30.1455, Calls: Discourse Analysis, General Linguistics, Psycholinguistics, Sociolinguistics, Cognitive Science / Travaux interdiscplinaires sur la parole et le langage (Jrnl)
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LINGUIST List: Vol-30-1455. Tue Apr 02 2019. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.
Subject: 30.1455, Calls: Discourse Analysis, General Linguistics, Psycholinguistics, Sociolinguistics, Cognitive Science / Travaux interdiscplinaires sur la parole et le langage (Jrnl)
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Date: Tue, 02 Apr 2019 12:03:29
From: Joelle Lavaud [joelle.lavaud at lpl-aix.fr]
Subject: Discourse Analysis, General Linguistics, Psycholinguistics, Sociolinguistics, Cognitive Science / Travaux interdiscplinaires sur la parole et le langage (Jrnl)
Full Title: Travaux interdiscplinaires sur la parole et le langage
Linguistic Field(s): Cognitive Science; Discourse Analysis; General Linguistics; Psycholinguistics; Sociolinguistics
Call Deadline: 31-Aug-2019
Call for Papers:
How the body contributes to discourse and meaning
Coordination: Brahim AZAOUI (Montpellier University, LIRDEF) & Marion TELLIER
(Aix-Marseille University, LPL)
Research on the body, taken in a broad sense (gaze, manual gestures,
proxemics, etc.), has recently experienced a renewed interest in various
fields in human sciences. Since the praxeological shift in linguistics in the
1950s with the theories of speech acts in particular, interactional
linguistics (Mondada, 2004, 2007; Kerbrat-Orecchioni, 2004) has given it a
certain place in its work. Similarly, didactics has gradually recognized its
importance in the teaching and learning process (Sime, 2001, 2006; Tellier,
2014 & 2016) thanks in particular to the numerous studies carried out in
social semiotics (Jewitt, 2008; Kress et al, 2001), in education sciences
(Pujade-Renaud, 1983), psychology and cognitive sciences (Stam, 2013) or
linguistics (Aden, 2017, Colletta, 2004; Tellier 2008, 2014; Azaoui, 2015,
2019; Gullberg, 2010).
However, if this field of study is gaining in interest, as shown by the number
of articles, books and PhD dissertations dedicated to it, it must be noted
that few French journals have devoted an issue to it.
This issue of TIPA journal seeks to contribute to the understanding and
dissemination of this theme by collecting various contributions to answer the
following question: how does the body of speakers co-constructs discourse and
meaning in didactic speech? The term ''didactic speech'' will refer to any
situation where the discourse of the interlocutors aims to make somebody
know/learn. This conception is inspired by Moirand's work on the notion of
didacticity (1993), which makes it possible to distinguish discourses whose
primary intention is didactic, such as those produced in school situations,
from those which are not didactic but have a didactic intent. Therefore, these
speeches can take place in contexts other than the classroom, whether in
face-to-face or distant interactions (e. g. videoconferencing) or in
asymmetric interactions in which an expert must adapt his or her speech to
explain to or convince a non-expert (doctor/patient, parent/child,
professional/client, political speech...).
The various articles proposed will pertain to a theoretical framework that
considers speech and the body as being in constant interaction, the study and
understanding of one makes the functioning of the other explicit, or as part
of the same cognitive process (McNeill, 2005; Kendon, 2004). The authors will
indicate which of the following three areas their contribution will focus on:
- Epistemology
- Analysis of practices
- Training in/through bodily activity
Timeline:
April 1, 2019: first call for papers
June 3, 2019: second call for papers
August 31, 2019: submission of the paper (version 1)
November 15, 2019: Notification to authors: acceptance, proposal for
amendments (of version 1) or refusal
January 15, 2020: submission of the amended version (version 2)
March 15, 2020: Committee feedback (regarding the final version)
April 15, 2020: publication
Instructions for authors:
Please send 3 files in electronic form to: lpl-tipa at univ-amu.fr,
marion.tellier at univ-amu.fr, brahim.azaoui at umontpellier.fr
- a .doc file containing, in addition to the body of the article, the title,
name and affiliation of the author(s)
- two anonymous files, one in .doc format and the other in .pdf format
For more details, please visit the ''instructions to authors'' page at
https://journals.openedition.org/tipa/222
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