LINGUIST List 18.1516
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Thu May 17 2007
Calls: Applied Ling/Hong Kong; General Ling/Croatia
Editor for this issue: Ania Kubisz
<ania linguistlist.org>
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Directory
1. Joey
Wong,
1st HCLS Conference on Becoming a World Language
2. Brala
Marija,
Space and Time in Language and Literature 2007
Message 1: 1st HCLS Conference on Becoming a World Language
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Date: 17-May-2007
From: Joey Wong <hcls cityu.edu.hk>
Subject: 1st HCLS Conference on Becoming a World Language
Full Title: 1st HCLS Conference on Becoming a World Language Short Title: HCLS-C1 Date: 05-Dec-2007 - 07-Dec-2007 Location: Hong Kong, Hong Kong Contact Person: Joey Wong Meeting Email: hcls cityu.edu.hk Web Site: http://www.hallidaycentre.cityu.edu.hk/HCLS-C1-2007 Linguistic Field(s): Applied Linguistics Call Deadline: 25-Aug-2007 Meeting Description: The Halliday Centre for Intelligent Applications of Language Studies of the City University of Hong Kong will organize a Conference on 'Becoming a World Language: the growth of Chinese, English and Spanish' - the first of a series of annual conferences - to be held from 5 to 7 December 2007 in Hong Kong. The Conference will be preceded by a Pre-Conference Institute on 3 and 4 December 2007. Officially launched in March 2006, The Halliday Centre has the distinct honour of being named after the world-renowned linguist, Professor M.A.K. Halliday. The Halliday Centre aims to expand opportunities for collaboration with global partners in China and the Asia-Pacific Region, Europe, North America and elsewhere, concentrating on research relating to corpus linguistics, computational linguistics, and comparative language studies. The Conference will provide an international forum for scholars, researchers, and other professionals to discuss the phenomenon of becoming a world language of Chinese, English and Spanish, and how an applicable linguistics might contribute to an understanding of the short and long term effects of the phenomenon both on speakers and on speech systems. Keynote speakers include Professor Cecilia Colombi, Professor Fang Yan, Professor M.A.K. Halliday, Professor Yamuna Kachru, Professor Christian Matthiessen, and Professor Larry Smith. Dear Colleagues, I write on behalf of The Halliday Centre for Intelligent Applications of Language Studies to invite you to participate in an International Conference on ''Becoming a World Language: the growth of Chinese, English and Spanish'' City University of Hong Kong, 5 - 7 December 2007 http://www.hallidaycentre.cityu.edu.hk/HCLS-C1-2007 Plenary Speakers: Cecilia Colombi (University of California, Davis) Fang Yan (Tsinghua University) M.A.K. Halliday (University of Sydney) Yamuna Kachru (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) Christian Matthiessen (Macquarie University) Larry Smith (Christopher, Smith & Associates LLC; and Japan-America Institute of Management Science, Honolulu) The objective of the conference is to explore from a multiple perspective the significance of a language becoming a world language. English is already acknowledged as a world language, but both Chinese and Spanish appear to be moving in the same direction. This raises some interesting issues. For example: is the pattern of emergence to this status the same in all three cases, or do they have different trajectories? Does the system of language change in this process, and if so, how? What kind of resources, if any, does the language have to develop along the way, and what are the consequences of its growth for those who speak it? What relevance do modes of language education have to this process? What are its effects on the formation of speaker identity, for both the native speakers of the world language and the foreign learners? The field is thus excitingly open to, and in need of, interpretation. We invite you to participate in this venture by presenting your thoughts on any aspect relevant to becoming a world language. Papers could be of (i) 30 minutes or (ii) 50 minutes duration. Please send your abstracts to HCLS cityu.edu.hk no later than 25 August 2007. The length of the abstract should be 150 - 250 words (Microsoft Word format preferred). Please show name, institution and country of residence at top of page and indicate whether your paper is intended for category (i) or (ii). There will be a Pre-Conference Institute on 3 and 4 December 2007. The instructors and titles of the courses are as follows: M.A.K. Halliday: Theoretical Foundations of Systemic Functional Linguistics Ruqaiya Hasan: Analysing Text: Meaning in Context Paul Thibault: Image and Language in Pedagogic Discourse: An Application of Systemic Functional Linguistics Participants will be offered a certificate of attendance. For details of course design and fee and online registration, please visit http://www.hallidaycentre.cityu.edu.hk/HCLS-C1-2007/institute.htm. Advance registration (with concession) for the Conference will be available until 29 September 2007. We look forward to receiving your abstracts and hope you will be able to join us in Hong Kong in December 2007. Yours sincerely, Dr. Jonathan Webster & Emeritus Professor Ruqaiya Hasan Convenors, International Conference on ''Becoming a World Language: the growth of Chinese, English and Spanish''
Message 2: Space and Time in Language and Literature 2007
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Date: 16-May-2007
From: Brala Marija <mbrala ffri.hr>
Subject: Space and Time in Language and Literature 2007
Full Title: Space and Time in Language and Literature 2007 Short Title: STLL 2007 Date: 21-Sep-2007 - 22-Sep-2007 Location: Rijeka, Croatia Contact Person: Marija Brala Meeting Email: mbrala ffri.hr Linguistic Field(s): General Linguistics Call Deadline: 20-Jun-2007 Meeting Description: STLL 2007 is aimed at providing a setting for presentations of innovative work, both theoretical and empirical, relative to the expression of time and space within natural languages. The aim is to compare and contrast the structure of spatiality and temporality both at the conceptual and at the lexical levels, and try to do so from an interdisciplinary perspective. STLL 2007 will also address the many diverse chronologies and topologies that have shaped or may one day shape our experience, identities, and (linguistic/literary) representations, both individual and collective. Some of the themes that will be discussed are: -- tense, aspect and event structure; spatial/temporal structure and discourse -- language change in the community and across the individual lifespan -- language acquisition and the timing of input; processing/acquiring spatial/temporal reference. -- cultural geographies; frontiers and borders; homeland and exile; globalization and geopolitics -- the center and its margins; canons and 'the other'; virtual worlds of utopia, SF, or hypertext -- digital and electronic media intertwining with the 'old' medium of literature; interactions between language and code, print and electronic text, and the dialectic between representations -- history and its periods; memory and repetition; narrativizations of time; the 'eternal return' -- simultaneity and instantaneity; temporalities of technology -- emergence, urgence, 'presentness' and becoming; temporality and philosophy -- the space-time of cultures, languages and aesthetic forms (including literary chronotopes) -- topographies and histories of gender, ethnicity, sexuality, race -- 'real space-time' and media time; music/image/cinema/hypertext: literature and other media Papers will be 20 minutes in length, followed by a 10-minute discussion. Abstracts should be no longer than 300 words, and should be submitted to mbrala ffri.hr (linguistics) or lovorka ucla.edu (literature) no later than June 20, 2007. Please, state your name, affiliation and contact details in the body of the message. A decision about the acceptance of papers will be made by July 1, 2007.
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