Heritage: Conference: Symposium About Language and Society (various langua ges)
Scott McGinnis
smcginnis at nflc.org
Mon Apr 3 19:26:31 UTC 2000
Heritage Languages Listserve
----------------------------
Date: Tue, 28 Mar 2000 23:21:52 -0600
From: SALSA <salsa at ccwf.cc.utexas.edu>
Subject: Symposium About Language and Society-Austin (SALSA VIII)
SALSA VIII
Symposium About Language and Society--Austin
April 7-9
ART BUILDING AND GALLERY (ART) 1.102
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS:
Gillian Sankoff, University of Pennsylvania
William Labov, University of Pennsylvania
William Hanks, Northwestern University
Madeline Maxwell, University of Texas at Austin
FRIDAY, APRIL 7
9:00-9:30 Registration/Coffee
9:30-9:45 Opening Remarks
9:45-10:45 Keynote Address: The sociolinguistics of language change:
Linguistic
reorganization across the lifespan
Gillian Sankoff, University of Pennsylvania
10:45-11:00 BREAK
SESSION I: LANGUAGE CONTACT AND CHANGE
11:00-11:30 Language variation in Caribbean creole/non-lexifier contact
situations: Continua or diglossia?
Peter Snow, University of California, Los Angeles
11:30-12:00 The role of Russian function words in urban colloquial Uzbek
Dominika Baran, Harvard University
12:00-12:30 The interplay of morphophonological systems in linguistic
borrowing
in Louisiana French
Becky Brown, Purdue University
12:30-2:00 LUNCH
SESSION II: DISCOURSE AND PERSUASION
2:00-2:30 Generalizing opinions as a strategy of persuasion in Japanese
business
meetings
Keiko Emmett, University of Minnesota
2:30-3:00 The discourse of pharmaceutical ads
Rae A. Moses, Northwestern University
3:00-3:15 BREAK
SESSION III: CONSTRUCTION OF IDENTITY
3:15-3:45 Creating a bilingual identity: Conversation analysis of
Spanish/English language use in a television interview
Holly R. Cashman, University of Michigan
3:45-4:15 Language attitude and identity in the European Republics of
the Former
Soviet Union
Matthew H. Ciscel, Angie C. Green, and Richard W. Hallett, Murray State
University
4:15-4:45 Martha Stewart's linguistic presentation of self
Catherine Evans Davies, University of Alabama
5:30 Happy Hour
SATURDAY, APRIL 8
8:30-9:00 Coffee
9:00-10:00 Keynote Address: The sociolinguistics of language change: The
evolution of North American English
William Labov, University of Pennsylvania
10:00-10:15 BREAK
SESSION I: FORM AND FUNCTION
10:15-10:45 Informal greeting formulas in connection with postwar
situation in
Western Ukraine
Anatoliy Orlovskyy and Ludmyla Chamarnyk, State University "Lviv
Politechnical," Ukraine
10:45-11:15 Referent honorifics in Japanese conversation
Harumi Yamaji, University of Arizona
11:15-11:45 Framing interactions and defining relations: Phatic talk in
Chinese
telephone conversations
Hao Sun, University of Idaho
11:45-1:15 LUNCH
1:15-2:15 Keynote Address: The making of a colonial interlanguage
William Hanks, Northwestern University
2:15-2:30 BREAK
SESSION II: LANGUAGE IN CONTEXT
2:30-3:00 Addressing the invisible world: Indexicality, iconicity, and
the
cultural concept of self in Belian, a Petalangan healing ritual
Yoonhee Kang, Yale University
3:00-3:30 Language and ecology: The view from the Kuna Indians of Panama
Joel Sherzer, University of Texas at Austin
3:30-4:00 Cooperation, flexibility and multimodal communication
Jens Allwood, University of Goeteborg
4:00-4:15 BREAK
SESSION III: LANGUAGE AND THE MEDIA
4:15-4:45 Poetics of argumentative public speaking
Troi Carleton, San Francisco State University
4:45-5:15 The dubbing of The Simpsons: Cultural appropriation,
discursive
manipulation and divergences
Eric Plourde, University of Montreal
8:00-11:00 SALSA Party
SUNDAY, APRIL 9
8:30-9:00 Coffee
9:00-10:00 Keynote Address: Lessons about language and communication to
be
learned from the study of deaf language and social interaction
Madeline Maxwell, University of Texas at Austin
10:00-10:15 BREAK
SESSION I: GENDER AND POWER
10:15-10:45 Gender, power, and (inter)subjectivity in a Japanese seventh
grade
classroom
Ayumi Miyazaki, Harvard University
10:45-11:15 Tom-boy talk, 'Girls from the "Cité"' and the limits of
gender as
performance
Chantal Tetreault, University of Texas at Austin
11:15-11:45 How White hegemonic English reproduces racial and gender
hierarchies
John T. Clark, California State University at Chico
Pre-registration (until April 6): Students $22, Non-students $37
Registration (April 7-9): UT Students $18, Non-UT Students $25,
Non-students $40
Symposium About Language and Society-Austin
For more information:
http://www.dla.utexas.edu/depts/anthro/projects/salsa
E-mail: SALSA at ccwf.cc.utexas.edu
Department of Linguistics, University of Texas at Austin
Austin, TX 78712-1196 Tel: (512) 471-1701
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