LINGUIST List 21.812
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Wed Feb 17 2010
Calls: Cognitive Science, General Ling, Socioling/Portugal
Editor for this issue: Kate Wu
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1. Augusto
Soares da Silva,
Pluricentric Languages: Linguistic Variation and Sociocognitive Dimensions
Message 1: Pluricentric Languages: Linguistic Variation and Sociocognitive Dimensions
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Date: 15-Feb-2010
From: Augusto Soares da Silva <assilva braga.ucp.pt>
Subject: Pluricentric Languages: Linguistic Variation and Sociocognitive Dimensions
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Full Title: Pluricentric Languages: Linguistic Variation and Sociocognitive Dimensions Short Title: Plurilang Date: 15-Sep-2010 - 17-Sep-2010 Location: Braga, Portugal Contact Person: Augusto Soares da Silva Meeting Email: plurilang2010 gmail.com Web Site: http://www.plurilang2010.org Linguistic Field(s): Cognitive Science; General Linguistics; Semantics; Sociolinguistics; Text/Corpus Linguistics Call Deadline: 30-Apr-2010 Meeting Description: International Conference on Pluricentric Languages: Linguistic Variation and Sociocognitive Dimensions The conference aims to explore the sociocultural, conceptual and structural dimensions of variation and change within pluricentric languages, with specific emphasis on the relationship between national varieties. It brings together the Cognitive Linguistics paradigm, Sociolinguistics tradition and other usage-based, cognitively and socially oriented approaches to language variation and change. Call for Papers Plenary Speakers Peter Auer (University of Freiburg) Enrique Bernardez (Complutense University of Madrid) Ataliba Teixeira de Castilho (University of Sao Paulo) Dirk Geeraerts (University of Leuven) Gitte Kristiansen (Complutense University of Madrid) Georges Ludi (University of Basel) Edgar W. Schneider (University of Regensburg) Aim and Scope The "one-nation-one-language" assumption is as unrealistic as the well-known Chomskyan ideal of a homogeneous speech community. Linguistic pluricentricity is a common and widespread phenomenon. For example, English, German, Dutch, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Arabic, Swahili, Chinese, etc. are all pluricentric languages in the sense that they have different national varieties, each with its own cultivated, standard register. However, language pluricentricity and monocentricity are gradient rather than separate categories: there are languages that are more pluricentric than others. Moreover, some forms of pluricentricity are approximately symmetric while others (the majority) are asymmetrical. Indeed, all languages are "pluricentric" to some degree, to the extent that they exhibit internal dialectal variation and differing local norms. Pluricentricity is therefore a special case of language-internal variation, marked by questions of national identity and power. Almost two decades ago, Michael Clyne edited the seminal collective volume Pluricentric Languages (1992), gathering comparative data concerning a representative selection of pluricentric languages throughout the world. Since then, the basis for the discussion of national varieties has shifted from a "deviation from the center" model to a "several interacting centers", or pluricentric, one and the relationship between national varieties has been studied in terms of a dynamic and interactive process. Recently a new and highly stimulating opportunity has been offered by Cognitive Sociolinguistics, an emerging extension of Cognitive Linguistics as a usage-based and recontextualizing approach to language and cognition, institutionalized in the collective volume Cognitive Sociolinguistics (2008), edited by Gitte Kristiansen and Rene Dirven. Cognitive Sociolinguistics examines the social, cultural and conceptual meaningfulness of language-internal variation, including the internal structure of (and interaction between) whole varieties and styles, and explores the relationship between lectal variation and cognition. Methodologically, it uses advanced corpus-based quantitative methods, while benefiting theoretically from key concepts from Cognitive Linguistics (such as prototypicality, metaphor, metonymy, embodiment, framing, perspectivization, profiling, reference point construction, subjectification, cultural cognitive models etc.) in dealing with lectal varieties as socio-cognitive entities. This conference aims to explore the sociocultural, conceptual and structural dimensions of variation and change within pluricentric languages, with specific emphasis on the relationship between national varieties. It brings together the Cognitive Linguistics paradigm, Sociolinguistics tradition and other usage-based, cognitively and socially oriented approaches to language variation and change. Within this socio-cognitive and interdisciplinary context of research into linguistic pluricentricity and other expressions of language-internal variation, papers are invited on the following themes and topics. 