)
-Discursive patterns of epistemicity and evidentiality
-Prosody and intonation patterns in stance taking
-Grammaticalization in epistemic expressions
-Reported speech, modalisation markers and evidentiality
**
*Keywords:*
epictemicity, evidentiality, subjectivity, intersubjectivity,
discourse and conversation analysis, corpus linguistics, usage-based
linguistics
Cognitive Linguistics, Enunciative Functional Linguistics, Systemic
Functional Linguistics
**
*Instructions for abstract submissions: *
- Short abstracts of 300 words (excluding references) should clearly
specify the (i) /research question(s)/, (ii) /method and data/, and
(iii) the (expected) /results./
- Abstracts should be sent to: epistemicitySLE2014 at gmail.com
- Please use a modifiable file format such as .doc, .rtf, or .odt
For further information, please contact the session convenors
Françoise Doro-Mégy: fdoro at free.fr
Dylan Glynn: dglynn at univ-paris8.fr
Karolina Krawczak: karolina at wa.amu.edu.pl
*Dates:*
Deadline: November, 25^th
Notification: November, 30^th ^
^
If accepted, longer abstracts of 500 words (excluding references) will
need to be submitted separately to the central conference organisers by
the 15^th January 2014
*References:*
Benveniste, E. 1971 [1958]. Subjectivity in language. In: Emile
Benveniste, /Problems in General Linguistics/, 223--230. Coral
Gables: University of Miami Press.
Brisard, F. 2002. /Grounding/: /The Epistemic Footing of Deixis and
Reference/. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
Celle, A. 2009. The intersubjective function of modal adverbs. A
contrastive English-French study of adverbs in journalistic discourse.
/Languages in Contrast/, 9, 23-36.
Chafe, W. & Nichols, J. (Eds.). 1986. /Evidentiality: The Linguistic
Coding of /Epistemology. Norwood: Ablex.
Coltier, D. & Dendale, P. 2004. La modalisation du discours de soi :
éléments de description sémantique des expressions pour moi, selon moi
et à mon avis. /Langue Française/, 142, 41-57.
Cornillie, B. 2007. /Evidentiality and epistemic modality in Spanish
(semi)auxiliaries. A cognitive-functional approach/. Berlin: Mouton de
Gruyter.
Dendale, P. & Van Bogaert, J. 2012. Réflexions sur les critères de
définition et les problèmes d'identifications des marqueurs évidentiels
en français. /Langue Française/ 173, 13-29.
De Saussure, L. 2011. Discourse analysis, cognition and evidentials.
/Discourse Studies/, 13, 781-788.
Ekberg, L. & Paradis, C. (Eds.). 2009. /Evidentiality in language and
cognition/. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Englebretson, R. 2007. /Stancetaking in discourse: Subjectivity,
evaluation, interaction. /Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Guentchéva, Z. (Ed.). 1996. /L'Énonciation médiatisée. Bibliothèque de
l'information grammaticale/. Louvain: Éditions Peeters.
Hunston, S. 2010. /Corpus Approaches to Evaluation: Phraseology and
Evaluative Language/. London: Routledge.
Kärkkäinen, E. 2003. /Epistemic Stance in English Conversation. A
description of its interactional functions, with a focus on I think/.
Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Langacker, R. W. 1985. Observations and speculations on subjectivity.
In: John Haiman (Ed.), /Iconicity in Syntax/, 109--150. Amsterdam: John
Benjamins.
Langacker, R. W. 1987. /Foundations of Cognitive Grammar. Vol. 1.
Theoretical Prerequisites/. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
Mushin, I. 2001/. Evidentiality and Epistemological Stance. Narrative
Retelling/. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Nuyts, J. 2001. /Epistemic modality, language, and conceptualization: A
cognitive-pragmatic perspective/. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Scheibman, J. 2002. /Point of View and Grammar. Structural patterns of
subjectivity in American English conversation/. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Simon-Vandenbergen, A. M. & Aijmer, K. 2007. /The Semantic Field of
Modal Certainty: A Corpus-based Study of English Adverbs/. Berlin:
Walter de Gruyter.
Traugott, E. 1989. On the rise of epistemic meanings in English: An
example of subjectification in semantic change. /Language/, 65, 31--55.
Verhagen, A. 2005. /Constructions of Intersubjectivity. Discourse,
Syntax, and Cognition/. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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