final call: 2nd Workshop on the Lgs of Papua, Manokwari, 8-12.2.2010
David Gil
gil at EVA.MPG.DE
Wed Aug 5 16:27:04 UTC 2009
Final Call for Abstracts
The 2nd Workshop on the Languages of Papua
MELANESIAN LANGUAGES ON THE EDGE OF ASIA:
PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE
8-12 February 2010
Manokwari, Indonesia
***
This workshop will focus on the most linguistically diverse part of the
world – Melanesia – which straddles countries of Southeast Asia and the
Pacific. Melanesia contains around a fifth of the world’s 6,000
languages in under 3% of its land area and less than 0.2% of its
population. The scope of the workshop includes all languages known as
"Papuan", plus the Austronesian languages that are spoken in the
vicinity of Papuan languages in New Guinea plus parts of Indonesia, East
Timor and the Solomon Islands.
These languages are astonishingly diverse, barely known to science, and
face the threat of extinction without trace in the coming century unless
concerted international efforts are made to meet the huge challenge of
documenting them. This conference addresses the scientific issues raised
by these languages. The scientific part of the program will cover the
whole gamut of linguistic questions from phonology to syntax to typology
to historical linguistics, as well as topics bordering musicology,
anthropology and prehistory, plus papers on digital archiving,
documentary linguistics, scientific infrastructure and the training of
linguists from minority language groups.
Besides the scientific questions, the theoretical recognition of
cultural and linguistic rights of minority groups in Indonesia, Timor
Leste and Papua New Guinea faces enormous practical difficulties if it
is to be realised, as national governments have indicated they wish, as
education programs that allow children to receive part of their
schooling in their mother-tongue.
The conference will run from Monday the 8th to Friday the 12th of
February 2010, and will include a free day for an excursion and informal
discussions on Wednesday the 10th. The conference will be followed by a
one-day master class on Field Methods and Language Resources on Saturday
the 13th of February.
Invited speakers include Linda Barwick, Steven Bird, Mark Donohue,
Michael Dunn, Nikolaus Himmelmann, Steve Levinson, and Ger Reesink.
***
Submission of abstracts:
We are now issuing a general call for papers. Session length: 45
minutes. If there is demand for a poster session we will also organise
one. If you are interested in presenting, please send the following
information, as an attachment, to
ManokwariPapuanConference at gmail.com:
Paper or poster?
Title
Abstract (max 200 words)
On a separate attachment, please also send the following information:
• name(s)
• institutional affiliation(s)
• contact details
• nationality and passport number
(Information regarding nationality and passport number is needed by the
workshop organizers well in advance in order to obtain the necessary
permits for the workshop. In the case of multiple authorship, this
information is required for all but only those authors who plan to
actually attend the workshop.)
Deadline for receipt of abstracts:
14 August 2009, midnight Australian Eastern Standard Time (AEST).
Notification concerning the status of your application by:
14 September 2009.
***
Inquiries:
David Gil <gil AT eva.mpg.de>
Conference Website:
email.eva.mpg.de/~gil/wlp2/
Organisers:
Nick Evans (Australian National University)
David Gil (Max Plank Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology)
Marian Klamer (Leiden University)
Yusuf Sawaki (Australian National University / Universitas Negeri Papua)
Wayan Arka (Australian National University / Universitas Udayana)
Acknowledgments:
This conference is being organised with the generous support of funds
from Australia-Netherlands Research Collaboration (ANRC) as well as the
Australian National University; the Max Planck Institute for
Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig; the Max Planck Institute for
Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen; Leiden University; and the Pusat
Dokumentasi Bahasa-Bahasa Hampir Punah di Papua, Universitas Negeri
Papua, Manokwari, Indonesia
--
David Gil
Department of Linguistics
Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology
Deutscher Platz 6, D-04103 Leipzig, Germany
Telephone: 49-341-3550321 Fax: 49-341-3550119
Email: gil at eva.mpg.de
Webpage: http://www.eva.mpg.de/~gil/
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