1. Language-internal and cross-national variation, culture and cognition - Formation of national varieties: When is a national variety codified and why? What conditions can promote a more or less symmetrical pluricentricity? - Cooperation, competition and conflict between national varieties: What are the interconnections between national identity, power relationships and national varieties? Can pluricentric languages be both unifiers and dividers of people and to what extent? How symmetrical can pluricentricity be in an unequally distributed world? - Collective pluricentric language planning and policy: bi- or multilateral language planning and policies, spelling reforms, educational programmes, the influence of television, etc. - Pluricentricity and globalization: What are the effects of current processes of globalization on the relationships between national varieties? What is the impact of the global pressure of English on pluricentricity? - National variation, culture and cognition: Do national linguistic differences reflect cultural differences? To what extent do the former correlate with conceptual differences? How does national variation affect linguistic meaning and linguistic categorization? How does language-internal and cross-national variation reveal the situated and social nature of cognition? 2. Structural patterns of national variation and corpus-based approaches - Indicators of (sub)standardization and pluricentricity: Convergence and divergence between national varieties and internal stratification of national varieties. - Correlations between variables: To what extent do lexical, grammatical and phonological variables correlate when it comes to the convergence/divergence and stratification of national varieties? Do social identities (national, regional, local) operate as independent variables? To what extent do socio-stylistic factors correlate with semantic, grammatical and discursive factors? - National and local varieties, styles and registers as prototype-based and radial categories of meaning: How do national/local variation and semantic variation correlate? How do prototypicality, stereotypicality and semantic normativity combine and intertwine between and within national varieties? - National varieties, linguistic system and linguistic change: What are the linguistic consequences of contact between national varieties? What is the impact of pluricentricity on language change? - Corpus-based multivariate and quantitative models of language-internal variation: What methods, tools and techniques (analytical and descriptive) are needed to arrive at an adequate description of national variation? How can we measure diachronic convergence and divergence between national varieties and synchronic internal stratification of national varieties? 3. Cognitive cultural models of national language variation - Perception and evaluation of national varieties: How do language users perceive national varieties and how do they evaluate them attitudinally? What cultural and cognitive models are at work in the categorization and evaluation of local and national linguistic differences? What is the role of ideology in cognitive representations of national variations? - National variation and language attitudes: How are purist or pro-independence attitudes manifested and what are the consequences for the development of national varieties? How do language attitudes differ in the various centers of a pluricentric language, particularly of the dominating and non-dominating varieties? - Objective and subjective linguistic distances: Is there a correlation between objective linguistic distances, perceived distances, and language attitudes? To what extent do language attitudes as they can be objectively measured correlate with actual language behavior as observed in corpora? - Mutual intelligibility between national varieties: to what extent do objective linguistic distances and language attitudes influence intelligibility? - National cultural models and national language variation: How do these interact? Does language variation follow from cultural models, merely reflect them or actually determine them? - Cultural models of national variation and their consequences for language planning and language policy. Submission of Abstracts Submissions are solicited for presentations which should last for 20 minutes with 10 minutes for questions (maximum 30 minutes total). All submissions for presentations should follow the following abstract guidelines: - Conference languages are English (preferably), Portuguese, Spanish and French. - The deadline for abstracts is April 30, 2010. - The abstract, edited in Word or RTF (or PDF, in case it contains special symbols), should be sent to the following address: plurilang2010 gmail.com - Abstracts should not exceed 500 words (exclusive of references) and should state research questions, approach, method, data and (expected) results. Abstracts will be reviewed anonymously. - Please do not mention the author's name, institution or address in the abstract. - The subject header of your email should include: Abstract Plurilang2010- name/s. - Please include the following information in the main body of your email: (1) name of author/s, (2) affiliation, (3) paper title, (4) email address, (5) postal address. Notification of acceptance/rejection will be given by May 31, 2010.
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