34.133, Confs: Anthropological Linguistics, Applied Linguistics, Discourse Analysis, Sociolinguistics/USA
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Tue Jan 17 02:28:56 UTC 2023
LINGUIST List: Vol-34-133. Tue Jan 17 2023. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.
Subject: 34.133, Confs: Anthropological Linguistics, Applied Linguistics, Discourse Analysis, Sociolinguistics/USA
Moderators:
Editor for this issue: Everett Green <everett at linguistlist.org>
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Date: Tue, 17 Jan 2023 02:28:30
From: Gabriella Licata [glicata at berkeley.edu]
Subject: Visibilizing raciolinguistic ideologies across cultures, languages, and systems
Visibilizing raciolinguistic ideologies across cultures, languages, and systems
Date: 06-Apr-2023 - 07-Apr-2023
Location: Virtual, USA
Contact: Gabriella Licata
Contact Email: glicata at berkeley.edu
Meeting URL: https://sites.google.com/view/raciolinguistics
Linguistic Field(s): Anthropological Linguistics; Applied Linguistics; Discourse Analysis; Sociolinguistics
Meeting Description:
Raciolinguistics (Alim et al., 2016; Flores & Rosa, 2015) is an emerging field
that interrogates how ethnoracial identities are constructed linguistically;
what role language plays in processes of racialization and ethnicization; and
how language ideologies function to marginalize racially-minoritized
populations in specific political, economic, and historical contexts (Alim et
al., 2020). A more recent breadth of research has revealed how raciolinguistic
ideologies underpin broadly-accepted notions of those whose multilingualism is
institutionally valued and those who are disparaged (Rosa & Flores, 2017),
shedding light on how language serves as a proxy for other forms of
discrimination. Whereas this research has contributed much to the analysis of
raciolinguistics in institutional contexts in the United States, recent calls
have emphasized the need for more studies of language and race in non-US
contexts (Alim et al., 2020). We take up this call and hope to extend it by
creating an international, interdisciplinary, and intercultural dialogue to
critically examine how raciolinguistic ideologies are manifested across
contexts.
LOCATION:
Fully virtual conference via Zoom hosted by the Language as Social Justice
Working Group, housed in the Berkeley Language Center, and sponsored by the
Townsend Center at the University of California, Berkeley.
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