Reviews on Ling Anthro in the US?
Ehrensal Kenneth
ehrensal at KUTZTOWN.EDU
Fri Feb 22 18:19:50 UTC 2013
Stephen O Murray's volume:
Theory Groups and the Study of Language in North America: A Social History
http://www.amazon.com/Theory-Groups-Study-Language-America/dp/1556193645/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1361557061&sr=8-2&keywords=stephen+o+murray+linguistic+anthropology
****************************************
-- Anthropologist: An Apologist for the Past Follies of Mankind
****************************************
Kenneth Ehrensal
Associate Professor (Anthropology)
Department of Anthropology and Sociology
Kutztown University
On Feb 22, 2013, at 12:13 PM, Laura Ahearn wrote:
> Nate,
>
> You might take a look at Duranti's "Language as Culture in US Anthropology: Three Paradigms," Current Anthropology 33:323-347.
>
> Laura
>
> *****************************
> Laura M. Ahearn
> Series Editor, Oxford Studies in the Anthropology of Language
> Associate Professor
> Department of Anthropology
> Rutgers University
> 131 George Street
> New Brunswick, NJ 08901
> (908) 227-7198
> http://www.anthro.rutgers.edu/fac/department-undergrad-a-grad-faculty/laura-ahearn
>
> Living Language: An Introduction to Linguistic Anthropology
> http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/book/10.1002/9781444340563
>
>
>
>
> On Feb 22, 2013, at 11:54 AM, Nathaniel Dumas <ndumas at LINGUISTICS.UCSB.EDU> wrote:
>
>> Dear Colleagues,
>>
>> I hope all is well. I'm currently designing a course on the anthropologies of the US, with the goal of incorporating ethnographies from both linguistic and cultural anthropology. It's less of a course about "what it means to be 'American'" and more of a course on how do different conceptualizations of the US in anthropology push us to rethink the multiple projects, concepts, and methods of the discipline. I've noticed that while there is much written about this from cultural anthropologists (including a 2010 Annual Review "Anthropologies of the US"), I've come up against a wall in my search for reviews on the problems and rewards for linguistic anthropologies of the US, even though many of us do conduct fieldwork in the US. That said, does anyone know of any review pieces that cover how contemporary linguistic anthropologies of the US in general have contributed to a rethinking of the discipline's epistemological, methodological, and areal foundations? (The only other one that comes to mind is Norma Mendoza Denton's 1999 ARA article, which focuses on US Latinos.)
>>
>> Thanks in advance!
>>
>> Best,
>> Nate
>>
>> Nathaniel Dumas
>> Visiting Postdoctoral Researcher
>> Department of Linguistics
>> University of California, Santa Barbara
>> http://ucsb.academia.edu/NathanielDumas/About
More information about the Linganth
mailing list