24.3006, Calls: Chinese, General Linguistics, Language Acquisition, Sociolinguistics/USA

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LINGUIST List: Vol-24-3006. Wed Jul 24 2013. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 24.3006, Calls: Chinese, General Linguistics, Language Acquisition, Sociolinguistics/USA

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Date: Wed, 24 Jul 2013 13:45:34
From: Minglang Zhou [mlzhou at umd.edu]
Subject: 22nd Annual Conference of the IACL & 26th North American Conference on Chinese Linguistics

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Full Title: 22nd Annual Conference of the IACL & 26th North American Conference on Chinese Linguistics 
Short Title: IACL-22 & NACCL-26 

Date: 02-May-2014 - 04-May-2014
Location: College Park, Maryland, USA 
Contact Person: Minglang Zhou
Meeting Email: IACL22-NACCL26 at umd.edu
Web Site: http://sllc.umd.edu/chinese/IACL22-NACCL26/EN 

Linguistic Field(s): General Linguistics; Language Acquisition; Sociolinguistics 

Subject Language(s): Chinese, Mandarin (cmn)

Call Deadline: 15-Dec-2013 

Meeting Description:

Globalization of Chinese: Linguistic Variation in the Spread of the Standard Language
Symposium Dates: May 2-4, 2014
University of Maryland, College Park

This symposium explores how Putonghua (Mandarin) is vernacularized in the process of globalization. It encourages investigation and analysis of the vernacularization of the standard language in linguistic globalization in a cross-fertilized approach (across linguistic theory, sociolinguistic, SLA, and other subfields), particularly across the boundary between sociolinguistics and biolinguistics.

In the globalization of Chinese, an extensive shift from Chinese dialects to Putonghua (Mandarin) is seen in Chinese diaspora communities around the world, and at the same time, Putonghua, Pinyin Romanization, and simplified Chinese characters are used as the standard in global Chinese language education. This is similar to the promotion and spread of Putonghua in China. However, the spread of Putonghua in China leads to its vernacularization, such as Shanghai Putonghua, Guangzhou Putonghua, Uygur Putonghua, and more. Is the vernacularization happening to Putonghua globally as it does in China in the last two or three decades and as English have been experiencing globally in the last three centuries?

Call for Papers:

Abstract Submission Deadline: December 15, 2013

Notice of travel assistance if funded and requested: March 1, 2014

The symposium, to be held in conjunction with IACL-22 & NACCL-26, will include thematic panels for approximately 30 papers, a poster session for 10-15 undergraduate student papers, and a plenary roundtable with distinguished scholars. It will encourage investigation and analysis of vernacularization of the standard language in linguistic globalization in a cross-fertilized approach (across linguistic theory, sociolinguistic, SLA, and other subfields). Specifically, the symposium is interested in papers analyzing data in a cross-fertilized approach and answering some of the following questions:

1) What are the grammatical features of the interlanguage produced by a heritage dialect speaker in learning Putonghua as a heritage language? Is the interlanguage influenced by both the heritage dialect and the language (such as English, French, or Malay) of the diaspora community’s resident country and how? 
2) What are the grammatical features of the interlanguage produced by a non-native speaker in learning Putonghua as L2? Is this type of interlanguage similar to or different from that in (1) above if they share the same geographical location or community and why?
3) How are these types of interlanguage grammatically and theoretically related to vernacularized or varieties of Putonghua in the learners’ (diaspora and L2) communities? 
4) How are local varieties of Putonghua in a diaspora community and in a L2 community in the same geographic location, say New York City or Paris, similar or different and why? How are these vernacularized Putonghuas different from the standard Putonghua? 
5) How can the data concerning the above questions be satisfactorily accounted for in linguistic theory and how do the data bear on linguistic theory?

The symposium encourages heritage and Chinese as L2 undergraduate students to submit papers reflecting their own Chinese learning and using experience in relation to questions (1) or (2). The symposium will also consider high quality submissions on the vernacularization of Putonghua in dialect and minority language communities within China. If funded, the symposium may provide travel assistance to some accepted paper presenters who have a financial need.

Abstracts are invited for talks on any fields of Chinese linguistics or linguistic studies of languages in China. Each talk will be 15 minutes, followed by a 10-minute discussion. Submissions are limited to one individual and one joint abstract per author. Abstracts should be submitted online through Conference Email (IACL22-NACCL26 at umd.edu). Notice of acceptance will be sent on February 1, 2014. Non-IACL members must join IACL within 30 days of the notice of acceptance (by March 2, 2014). The program will not include non-IACL members.

