36.2601, Calls: Globalising Sociolinguistics (GloSoc4) (Egypt)
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LINGUIST List: Vol-36-2601. Tue Sep 02 2025. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.
Subject: 36.2601, Calls: Globalising Sociolinguistics (GloSoc4) (Egypt)
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Date: 02-Sep-2025
From: Dick Smakman [d.smakman at hum.leidenuniv.nl]
Subject: Globalising Sociolinguistics (GloSoc4)
Full Title: Globalising Sociolinguistics (GloSoc4)
Date: 07-Feb-2026 - 09-Feb-2026
Location: The 3-day conference is held at three universities in Cairo:
Ain Shams University, Helwan University, and Cairo University, Egypt
Contact Person: Nadia Shalaby
Meeting Email: nadiashalaby at aucegypt.edu
Linguistic Field(s): Anthropological Linguistics; History of
Linguistics; Language Acquisition; Philosophy of Language;
Sociolinguistics
Call Deadline: 15-Sep-2025
Final Call for Papers:
After the successful and inspiring GloSoc 3 conference at Tallinn
University, the theme of this fourth edition of the GloSoc series is
the sociolinguistics of decolonisation. This theme should be
interpreted very broadly. We are hoping for contributions from
countries that have experienced (linguistic) colonisation. PhD
students and young researchers are welcomed in particular. Some themes
for your inspiration:
- The effects of colonisation on language use in a specific region or
country
- Historical descriptions of how colonisation has affected language
use
- Managing the presence and use of the language of the coloniser
- The need (or not) of decolonising language use
- Language learning and teaching
- Theoretical talks about the sociolinguistic mechanisms behind
colonisation and decolonisation
- Codeswitching that includes the colonial language
- Nativisation of the colonial language (making it more culturally
suitable)
- Theoretical bias in analysing sociolinguistic situations in
postcolonial settings
- Effects of colonisation on local languages
- Personal experiences in multilingual situations that included the
language of the former coloniser
- The protection of local languages
- The protection of multilingualism
- Multilingual language practices
- Language norms in multilingual settings
- The social status of the local and the colonial language
- The socially stratified roles of colonial and local languages
Keynote Speakers:
Sinfree Makoni, Pennsylvania State University, USA
Reem Bassiouney, The American University in Cairo, Egypt
Henning Radke, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Dick Smakman, Leiden University, The Netherlands
Organisers:
- Mona Fouad Attia, Professor of Discourse Analysis, Department of
English Language and Literature, Faculty of Arts
Helwan University
- Ola Hafez, Professor of Discourse Studies, Department of English
Language and Literature, Faculty of Arts, Cairo University, Egypt
- Nihal Nagi Sarhan, Professor of Linguistics, Department of English,
Faculty of Al-Alsun, Ain Shams University, Egypt
- Nadia Shalaby, Professor of Linguistics, Department of English
Language and Literature, Faculty of Arts, Ain Shams University, Egypt
- Kapitolina Fedorova, Professor of Russian Studies, School of
Humanities, Tallin University, Estonia
- Dick Smakman, Assistant Professor, Leiden University Centre of
Linguistics, Leiden, The Netherlands
Abstract Submission Form: https://shorturl.at/R7JDM
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