34.1009, Calls: Anthropological Linguistics, Language Acquisition, Sociolinguistics / LIDIL (Jrnl)
The LINGUIST List
linguist at listserv.linguistlist.org
Fri Mar 24 15:05:02 UTC 2023
LINGUIST List: Vol-34-1009. Fri Mar 24 2023. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.
Subject: 34.1009, Calls: Anthropological Linguistics, Language Acquisition, Sociolinguistics / LIDIL (Jrnl)
Moderator: Malgorzata E. Cavar, Francis Tyers (linguist at linguistlist.org)
Managing Editor: Lauren Perkins
Team: Helen Aristar-Dry, Steven Franks, Everett Green, Joshua Sims, Daniel Swanson, Matthew Fort, Maria Lucero Guillen Puon, Zackary Leech, Lynzie Coburn
Jobs: jobs at linguistlist.org | Conferences: callconf at linguistlist.org | Pubs: pubs at linguistlist.org
Homepage: http://linguistlist.org
Please support the LL editors and operation with a donation at:
https://funddrive.linguistlist.org/donate/
Editor for this issue: Zachary Leech <zleech at linguistlist.org>
================================================================
Date:
From: Junkai Li [junkai.li at univ-lorraine.fr]
Subject: Anthropological Linguistics, Language Acquisition, Sociolinguistics / LIDIL (Jrnl)
Call for papers:
Lidil issue 69, May 2024
Second language training facing emergency
Migrants today find themselves in an "emergency" context aggravated by
the pandemic. The uncertainty of their condition, due to practical,
legal and institutional matters, has been worsen by the current issues
related to health and security, which is weakening their integration
process even more. In such a context, it is also urgent to reconsider
the language needs of migrants, in other words, to address, in terms
of language training, the urgency of their integration through
language as well as the new difficulties in meeting the needs that
they express as learners. Thus, this issue of Lidil seeks to deepen
the reflection on topics related to second languages for migrants
(Lebreton, 2017; Azaoui et al., 2019) in the context of pandemic and
post-pandemic emergency (Achour, 2021).
In this perspective, Nathalie Gettliffe & Marie-Aline Ardisson (2022)
have called very recently on the need of developing a didactique de la
catastrophe (didactics in catastrophic situation) for French as a
foreign or second language. They argue and emphasize that, while
various catastrophes displaced populations on a massive scale in the
second half of the twentieth century (partition of Europe, wars in
South-East Asia, etc.), these displacements have been accelerated in
the twenty-first century (Gardou 2006; 2012), due first and foremost
to economic, social and political reasons, but nowadays, to crises
relating to health and safety more than ever. However, they conclude,
“the didactics in emergency (didactique de l’urgence, Beacco, 2012)
still seems to be poorly conceptualized” insofar as this question
initially posed by Beacco now dates back to more than ten years.
Therefore, the main objective of the call for papers for this issue of
Lidil will be to assess, in the light of current events, the relevance
of “emergency” in the field of language teaching research, i.e. to
define what extensions or theoretical renewals this concept has
acquired (see e.g. Macé, 2017). At the same time, we would like not
only to report on various tools, including digital ones, that have
been put in place and experimented over the past three years, but also
to explore how they have been used since then or can be used today
(see Abid et al., 2022 and forthcoming, 2023).
Moreover, this call for papers also aims to review the ins and outs,
principles and issues of what some researchers have called the
"Emergency Linguistics" (see Piller et al., 2020; Civico, 2021;
Dreisbach & Mendoza-Dreisbach, 2021). This emerging discipline thus
seeks to take advantage of the achievements of language sciences to
describe and improve the conditions of communication in public or
personal emergency situations, especially in the aim of guaranteeing
access to vital information. When it comes to application, this would
involve rethinking or revising second language training for migrants
in terms of "Emergency Language Services" (Yao, 2022).
We therefore invite researchers to submit a contribution that
addresses one of the related axes/questios:
See complete Call for papers:
https://journals.openedition.org/lidil/3231?lang=en#tocto1n3 (Issue
69)
Submitted abstracts should not exceed 3 pages (including references).
Full papers should not exceed 40,000 characters (including spaces).
Papers may be written in English, French or Italian.
Proposals for abstracts and papers should be sent to both:
junkai.li at univ-lorraine.fr and aurora.fragonara at univ-poitiers.fr.
Full call for papers to consult
https://journals.openedition.org/lidil/3231?lang=en#tocto1n3
Important dates
30th April 2023: submission of 3-page abstracts
Mid-May 2023: notification of acceptance or rejection of abstracts
31st July 2023: submission of full papers V1
31st October 2023: submission of revised papers V2
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
LINGUIST List is supported by the following publishers:
American Dialect Society/Duke University Press http://dukeupress.edu
Bloomsbury Publishing (formerly The Continuum International Publishing Group) http://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/
Brill http://www.brill.com
Cambridge University Press http://www.cambridge.org/linguistics
Cascadilla Press http://www.cascadilla.com/
De Gruyter Mouton https://cloud.newsletter.degruyter.com/mouton
Dictionary Society of North America http://dictionarysociety.com/
Edinburgh University Press www.edinburghuniversitypress.com
European Language Resources Association (ELRA) http://www.elra.info
Georgetown University Press http://www.press.georgetown.edu
John Benjamins http://www.benjamins.com/
Lincom GmbH https://lincom-shop.eu/
Linguistic Association of Finland http://www.ling.helsinki.fi/sky/
Multilingual Matters http://www.multilingual-matters.com/
Narr Francke Attempto Verlag GmbH + Co. KG http://www.narr.de/
Netherlands Graduate School of Linguistics / Landelijke (LOT) http://www.lotpublications.nl/
Oxford University Press http://www.oup.com/us
Springer Nature http://www.springer.com
Wiley http://www.wiley.com
----------------------------------------------------------
LINGUIST List: Vol-34-1009
----------------------------------------------------------
More information about the LINGUIST
mailing list