[Linganth] Please do NOT send review requests to me! FW: Language in Society - Volunteers to write Book Notes

Woolard, Kathryn kwoolard at ucsd.edu
Wed Oct 30 17:14:40 UTC 2019


Dear LingAnthers – please read the message from Brian King that I forwarded previously carefully. Do NOT send your requests to review to me, I have no power over this!  Send them to Brian King at the address he gives; I’ve included his message again below so that you can see that clearly.

Thank you.
Kit Woolard

---------- Forwarded message ---------
De: Brian King <lsyreviewseditor at gmail.com<mailto:lsyreviewseditor at gmail.com>>
Date: dj., 24 d’oct. 2019 a les 9:15
Subject: Language in Society - Volunteers to write Book Notes
To: Undisclosed Recipients <lsyreviewseditor at gmail.com<mailto:lsyreviewseditor at gmail.com>>
Dear Colleague,

Please find below a list of books currently available to volunteers who would like to write a 500-word book note for Language in Society. A book note is a summary of a book's content with a brief evaluative summary at the end.


Graduate students are welcome to write book notes, with a faculty member's supervision. Please send a list of three books you would like to write notes on (in order of preference and that appear in the list below) to lsyreviewseditor at gmail.com<mailto:lsyreviewseditor at gmail.com>. Book notes will be due 3 months after you receive the book.

Please forward this list to students and colleagues who might be interested in writing a book note for Language in Society. Each book will go to the first person who requests it. Because there is a limited supply of books, book notes will be limited to one per person. Priority will be given to those who have not published a book note in the journal in the past two years.


Sincerely,
Brian King, Reviews Editor, Language in Society


Available for Book Notes (500 words) - PHD STUDENTS WELCOME (SUPERVISED)



Blackledge, Adrian & Angela Creese (2019) Voices of a city market: An ethnography. Bristol: Multilingual Matters. Pp. 208. Hb. £30.



Braber, Natalie & Sandra Jansen (eds.) (2018) Sociolinguistics in England. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. Pp. xxii, 398. Pb. €110.



De Meulder, Maartje, Joseph J. Murray & Rachel L. McKee (eds.) (2019) The legal recognition of sign languages: Advocacy and outcomes around the world. Bristol: Multilingual Matters. Pp. 352. Pb. £35.



Denham, Kristin (ed.) (2019) Northwest voices: Language and culture in the Pacific Northwest. Corvallis: Oregon State University Press. Pp. 224. Pb. $23.



Doerr, Martin, Øyvind Eide, Oddrun Grønvik & Bjørghild Kjelsvik (eds.) (2019). Humanists and the digital toolbox: in honour of Christian-Emil Smith Ore. Oslo: Novus Forlag. Pp. 281. Pb. 350 NOK.



Dunmore, Stuart S. (2019) Language revitalisation in Gaelic Scotland: Linguistic practice and ideology. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. Pp. 196. Hb. £75.



Fleming, Kara & Umberto Ansaldo (2019) Revivals, nationalism, and linguistic discrimination: Threatening languages. Abingdon: Routledge. Pp. 152. Hb. £120.



Freytag, Vera (2019) Exploring politeness in business emails: A mixed-methods analysis. Bristol: Multilingual Matters. Pp. 220. Hb. £120.



Gao, Shuang (2019) Aspiring to be global: Language and social change in a tourism village in China. Bristol: Multilingual Matters. Pp. 184. Pb. £35.



Horner, Kirstine & Jennifer Dailey-O’Cain (eds.) (2019) Multilingualism, (im)mobilities and spaces of belonging. Bristol: Multilingual Matters. Pp. 264. Pb. £40.



Jones, Mari C. (2019) Endangered languages and new technologies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Pp. 228. Pb. £35.



Kalayil, Sheena (2019) Second-generation South Asian Britons: Multilingualism, heritage languages, and diasporic identity. London: Lexington Books. Pp. ix, 174. Hb. £65.



Komter, Martin (2019). The suspect's statement: Talk and text in the criminal Process. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Pp. xi, 207. Hb. £80.



McCarty, Teresa L., Sheilah E. Nicholas & Gillian Wigglesworth (eds.) (2019) A world of indigenous languages: Politics, pedagogies and prospects for language reclamation. Bristol: Multilingual Matters. Pp. 264. Pb. £30.



Mendel, Yonatan & Abeer AlNajjar (eds.) (2019) Language, politics and society in the Middle East: Essays in honour of Yasir Suleiman. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. Pp. 256. Pb. £20.



Ogiermann, Eva & Pilar G. Blitvich (eds.) (2019) From speech acts to lay understandings of politeness: Multilingual and multicultural perspectives. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Pp. xii, 334. Hb. £95.



Pandharipande, Rajeshwari Vijay, Maya Khemlani David & Miriam Eisenstein Ebsworth (eds.) (2019) Language maintenance, revival and shift in the sociology of religion. Bristol: Multilingual Matters. Pp. 224. Pb. £35.



Perrino, Sabina (2019) Narrating migration: Intimacies of exclusion in northern Italy. Abingdon: Routledge. Pp. 208. Hb. £120.



Ponsonnet, Maïa (2019) Difference and repetition in language shift to a creole: The expression of emotions. Abingdon: Routledge. Pp. 174. Hb. £115.



Ricento, Thomas (ed.) (2019) Language politics and policies: Perspectives from Canada and the United States. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Pp. xxxi, 318. Hb. £95.



Rupp, Laura & David Britain (2019) Linguistic Perspectives on a Variable English Morpheme: Let's talk about –s. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. Pp. xi, 370. Hb. €80.



Saft, Scott (2019) Exploring multilingual Hawaiʻi: Language use and language ideologies in a diverse society. London: Lexington Books. Pp. viii, 261. Hb. £65.



Seals, Corinne (2019) Choosing a mother tongue: The politics of language and identity in Ukraine. Bristol: Multilingual Matters. Pp. 224. Hb. £100.



Seargeant, Philip (2019) The emoji revolution: How technology is shaping the future of communication. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Pp. ix, 231. Pb. £18.99.



Seilhamer, Mark Fifer (2019) Gender, neoliberalism and distinction through linguistic capital: Taiwanese narratives of struggle and strategy. Bristol: Multilingual Matters. Pp. 232. Pb. £35.



Shaw, Emily (2019) Gesture in multiparty interaction. Washington DC: Gallaudet University Press. Pp. 256. Hb. $80.


Setter, Jane (2019) Your voice speaks volumes: It's not what you say, but how you say it. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Pp. 240. Hb. £20.



Stanford, James N. (2019) New England English: Large-scale acoustic sociophonetics and dialectology. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Pp. 376. Hb. £48.



Talbot, Mary (2019) Language and Gender (Third Edition). Cambridge: Polity Press. Pp. xiii, 285. Pb. £18.



Vieira, Kate (2019) Writing for love and money: How migration drives literacy learning in transnational families. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Pp. 256. Pb. £20.



Wee, Lionel & Robbie B.H. Goh (2019) Language, space and cultural play:
Theorising affect in the semiotic landscape. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Pp. 216. Hb. £85.



Woodhams, Jay (2019) Political identity in discourse: The voices of New Zealand voters. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. Pp. xix, 225. Hb. €75.



Zain, Subhan (2019) Language policy in superdiverse Indonesia. Abingdon: Routledge. Pp. 280. Hb. £115.



Zappettini, Franco (2019) European identities in discourse: A transnational citizens' perspective. London: Bloomsbury. Pp. ix, 219. Hb. £95.


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