LINGUIST List 19.3792
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Thu Dec 11 2008
Calls: Anthro Ling,General Ling/USA; Syntax/Greece
Editor for this issue: Kate Wu
<kate linguistlist.org>
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Directory
1. Danny
Law,
Symposium About Language and Society-Austin
2. Anna
Roussou,
The Optionality of Wh-movement
Message 1: Symposium About Language and Society-Austin
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Date: 10-Dec-2008
From: Danny Law <law.dannylaw gmail.com>
Subject: Symposium About Language and Society-Austin
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Full Title: Symposium About Language and Society-Austin Short Title: SALSA Date: 10-Apr-2009 - 12-Apr-2009 Location: Austin, Texas, USA Contact Person: Danny Law Meeting Email: salsaut uts.cc.utexas.edu Web Site: http://www.utexas.edu/students/salsa Linguistic Field(s): Anthropological Linguistics; General Linguistics Call Deadline: 30-Jan-2009 Meeting Description: The Symposium About Language and Society-Austin is pleased to announce its 17th Annual Meeting to be held April 10-12, 2009 at the University of Texas at Austin. We encourage the submission of abstracts on research that addresses the relationship of language to culture and society. Call for Papers The Symposium About Language and Society-Austin is pleased to announce its 17th Annual Meeting to be held April 10-12, 2009 at the University of Texas at Austin. Keynote speakers will include Curtis LeBaron (Brigham Young University), Matthew S. McGlone (University of Texas at Austin), and Marianne Mithun (University of California, Santa Barbara). We encourage the submission of abstracts on research that addresses the relationship of language to culture and society. Desired frameworks include but are not limited to: Linguistic Anthropology Sociolinguistics Ethnography of Communication Language and Identity Speech Play, Verbal Art, and Poetics Language, Media, and Technology Language and Social Interaction Discourse Analysis Conversation Analysis Historical Linguistics Language Vitality Language Socialization Gesture and Talk in Interaction Papers delivered at the conference will be published as a special edition of the Texas Linguistic Forum. Speakers will be allowed 20 minutes for presentation and 10 minutes for discussion. Please send submissions to SALSA 2009 through the online submission form on the SALSA web site.http://www.utexas.edu/students/salsa All submissions must include two abstracts: An extended abstract not to exceed 4,100 characters and spaces(approximately 600 words), including references and examples; and a shorter abstract not to exceed 1,100 spaces and characters (approximately 150 words). Please note that the online submission form does not accept special formatting or text such as IPA. Only electronic submissions sent through our online form will be accepted. Each person is limited to one submission as the primary author; multiple submissions by the same first author will not be accepted. Deadline for receipt of abstracts is January 30, 2009. Late submissions will not be accepted, and we cannot accept papers that are to be published elsewhere. Notification of acceptance or rejection will be sent in mid- February 2009. Pre-registration fees for SALSA XV will be $25 for students and $50 for non-students, and on-site registration fees will be $30 for students and $60 for non-students. Contact us at: salsaut uts.cc.utexas.edu
Message 2: The Optionality of Wh-movement
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Date: 10-Dec-2008
From: Anna Roussou <aroussou upatras.gr>
Subject: The Optionality of Wh-movement
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Full Title: The Optionality of Wh-movement Short Title: TOWH Date: 03-Apr-2009 - 05-Apr-2009 Location: Thessaloniki, Greece Contact Person: Anna Roussou Meeting Email: whstrategy gmail.com Web Site: http://www.enl.auth.gr/symposium19/ Linguistic Field(s): Syntax Call Deadline: 15-Dec-2008 Meeting Description: The availability of a wh-in situ strategy in typical wh-movement languages has recently been argued to exist in a number of typical wh-movement languages. The pervasive availability of wh-in situ of this type turns out to be a non-trivial issue, with implications regarding the nature of wh-movement, its effects on the interfaces and the interaction with the lexicon. The workshop aims at considering the properties of these constructions from a theoretical perspective, including questions regarding the 'optionality' of wh-in situ,the differences with 'real' in-situ, the similarities with sluicing, and the role of islands. Call for Papers Workshop on 'The optionality of wh-movement' The availability of a wh-in situ strategy in typical wh-movement languages was originally discussed with respect to French (Aout et al. 1981; Cheng1991; Chang 1997; Bosković 1997, 2000; Cheng & Rooryck 2000, 2002; Starke 2001; Mathieu 2004; Baunaz 2005, 2008, a.o.). In recent years, the in-situ option has been argued to exist in a number of languages, such as English (Ginzburg & Sag 2001, Pires & Taylor 2007), Spanish (Uribe-Etxebarria 2002, Etxepare & Uribe-Etxebarria 2005, Reglero 2005), European Portuguese (Cheng & Rooryck 2000), Brazilian Portuguese (Kato 2004), Egyptian Arabic (Lassadi 2004), Malagasy (Sabel 2003), Greek (Sinopoulou 2007, Vlachos 2008) and Babine-Witsuwit'en (Danham 2000). The wh-in situ strategy has been broadly analyzed either as concealed (remnant or feature) movement, or as real in-situ. Despite different implementations all approaches show that the in-situ variant has different syntactic properties compared to its moved counterpart, e.g. lack of island effects (a property also shared by 'sluicing') and interpretative restrictions. It has also been pointed out that real in-situ languages give rise to different readings depending on the presence or absence of the question particle (Miyagawa 2001), raising the question whether these languages also exhibit a parallel, although differently manifested, dual pattern. The pervasive availability of wh-in situ in typical wh-movement languages turns out to be a non-trivial issue, with implications regarding the nature of wh-movement, its effects on the interfaces and the interaction with the lexicon. On the PF-interface, in-situ and moved wh-questions exhibit different intonational patterns, while on the LF interface, they provide a more restricted set of readings, an option which is not shared by 'real' in-situ languages. The workshop aims at considering the properties of these constructions from a theoretical perspective, including questions such as the ones below: - If the wh-in situ strategy is optional, how is it captured by the computational system? -- How does 'optional' wh-in situ differ (if it does) from 'real' in-situ? -- What is the correlation between alternative strategies of wh-questions and the properties of the lexical elements involved? -- How does 'optional' wh-in situ compare with other phenomena, such as sluicing, in terms of interpretation and island effects? What are the implications for the definition of islands? The workshop will run in parallel to the general session of the 19th International Symposium on Theoretical and Applied Linguistics (ISTAL 19), Thessaloniki, Greece, 3-5 April 2009. Organization details will be available in due course at: http://www.enl.auth.gr/symposium19/. Papers covering any aspect of the properties of the wh-in-situ strategies are welcome. Those interested can submit abstracts in .pdf format. Only electronic submissions will be considered. Abstracts should be anonymous and 300-500 words long (not exceeding one page A4). Send your personal information - Name, Affiliation, and Contact Email - in the body of the message and attach the abstract with title but without name and affiliation. Please note that only one single or co-authored abstract can be submitted. Submissions should be sent by 15 December 2008 to the workshop email address: whstrategy gmail.com (subject 'abstract submission'). Applicants will be notified on abstract acceptance by 15 January 2009. The Organizing Committee Anna Roussou Christos Vlachos
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