33.3127, Calls: General Linguistics/Spain
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Fri Oct 14 19:37:53 UTC 2022
LINGUIST List: Vol-33-3127. Fri Oct 14 2022. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.
Subject: 33.3127, Calls: General Linguistics/Spain
Moderators:
Editor for this issue: Everett Green <everett at linguistlist.org>
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Date: Fri, 14 Oct 2022 19:25:51
From: Ana Elina Martinez-Insua [esflc2023 at uvigo.es]
Subject: 32nd European Systemic Functional Linguistics Conference. (Cognitive) developments in multimodal (digital) communication. Expanding traditional borders in SFL.
Full Title: 32nd European Systemic Functional Linguistics Conference. (Cognitive) developments in multimodal (digital) communication. Expanding traditional borders in SFL.
Short Title: ESFLC2023
Date: 15-Jun-2023 - 17-Jun-2023
Location: Vigo, Spain
Contact Person: Ana Elina Martinez-Insua
Meeting Email: esflc2023 at uvigo.es
Web Site: https://esflc2023.webs.uvigo.gal/
Linguistic Field(s): General Linguistics
Call Deadline: 20-Jan-2023
Meeting Description:
>From the assumption that human interaction is inherently multimodal, and the
acceptance of the co-development of society and digital media for
communication and its analysis, this conference aims to deepen in the
explanation of language and other modes of meaning-making, and explore models
for the representation of such multimodality. The conference invites SFL and
associated disciplines to approach the study of verbal and non-verbal
communication in the form of paper presentations, posters and single-themed
symposia with multiple speakers.
Call for Papers:
The 32nd European Systemic Functional Linguistics Conference will take place
in Vigo on 15-17 June 2023. The conference will be organised by the LVTC
(Language Variation and Textual Categorisation) research group at the
University of Vigo and the theme will be (Cognitive) developments in
multimodal (digital) communication. Expanding traditional borders in SFL.
Plenary speakers:
- Dr. Rebekah Wegener (Paris Lodron University Salzburg): ''The Semiotic
Machine: Technology and multimodal interaction in context''
- Prof. Kay O’Halloran (University of Liverpool): ''Multimodality: Informing
design, policymaking and activism for digital media''
- Dr. Inés Olza (University of Navarra): ''Systemic-functional approaches,
cognitive approaches, or both? Recent developments in gesture analysis''
>From the assumption that human interaction is inherently multimodal, and the
acceptance of the co-development of society and digital media for
communication and its analysis, this conference aims to deepen in the
explanation of language and other modes of meaning-making, and explore models
for the representation of such multimodality. The conference invites SFL and
associated disciplines to approach the study of verbal and non-verbal
communication in the form of paper presentations, posters and single-themed
symposia with multiple speakers.
Although the conference is open to contributions that address all kinds of SFL
theory and research/practice topics, we especially welcome proposals that
connect the theme of the conference to these areas of research, among others:
- SFL and Multimodality
- SFL, Interdisciplinarity and Transdisciplinarity
- SFL, Computational Linguistics, Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence
- SFL and Corpus Linguistics
- SFL and Genre theories/ analysis
- SFL and Cognitive Linguistics
- SFL and Pragmatics
- SFL and (Critical) Discourse Analysis
- SFL and L2 Teaching and Learning
- SFL and ESP
- SFL and (digital) Communication (medical, business, political, etc.)
- SFL, Translation and Multilingual Studies
- SFL and Ecolinguistics
- SFL and Literary Studies
- SFL and Culture and Media Studies
The following formats will be considered:
- 20-minute papers (plus 8 minutes for questions and answers)
- Single-themed symposia with multiple (3-5) speakers
- Posters
All submissions will be evaluated by the scientific committee, who will
consider their relevance to the framework, their quality and their
originality.
- Abstracts for paper and poster proposals should include a title, a maximum
of 300 words (including references) and 3-5 keywords.
- Abstracts for symposium proposals should include a title, a general
description of their purpose (maximum 100 words), and individual descriptions
of the papers to be presented (maximum 300 words each, including references
and keywords).
Convenors of symposia are responsible for deciding their theme, inviting
speakers, gathering abstracts from speakers, and organising the order of the
discussions.
Important dates:
Abstract submission: 14 October 2022 – 20 January 2023
Acceptance notification: 17 February 2023
Early-bird registration: 17 February – 31 March 2023
Regular registration: 01–30 April 2023
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