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LINGUIST List 19.3960

Mon Dec 22 2008

Calls: Anthropological Ling,Applied Ling/USA; Philosophy of Lang/France

Editor for this issue: Kate Wu <katelinguistlist.org>


LINGUIST is pleased to announce the launch of an exciting new feature: Easy Abstracts! Easy Abs is a free abstract submission and review facility designed to help conference organizers and reviewers accept and process abstracts online. Just go to: http://www.linguistlist.org/confcustom, and begin your conference customization process today! With Easy Abstracts, submission and review will be as easy as 1-2-3!
Directory
        1.    Lyle Campbell, Conference on Endangered Languages and Cultures of Native America
        2.    Nathan Klinedinst, New Directions in the Theory of Presupposition


Message 1: Conference on Endangered Languages and Cultures of Native America
Date: 22-Dec-2008
From: Lyle Campbell <lyle.campbelllinguistics.utah.edu>
Subject: Conference on Endangered Languages and Cultures of Native America
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Full Title: Conference on Endangered Languages and Cultures of Native America
Short Title: CELCNA

Date: 27-Mar-2009 - 29-Mar-2009
Location: Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
Contact Person: Elizabeth Neilson
Meeting Email: e.neilsonutah.edu
Web Site: http://www.cail.utah.edu/?pageId=1049

Linguistic Field(s): Anthropological Linguistics; Applied Linguistics; General
Linguistics; Language Documentation

Call Deadline: 16-Jan-2009

Meeting Description:

Conference on Endangered Languages and Cultures of Native America
5th annual CELCNA

Dates: March 27-29, 2009, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah.

Second Call for Papers

Abstracts Deadline: Jan. 16, 2009

Sponsors: Smithsonian Institution, American Philosophical Society, and CAIL
(Center for American Indian Languages, University of Utah).

Keynote Speakers:
Nora England (University of Texas, Austin)
Chuck (Harold) Foster (Utah State Office of Education, Navajo Nation)
Fredina Drye-Romero (Nevada Department of Education, Indian Education, Southern
Paiute).

Call for papers: Papers or posters are invited on any aspect of American Indian
languages, in particular on documentation or revitalization. American Indian
participants are especially invited. Papers are 20 minutes each in length, with
an additional 10 minutes for discussion.

Deadline: for ABSTRACTS : Jan. 16, 2009. The Program Committee will announce
results about Feb. 2.

Papers and posters can be presented in English or Spanish; abstracts can be
submitted in English or Spanish. There will some be Spanish language sessions,
and those working with indigenous languages of Latin America are encouraged to
come and participate.
Habrán algunas sesiones en español, y por eso se invitan ponencias y posters en
español; los abstracts también pueden ser entregados en español. Son muy
cordialmente invitados todos los que trabajan con lenguas indígenas de América
Latina.

Abstract guidelines: Abstracts, no longer than 300 words (a paragraph or two
will do), should include paper title, name of author(s), affiliation. Abstracts
should be submitted in Microsoft Word format, RTF, or PDF. Include contact
details for January to April 2009. Only one abstract per person (except where a
paper has multiple authors).
Address: Send abstracts to: to http://linguistlist.org/confcustom/celcna09, by
Jan. 16, 2009.

Additional information: Contact Elizabeth Neilson (eneilson83gmail.com), or for
particular questions, Lyle Campbell (lyle.campbelllinguistics.utah.edu). If you
need information not easily arranged via e-mail, please call: Tel. 801-587-0720
or 801-581-3441 during business hours, or Fax 801-585-7351.
Message 2: New Directions in the Theory of Presupposition
Date: 22-Dec-2008
From: Nathan Klinedinst <nathankucl.ac.uk>
Subject: New Directions in the Theory of Presupposition
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Full Title: New Directions in the Theory of Presupposition

Date: 27-Jul-2009 - 31-Jul-2009
Location: Bordeaux, France
Contact Person: Nathan Klinedinst
Meeting Email: nathankucl.ac.uk
Web Site: http://essllipresupposition2009.blogspot.com/

Linguistic Field(s): Cognitive Science; Philosophy of Language; Pragmatics;
Semantics; Syntax

Call Deadline: 15-Feb-2009

Meeting Description:

An interdisciplinary workshop on presupposition at ESSLLI 2009, Bordeaux, France.

Call for Papers

The last ten years has seen a wealth of new developments on the topic of
presupposition and, in particular, the projection problem for presupposition.
While there had been considerable interest in the seventies in developing
entirely pragmatic accounts of presupposition triggering and projection (Wilson,
1974, Stalnaker 1977, Grice, 1981), these accounts had generally not been
sufficiently developed to match the dynamic accounts developed in the eighties
in predictive power. Recent work, such as that of Schlenker (2006, 2008),
however, has shown that broadly pragmatic accounts can also have considerable
predictive power. In addition, trivalent approaches based on such techniques as
supervaluations and the Strong Kleene connectives, which were dismissed by many
long ago, have recently attracted new interest (Beaver and Krahmer, 2001,
George, 2008, Fox, 2008) and have been shown capable of handling many empirical
issues in presupposition projection. Thus there is no longer a clear consensus
on how we should explain presupposition projection. In addition, experimental
work has raised interesting questions about what the basic facts of
presupposition projection are and suggests that real empirical work is needed to
determine some of the subtleties (Chemla 2007). There has also been renewed
interest in the triggering problem (Simons, 2001, Abusch, 2002) which naturally
links up to the projection problem, as well as recent theoretical work on
foundational issues such as the notion of common ground and accommodation
(Beaver and Zeevat, 2004, von Fintel, 2001, 2006, Stalnaker, 2002).

The purpose of this workshop is to bring together researchers on presupposition
to discuss these new developments and connect some of the different theoretical
and empirical questions, which are too often considered in isolation.

We invite submission of abstracts from linguists, philosophers, and cognitive
scientists, addressing formal or foundational issues about theories of
presupposition, or offering new empirical perspectives that bear on them. We
especially encourage papers that address questions about the explanatory depth
of different theories or the triggering problem, or introduce new forms of
experimental or empirical evidence relevant to adjudicating between theories of
presupposition.

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