Abstract Format:

Abstracts should be in Word, or in PDF if special fonts (such as IPA) are used. Abstracts should be written in English for presentations in English or in Chinese for presentations in Chinese.

For English, please use standard Times New Roman font, size 12 pt.

For Chinese, please use Song font (宋体/宋體), size 12 pt.
 
Abstracts are limited to one page (using 1 inch margins on all sides), including examples and (selected) references (using APA style). Two copies of an abstract should be submitted: one anonymous (with title only) and one with title, name(s), institution(s), and email address. Abstracts should include a subcategory (such as ‘phonology,’ ‘syntax,’ ‘sociolinguistic,’ ‘applied linguistics,’ etc. in the header.

The Young Scholar Award (YSA):

The YSA competition is an innovative attempt by the IACL to promote, recognize, and encourage scholarship by young scholars. It is held once a year in conjunction with the IACL annual conference.

A maximum of 5 (normally 2-4) finalists will be selected, each awarded a travel subsidy (of around $500) and invited to the IACL conference to make an oral presentation at a special session organized for this purpose, before a panel of judges chaired by the IACL President (the review committee of any given year may also recommend that no finalist be invited). The author of the best paper selected by the panel will be honored at the banquet of the annual conference and presented with an award certificate.

Eligibility: 35 years of age or below in the year of the conference. Current rank is below that of Associate Professor in the Chinese and American university systems and below that of Senior Lecturer in the British system. Previous award winners are not allowed to re-enter the competition. Membership of IACL: Non-members must join IACL within 30 days of the notice of acceptance.

Submission Guideline: A participant is required to submit a full paper of not more than 25 pages (double space) in length to the organizing committee. Attach a letter giving his or her age in 2013 as well as his or her present academic rank. All submissions for the YSA competition must be original papers that have not been published, accepted for publication, nor presented at a major conference and to appear in its proceedings. The same paper submitted to previous IACL conferences should not be resubmitted.

Submission Method: 

Email Submission: Please submit both the abstract and the full paper directly to the conference email (IACL22-NACCL26 at umd.edu) and include the word YSA in the subject line of the submission email. In the body of the message, please include: paper title, name of the author, age, affiliation and academic rank, and email address.

Submission Deadline: The abstract and the full paper should be submitted no later than December 15, 2013. The result will be notified by February 1, 2014.

Mantaro J. Hashimoto (MJH) Award for Chinese Historical Phonology:

This new award is an annual prize in the amount of US $500, donated by Professor Anne Yue in memory of the eminent linguist and Sinologist, Professor Mantaro J. Hashimoto. It is offered as an encouragement to young scholars who wish to devote themselves to the study of Chinese historical phonology, a field in which Professor Hashimoto was especially interested and to which he made numerous important contributions.

The prize will be administered as part of the Young Scholar Award process. All YSA papers submitted in the field of Chinese historical phonology will automatically be concurrently considered for the MJH Award.

Submission Guideline:

Applicants should follow the published YSA guidelines above in preparing their submissions. All regulations, restrictions, selection criteria, and judging standards current in the YSA process will apply to papers considered for the MJH Award, with the exception that MJH submissions must deal specifically with the area of historical phonology.

Submission Method and Deadline:

The same as those for YSA and including ‘MJH’ in the subject line of the submission email.

The Interdisciplinary Research Award (IRA):

This award is an annual prize in the amount of US $500, established in the honor of Professor Hsin-I Hsieh for his immense contributions to the IACL and to the field of Chinese Linguistics. The award is offered as a token of encouragement to young scholars who wish to devote themselves to interdisciplinary studies in Chinese linguistics. The prize will be administered as part of the Young Scholar Award (YSA) process. All papers with an interdisciplinary approach submitted for YSA will automatically be concurrently considered for this Interdisciplinary Research Award.

Submission Guideline:

Applicants should follow the published YSA guidelines above in preparing their submissions. All regulations, restrictions, and selection criteria adopted in the YSA process will apply to the papers considered for the Interdisciplinary Research Award, with the exception that these submissions must have an interdisciplinary focus, which includes interface studies (phonology-syntax, morpho-syntax, syntax-semantics, etc.), studies which combine diachronic and synchronic approaches, those that combine methodologies from different frameworks (formal, functional, typological, etc.), or those that combine linguistics and other disciplines (literature, anthropology, sociology, psychology, computer science, etc.).

Submission Method and Deadline:

The same as those for YSA and including ‘IRA’ in the subject line of the submission email.

For more information in English, visit http://sllc.umd.edu/chinese/IACL22-NACCL26/EN.

For more information in Chinese, visit http://sllc.umd.edu/chinese/IACL22-NACCL26/CN.







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