LINGUIST List 20.397
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Mon Feb 09 2009
Calls: Ling&Literature/Discourse Analysis/Sociolinguistic Studies (Jrnl)
Editor for this issue: Susanne Vejdemo
<susanne linguistlist.org>
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Directory
1. Carolina
Amador-Moreno,
Sociolinguistic Studies
Message 1: Sociolinguistic Studies
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Date: 09-Feb-2009
From: Carolina Amador-Moreno <camador unex.es>
Subject: Sociolinguistic Studies
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Full Title: Sociolinguistic Studies
Linguistic Field(s): Discourse Analysis;Ling & Literature;Pragmatics;Sociolinguistics;Text/Corpus Linguistics
Call Deadline: 30-Mar-2009
Second Call for Papers: Special Issue Sociolinguistic Studies. Fictionalising Orality Co-edited by Prof. Kevin McCafferty and Dr. Carolina Amador-Moreno Proposal Submission Deadline: 30th March, 2009 Editor: Equinox, London. Fictional texts often display traces of orality to a greater or lesser extent. Whatever the precise characteristics of this representation of orality, verbal interaction in fiction can only be understood and interpreted in relation to the same rules of discourse that govern everyday interaction. Although evidently lacking the spontaneity of spoken oral interaction, and differing in important ways from text types that may record the spoken word more authentically (cf. Schneider 2002:70-77), fictional dialogue is, nonetheless, rooted in ordinary discourse and everyday situations. While they are certainly invented and hypothetical in Schneider's typology, as Fowler points out, fictional dialogues are built upon models of language use which tend to occur in 'non fictional' texts (conversation, meetings, political speeches, news reports, etc.) and they are, in a sense, transcripts of naturally occurring speech: Ordinary, conventional language has its rules of structure: eg. dialect and accent are recognizable through regular features of a person's speech; and in conversation, different people's contributions are linked to each other, by various cohesive devices, into an integrated communicative whole. These conventional regularities of structure, non-literary in origin, may be as it were 'transcribed' out of real life into written fiction. (Fowler 1989: 114) However, a certain degree of language awareness is required of an author when it comes to (re)-creating the features of spoken language, especially when dialogues are presented without narratorial comments or any other form of authorial direction. Papers are sought that explore how the features of spoken language are fictionalised. Some of the research questions this special issue will address are: - What are the strategies used in fiction to represent the spoken mode? - How is characterisation created through patterns of language in fiction? - To what extent is fictional discourse like or unlike informal casual conversation? - How are dialect, false starts, overlapping, incomplete sentences, elisions, interruptions, turn-taking, backchannelling, hedging, repetitions, hesitation, and other features of spoken discourse represented in novels, short stories, plays, films and even advertising? - What are the functions of bilingual or multilingual fictional dialogue in these genres? - How is code-switching constructed in the work of bilingual authors? - How can the tools of corpus analysis and/or (historical) sociolinguistics contribute to the study of the spoken mode in fiction? - What principles need to be observed in the study of literary dialect? Researchers and scholars are invited to submit a paper proposal of not more than 500 words, stating the purpose of the paper, its contents, and methodology as well as how the proposed paper relates to the overall topic of this special issue. Submissions should be in Microsoft Word or Rich Text Format. Please send proposals to: camador unex.es / kevin.mccafferty if.uib.no Authors of accepted proposals will be notified by 30th April, 2009. Upon acceptance of their proposals, authors will have until 30th November 2009 to prepare their papers. Submissions should be between 6,000 and 8,000 words (inclusive of notes and bibliography). Appendices may be attached but are to be included in the total word count. All submitted papers will be reviewed on a double-blind peer-review basis. Guidelines for preparing the papers will be sent upon acceptance of proposals. For additional information regarding the publisher, please visit: http://www.equinoxjournals.com/ojs/index.php/SS
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