35.1408, Calls: From Associated Motion to Associated Posture in Cross-Linguistic Perspective

The LINGUIST List linguist at listserv.linguistlist.org
Tue May 7 22:05:02 UTC 2024


LINGUIST List: Vol-35-1408. Tue May 07 2024. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 35.1408, Calls: From Associated Motion to Associated Posture in Cross-Linguistic Perspective

Moderators: Malgorzata E. Cavar, Francis Tyers (linguist at linguistlist.org)
Managing Editor: Justin Fuller
Team: Helen Aristar-Dry, Steven Franks, Everett Green, Daniel Swanson, Maria Lucero Guillen Puon, Zackary Leech, Lynzie Coburn, Natasha Singh, Erin Steitz
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: Zackary Leech <zleech at linguistlist.org>

LINGUIST List is hosted by Indiana University College of Arts and Sciences.
================================================================


Date: 04-May-2024
From: ALBERT ALVAREZ GONZALEZ [albert.alvarez at unison.mx]
Subject: From Associated Motion to Associated Posture in Cross-Linguistic Perspective


Full Title: From associated motion to associated posture in
cross-linguistic perspective

Date: 19-Nov-2024 - 20-Nov-2024
Location: Hermosillo, Mexico
Contact Person: ALBERT ALVAREZ
Meeting Email: albert.alvarez at unison.mx

Linguistic Field(s): Anthropological Linguistics; Morphology;
Semantics; Syntax; Typology

Call Deadline: 16-Jun-2024

Meeting Description:

This workshop aims to explore the diversity of associated motion and
associated posture systems in the languages of the world.

Associated motion (AM) is a relatively new, although by now
well-established comparative concept. Following Guillaume (2016), AM
refers to grammatical morphemes (affixes, clitics, particles or
auxiliaries) that are associated with the verb and that have among
their possible functions the coding of translational motion (spatial
displacement). As synthesized in Guillaume & Koch (2021), the main
typological parameters relevant to the analysis of AM systems include
the argument role of the moving figure (typically subject or object),
the temporal relation between the motion and the verb event (typically
prior, concurrent or subsequent) and the direction of the motion
(typically itive or ventive, one-way or returnative, straight or
ambulative). For instance, the Tacana inflectional imperfective
circumfixes in (1a) below instantiate a system of five subject
concurrent AM markers distinguished according to different
combinations of directional values.

Unlike AM, the phenomenon of “associated posture” (AP), lacks an
established label and definition in comparative linguistics, and has
not been the subject of any typological investigation. The term
“associated posture” has recently been employed by analogy with that
of AM in a number of descriptive studies, particularly focusing on
languages from Central and South America, to account for the
morphological expression of postural meanings (Peralta Ramirez 2009;
Vuillermet 2017; Tallman 2020; Guillaume 2023; 2024).

One of the aims of this workshop is to explore the relevance and
usefulness of AP as a crosslinguistic comparative concept (in the
sense of Haspelmath 2010). For this purpose, we will follow
Guillaume’s (2024) proposal in defining an AP marker as a grammatical
morpheme (affix, clitic, particle or auxiliary) that is associated
with the verb and that has among its possible functions the coding of
postural meanings (‘sit’, ‘stand’, ‘lie’, ‘bend’, ‘hang’, etc.).

Preliminary investigation suggests that expressions that match (or at
least come close to) this definition are found in languages from all
over the world. In addition to those listed above in Central and South
American languages, such expressions also appear to be present in
languages from at least some parts of North America (Watkins 1976;
Mithun 1999: 115–116), Africa (Newman 2002: 12–13; Hellwig 2003), Asia
(Enfield 2002; Anderson 2006: 344) and Europe (Kuteva 1999; 2001:
chap.3; Lemmens 2005).

In this workshop on AM and AP, we are particularly interested in, but
not limited to, studies that address the following topics:
• AM and/or AP in languages spoken in or near Northwestern Mexico
(Nahuan, Oto-Manguean, etc.): cf. surveys of AM in North- and
Central-American languages by Dryer (2021a), in the Otomi branch of
Oto-Manguean by Hernández-Green & Palancar (2021), in Nahuan languages
by Boeg Thomsen (Forthcoming) and of AM and AP in Zapotec languages by
Operstein (2024);
• similarities versus differences between AM and AP: parameters
relevant to their description, historical development, semantic
overlap, use in discourse (pleonastic/“echo” constructions), etc.:cf.
outline of a typology of AP in Guillaume (2024: Section 12);
• overlap between AM and directionals (“path satellites”): cf.
cross-linguistic surveys by Dryer (2021b) and Ross (2021), and
implicational scale by Belkadi (2016);
• purposive AM (“motion-with-purpose”) – and/or purposive AP, if
attested (?) – and the wider question of the degree of event
integration between the AM/AP meanings and the verb meanings: cf.
diagnostic tests in Jacques et al. (2021) and Silva-Robles et al.
(2022);
• interaction of AM/AP with the argument structure of the verb: cf.
applicative-like function of AM markers in Tungusic languages
described by Pakendorf & Stoynova (2021).

Call for Papers:

General information:
• This is a hybrid conference with options for online presentations.
• Abstracts for 30-minute presentations (20-25 minutes presentations
followed by 10-5 minutes
discussion) should not exceed 500 words, including examples but
excluding references.
• Abstracts must be anonymous; please include your personal data
(name, institution of
affiliation) within the email.
• Abstract should be sent no later than June 16, 2024, to the
following email addresses:
seminario.ca.uson81 at gmail.com, antoine.guillaume at cnrs.fr,
zarinaef at gmail.com,
albert.alvarez at unison.mx.
• Notification of acceptance will be sent out by July 1, 2024.



------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Please consider donating to the Linguist List https://give.myiu.org/iu-bloomington/I320011968.html


LINGUIST List is supported by the following publishers:

Cambridge University Press http://www.cambridge.org/linguistics

De Gruyter Mouton https://cloud.newsletter.degruyter.com/mouton

Equinox Publishing Ltd http://www.equinoxpub.com/

John Benjamins http://www.benjamins.com/

Lincom GmbH https://lincom-shop.eu/

Multilingual Matters http://www.multilingual-matters.com/

Narr Francke Attempto Verlag GmbH + Co. KG http://www.narr.de/

Wiley http://www.wiley.com


----------------------------------------------------------
LINGUIST List: Vol-35-1408
----------------------------------------------------------



More information about the LINGUIST mailing list